Mixed Love Notes #8 #mixedlovenotes
Mixed Love Notes #7 #mixedlovenotes
Let’s Talk About Being White: Be Part of a MTV Documentary on Race
This is a great opportunity to encourage discussions about race and difference with young folks. Check it out!–Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
Mixed Love Notes #2 #mixedlovenotes
Where the Dead Pause & the Japanese Say Goodbye by Marie Mockett AVAILABLE NOW
I’m super-excited to tell you about a new book that is on shelves TODAY! You don’t want to miss this memoir–Where the Dead Pause and the Japanese Say Goodbye– by writer Marie Mockett who is hapa. She has written a really touching story about coming to terms with loss after the Japanese earthquake and tsunami as she returns to Japan where her family’s Buddhist temple has suffered from the damaged nuclear reactor nearby. It’s a wonderful book that you don’t want to miss.–Heidi Durrow
2014 Festival Recap: Love Stories Told By Kids: A Kids’ Workshop
Love Stories Told By Kids (For Kids!)
In this storytelling workshop, children were able to explore the love they currently experience in their lives, from family love to friendship love, and even to love they have for themselves. Through the use of illustrations, they learned to sequence their stories and share with others in a safe and fun environment. And they had a lot of fun doing it as you can see!
Lora Nakamura is the author and illustrator of, The Bonsai Babes: A Love Story, a cross-cultural tale of unconditional love and friendship set in Los Angeles and its neighboring San Gabriel Valley. She has a background in education and social work, receiving her B.A. in Spanish Literature from the University of California, San Diego, her teaching credential from Cal State L.A., and her Masters in Social Work from Cal State Long Beach. She has been a guest lecturer on issues of diversity at Cal State L.A., and an advocate for underrepresented communities in Compton, Lynwood, Los Angeles, and the San Gabriel Valley.
2014 Festival Recap: Mixed 3.0
Mixed Race 3.0: How to Tell Immersive, Interactive, Integrated & Impactful Stories
This panel turned out to be one of our most popular, informative and entertaining. Panelists Velina Hasu-Houston, Marcus C. Shepard, Marcia Alesan Dawkins discussed what it meant for storytellers as the Mixed Experience becomes more inclusive and more accessible along multiple fronts — age, geography, media, technology etc. However, with so much diversity of content and outreach, learning how stories should be evolving and how to make narratives work is a complicated matter. This panel offered some perspectives on what audiences interested in the future of the Mixed Experience — what we’re calling “Mixed Race 3.0” — may be looking for in their stories, which can be summed up as immersion, interactivity, integration and impact. Velina Hasu-Houston focused on “immersion,” or delving deeper into the Mixed Experience through plays that focus on context and sensory experiences. Marcia Alesan Dawkins focused on “impact,” or inspiring people to take action and learn more about the Mixed Experience through online and on-the-ground engagement.
Marcia Alesan Dawkins
Marcia Alesan Dawkins, Ph.D. is a technology-loving, diversity-oriented intellectual entrepreneur from New York City and communication professor at USC Annenberg in Los Angeles. An award-winning author, speaker, and educator, Dawkins understands how diversity, technology and creative storytelling are changing who we are and how we communicate. Her first book, Clearly Invisible: Racial Passing and the Color of Cultural Identity, was released in August 2012 to rave reviews.
Dawkins has received grants and awards from organizations such as the National Communication Association, the Eastern Communication Association, the Irvine Foundation, the California State University and Google Project Glass. She has been recognized by the University of Southern California for outstanding teaching and mentoring. In addition, she has been awarded residencies and fellowships from Brown University, Vanderbilt University Law School, New York University, Villanova University and the USC Graduate School Office of the Provost.
Marcus Shepard
Marcus C. Shepard is a Ph.D. student at USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism. His work explores Black musical performance and its intersections and transformative capabilities of race, class, gender and sexuality. Specifically, he focuses on the musical genre neo-soul and its sonic, visual and political implications in the United States within communities of color. Shepard has also worked at the world famous Apollo Theater in Harlem as an archivist and maintains his ties to this artistic community. – See more at: http://henryjenkins.org/2013/10/revisiting-neo-soul.html#sthash.mvWcgiG6.dpuf
2014 Festival Recap: Global v. Universal: Writing & the Woman of Color
Global v. Universal: Otherness & Writing the Female Writer of Color
Led by Moderator Ananda Ilcken our panelists: Francesca Biller, Alexis Wilson, and Janet Stickmon enjoyed a wide-ranging conversation about what it means to be a female writer of color and write a “universal” story.
Francesca Biller
Francesca Biller is an award-winning investigative journalist, poet and humorist. She writes about the philosophy of cultural identity and about her interesting and exotic experiences as a Japanese Jewish girl who grew up in Los Angeles and Hawaii with a family of artists, designers and writers. Biller is the recipient of The Edward R. Murrow award and two Golden Mike awards for investigative reporting. Her work has been featured in national publications, radio, and television, including CBS, The Wall Street Journal, The Chicago Sun Times, The Huffington Post, The Jewish Journal of Los Angeles, and many others. Essays about her Japanese Hapa identity were included in the “Hapa-Japan, Visible and Invisible” exhibit at the Japanese American National Museum in Los Angeles in 2013. Currently, she is writing three books, including a novel about the 442nd Battalion of World War II, a collection of poetry, and a book of humorous autobiographical short stories. As a performer, she has also appeared on radio and television, and is happily working on a pilot about the history of Jewish comedy for a network.
Alexis Wilson
As a writer, Alexis Wilson has committed herself to the challenging and healing work of sharing her life story through her riveting memoir, Not So Black and White. As a speaker, she is motivated to share her personal story of a “show-biz” upbringing, abandonment by her mother and her non-traditional family. As an artist, Alexis has been fortunate to have worked as a professional dancer with some of the greatest talents in the theatre and dance world. After dancing, her interests and experience led her to teaching dancers, and casting national commercials and Broadway shows. She worked as a choreographer’s assistant and as a contributing writer for several published books. Her need and personal fulfillment to help others has involved her with many fundraising events that she either created or played a major role; whether for people in need of food or those affected by AIDS.
Alexis was born in The Netherlands to a Dutch ballerina and an African-American award winning Broadway choreographer and director. Although her first language was Dutch, she was raised and educated in the U.S. She grew up in Boston, Mass. and New York City. During her pre-teens, her parents divorced and she and her younger brother moved from Boston to Manhattan to live with their father, Billy Wilson. Growing up with her father was an exciting upbringing spent at auditions, in rehearsal rooms and running around backstage while he worked on show after show and ballet after ballet. At eleven years old, Alexis began to study classical ballet seriously at The New York School of Ballet, run by Richard Thomas Sr. and his wife Barbara Fallis. Alexis was the youngest member, performing with their small company, (The U.S. Terpsichore), in their rendition of Giselle. At the age of fourteen, with strong encouragement from her late godfather Karel Shook (co.-founder of The Dance Theatre of Harlem together with Arthur Mitchell), she joined DTH as an apprentice performing in the ballets The Four Temperaments, Seranade, Swan Lake and Dougla. Still in her late teens, Alexis made the transition from professional classical dancer to pursuing work in the commercial theater. She did numerous television commercials, performed in Emmy award winning projects and TV specials. Alexis worked with award winning choreographers from Michael Peters to Geoffrey Holder, as well as danced in The Cotton Club directed by Francis Ford Coppola. In 1985, she attended Carnegie-Mellon University where she received her BFA in drama.
Upon her return to the States, and after the death of her beloved father, she began a life away from performing. She began working as a casting associate to Peter Wise of Wise & Assoc., casting national commercials and theater productions including Twist and Broadway’s smash hit, Smokey Joe’s Café. As executrix of her father’s estate, Alexis continues to keep one foot in the dance and theater world. However, it is her passion for writing that has led her to greatest creative inspiration. She has made short story contributions to Before I Got Here, edited by Blair Underwood and Not in My Family, edited by Gil Robertson. Alexis is excited to be currently writing and preparing to perform her own one woman show, Not So Black and White for New York audiences. Alexis is married to Byron Stripling, internationally renowned jazz trumpeter and Artistic Director of the Columbus Jazz Orchestra. They live in Columbus, Ohio, with their two daughters.
Janet Stickmon
Prof. Janet C. Mendoza Stickmon, author of Midnight Peaches, Two O’clock Patience and Crushing Soft Rubies, is a teacher, writer, and performer. Stickmon has taught ethnic studies, social justice, history of Christianity, spoken word and algebra at Salesian High School in Richmond, CA for several years. She is currently a professor of Humanities at Napa Valley College, teaching Filipina/o-American Heritage, American Mind I and II, and Intro to Africana Studies. In addition to developing new ethnic studies curriculum over the past seven years, Prof. Stickmon is also leading a collaborative effort between the Humanities Department faculty and the Associated Students of Napa Valley College to open a cultural institute on campus in 2014.
Stickmon is the founder and facilitator of Broken Shackle Developmental Training—a program that promotes the use of healing techniques to help reduce the effects of internalized racism and has done workshops for women’s resource centers and conferences in the Bay Area. As a member of the Napa Valley Ethnic Studies Advocates, Stickmon delivers collaborative presentations with students, encouraging the integration of ethnic studies into the K-12 curriculum
Janet Stickmon’s memoir, Crushing Soft Rubies, has been used as a course textbook at U.C. Berkeley, San Francisco State University, Santa Rosa Junior College and Gavilan College. She is also a spoken word artist who has performed at several venues across the country. Through her literature and performances, she explores issues of love, motherhood, resilience, ancestral connection, and joy. Her latest book, Midnight Peaches, Two O’clock Patience is a collection of essays, poems, and short stories on the many dimensions of self-love. The text serves as a self-help book for women and men interested in tapping into the sacred feminine to explore issues of spirituality, ethnic identity, sexual freedom, self-care, and motherhood. Midnight Peaches, Two O’clock Patience has been used as a course textbook in colleges, universities and high schools. One of most well-known selections from this text is entitled, “Blackapina” and was featured in Positively Filipino magazine.
Stickmon holds a Master’s of the Arts Degree in Ethnic Studies from San Francisco State University, a Master’s of the Arts Degree in Religion and Society from the Graduate Theological Union in Berkeley, and a Bachelor’s of Science Degree in Civil Engineering from the University of California, Irvine. Her work has influenced thousands of adults and adolescents for the last eighteen years.
Ananda Ilcken
Ananda Ilcken is a Curriculum Manager for the non-profit, enrichment program, Woodcraft Rangers. In this position, Ananda is responsible for insuring Woodcraft Rangers’ 300 plus field instructors have an engaging and inspiring library of expanded learning curriculum to choose from. With content areas spanning from Video Production to Mariachi to Science; in locations that culturally diverge as far apart as Monterey Park and South Los Angeles, Ananda has utilized her education in racial identity models and her experience as an African-American Dutch-Indonesian, to guide her through writing curriculum that meets the interests of Woodcraft Rangers’ expansive student population. As curriculum Manager, Ananda supervises a team of writers that she leads through the hurdles of creating engaging project based learning activities for Woodcraft Rangers’ diverse population of 6000 plus students a day as well as through the challenges of writing for the agency’s equally diverse group of field instructors.
Little White Lie Film Receives Rave Reviews!
The Mixed Remixed Festival is very excited to co-host in collaboration with Be’chol Lashon a special Q&A with filmmaker Lacey Schwartz following the 11/30 2:20pm screening of Little White Lie at the Music Hall 3 in Beverly Hills, CA. Tickets are available for purchase on-line and at the box office.
Learn more about this amazing film that has received rave reviews across the board! Do we hear Oscar?–Heidi Durrow
“‘A lot of personal documentaries cover secrets,’ said Jay Rosenblatt, program director of the San Francisco Jewish Film Festival. ‘Self-indulgence is a big problem with personal documentaries, but I think the secret in ‘Little White Lie’ kept it from going in that direction — the narrative thrust keeps you engaged.'” – Felicia R. Lee / The New York Times

“Holmes’ criterion for festival submissions is great black films, against the grain. Certainly that describes Brooklyn filmmaker Lacey Schwartz’s ‘Little White Lie’, a personal documentary about family secrets and the power of truth-telling.”
– A.D Amorosi / The Inquirer

“It goes without saying that Jewish identity, in all its forms, is one of SFJFF’s overriding themes. The world premiere of Lacey Schwartz’s first-person documentary ‘Little White Lie’, closes the festival with an utterly unique angle on the topic.” – Michael Fox / KQED Arts
“Filmmaker Lacey Schwartz explores how race, culture and family shape a person’s sense of identity in this documentary and personal detective story.” – Anita Katz / The Examiner
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