We were so excited to get this shout out from Gayle on the Go. Thanks KTLA for helping us spread the word!
2015 Festival Re-cap: PHOTOS!
We have so many incredible photos from the Mixed Remixed Festival this year! We hope that you enjoy scrolling through these wonderful galleries.
You can find photos from the full day of fun here.
If you have photos you’d like to share, please email them to info(at)mixedremixed.org.-Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
Mixed Remixed Festival 2015 Re-cap: Writing Mixed and Queer
Fifteen enthusiastic writers showed up for the “Putting the ‘M’ in LGBT” workshop at the Mixed Remixed Festival on June 13th and we had a great time talking and writing ‘mixed and queer’.
I created a timeline of writers, who were mixed and queer, for the workshop – not an easy task! It was hard to find people who were on record as identifying as both mixed and queer before the 1980s. We talked about why this might be.
In the early part of the 2oth century the outlook for mixed or queer people was not always easy – attitudes in society and in some cases the laws of the land were discriminatory. This context was reflected in the literature of the time where the narrative arc of the “tragic mulatto” often paralleled that of gay characters, both generally ending in tragically for the protagonist.
However by the 1960’s, laws prohibiting ‘interracial marriage’ were being challenged in the US State of Virginia, the US was passing its Civil Rights Act while in the UK, ‘homosexual sex’ was decriminalised. These shifts were reflected in the world of literature and by the 1980s there was a blossoming of mixed/queer writing.
Writers on the timeline included:
Jackie Kay [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JiP684Ss3FI[/youtube]Stacyann Chin [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bc9MUvyAAkI[/youtube]
Carl Phillips[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1YdeDWeUf9g[/youtube]
15 Lucky Festival Attendees Will Get Greg Pak’s New Book Hot Off the Press!
We’re so excited that thanks to the generosity of Greg Pak we’re giving away 15 copies of The Princess Who Saved Herself. The children’s book based on a song by Jonathan Coulton, and follows the story of the multiracial Gloria Cheng Epstein Takahara de la Garza Champion. You will be among the very first to get the book! Come early and snag a copy in the giveaway!-Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
Presenter Spotlight 2015: Writer Amy S. Choi
Amy S. Choi
Sound Off!: Parents of Multiracial Kids Talk About Books, the Media, and the Race Talk
June 13, 2015, 3pm-3:50pm
Amy is the co-founder and editorial director of The Mash-Up Americans, a media and consulting company that aims to change how the world understands mixed-race, mixed-identity, mixed-faith, mixed-everything modern America. Amy is a first-generation Korean-American married to a first-generation Colombian-Mexican-American, and mom to a feisty Korombexican-American: in other words, The Future of America.
She has worked for more than a decade as a journalist and editor in New York. Her work has appeared in Bloomberg BusinessWeek, Women’s Wear Daily, Inc., TED, The Philadelphia City Paper, Time Out New York, Salon, and The Wall Street Journal, to name a few.
She specializes in getting people to tell stories they never expected to share. Amy sits on the board of Ugly Duckling Presse, an independent publisher in Brooklyn that focuses on poetry. She earned degrees in journalism and poetry writing at Northwestern University.
Stay tuned with Amy: @awesomechoi and find her in Brooklyn.
Growing Up Mixed & Expanding Your Dream
One of the things we hear most from people who finally come to the Mixed Remixed Festival is: “I never knew a place like this existed.” There’s a kind of awe, and relief, and belonging they feel that they have never felt before — many times not even in their own families. Festival favorite and volunteer Shelly Krause (far right in photo) explains it even better than I can in this short 1.5 minute video. Thank you Shelly!-Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
[youtube]https://youtu.be/rUAd_2PB01M[/youtube]
Interview with Multiracial Filmmaker Jason Cuthbert
Not to many people relate to the multiracial experience or the stories of their mixed friends, this is why forums for open discussion and collaboration are so important. These may take the form of literary festivals such as our beloved Mixed Remixed or may be told through artistic presentations. It’s not always easy explaining your personal experiences to a wider audience who may have no idea where you’re coming from, but the effort within this community is still invaluable to thousands around the globe. With that being said, let’s meet Jason Cuthbert – writer, director, filmmaker, and multiracial dude!
His upcoming documentary circling his, like many other biracials, experiences hopes to tackle the issue head on in a new and refreshing light. His team is a wonderfully diverse and highly educated group whose dedication and incredibly precise work ethic will bring you a film that is multidimensional in context and that combines subjective perspectives with objective experience.
Why is telling the story of the multiracial experience so important to your team, as is evident with your current project?
Multiracial and interracial experiences effect each and every member of our team…directly! My brother James, my sister Teisha and myself are biracial: African Trinidadian (father) and Caucasian American (mother). Francesca D’Amico (Ph.D. candidate, producer, researcher, educator), an Italian Canadian, not only teaches hip hop culture and African American history, but she has personally felt the social obstacles associated with her own interracial relationships. My sister-in-law Jessica Molina-Cuthbert (Ph.D. Candidate, researcher, educator) is El Salvadorian American, and is not only well versed in the effects of race and the American penal system, but she is also raising multiracial children with James. And my brother-in-law Fabian is Puerto Rican American (IT computer network systems) and has mixed race children with my sister. There is plenty of racial ambiguity going on over here.
What do you hope to achieve by producing such a dynamic film?
How would you describe it?
Race needs a real reality check. As rusty, ugly and outdated of a concept that it feels to be in 2015, why do we all still buy into it? “COLOURING BOOK: The Mixed Race Documentary” aspires to define, dissect, document and direct a dialogue about the value of race from not just those that study it, but by those whose identity exceeds its boundaries.
Do you think the growing multiracial community has the power to inspire positive change/enlightenment (through diversity and loving one another across colour lines)?
As mixed race people, we are the living, breathing proof that the concept of race doesn’t really work and may be unnecessary. We are those blurred lines, the colours in-between colors, the reds and blues that make purple. With “COLOURING BOOK: The Mixed Race Documentary” we are pushing to give a voice to those who feel just as excluded from the racial discussion as I did while growing up.
A question for Jason (if possible), what has it been like coming from a mixed family and how did it influence your creative perspective as a writer and director?
I grew to truly love the cultural crayon box that my family is. My love of all cultures comes from experiencing them first hand, whether they were part of my family tree or our diverse social circles. But as a child, I just wanted to fit in. Point blank. But being “normal” was never a reality for me. Racial boxes were rigid and I just didn’t fit. It also didn’t help that I rarely saw myself, a mixed kid, on screen in my favorite films and television shows. To this day, I write and relate to underdog characters in my stories, inherently, even if race has nothing to do with their story, because I felt like a strange foreigner in my own city.
What’s one of the biggest frustrations/misconceptions within the mixed community that you want to bring attention to with this film? If any.
I am not subscribing to stereotypes…like cancel that subscription…immediately. And just like any other racial category, we the “non-race” have some horrible stereotypes too. There is that super corny idea that mixed race people are more “beautiful” and “desirable,” and that we all feel we are better than everyone. Mixed race, or light skinned black, whatever you want to call me, …by no means do I feel that I’m any better than other humans of a darker complexion. You will not see me laughing at or co-signing dark-skinned jokes. Not-at-all. That divide and conquer mentality doesn’t work with me. Dark skin is gorgeous.
What can people who may not be directly part of the multiracial experience learn or take away from Colouring Book?
Our world is becoming more like a coloring book. Like those innocent years when kids use whatever colors they want, before they are taught to make tigers orange and make grass green. Mixed race may come to a shock to those that would rather see life neatly left in black and white instead of full color. We all need to get over ourselves. We have biases that we have learned, not that we were born with. Diversity training is not just for people in the racial majority. We ALL need to “colour” each other in by behaviors, talents and personalities rather than by which shade we were painted with in the womb. Race affects everyone. When diversity wins, we ALL win because it means we are relating to each other as a shared loving species, not as divided, hateful and inhumane beasts.
THANK YOU! You made it happen for the Mixed Remixed Festival!
Thank you so much for your support of the Mixed Remixed Festival! Because of you, we were able to raise $12,067 for the Festival this year! That’s way beyond our goal of $10,000 and even more than last year’s final funding number! WOW!
It was truly a community effort: 140 donors in 6 countries donated over the course of 40 days! THANK YOU!
So now, we can’t wait to see you on June 13 to see what your donations have helped support! Don’t forget to register. We want to know that you’re coming so we can give you an extra special hello!-Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder
Presenter Spotlight 2015: Singer-Songwriter Donn T
Donn T
Sound Off!: Parents of Multiracial Kids Talk about Books, the Media & the Race Talk
June 13, 2015 3pm-3:50pm
Storyteller’s Prize Presentation
June 13, 2015 6:30pm
Donn T (Sister of Questlove), is an eclectic singer-songwriter, producer and the owner of the indie label D-tone Victorious. As highlighted on TLC’s Say Yes To The Dress, she is newly wed to guitarist/producer Jake Morelli. Donn T will humorously and informatively discuss the adventures of her blended musical rockstar family and the unique dynamic and special love relationship she has with her tween bonus daughter Soren Echo.
[youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Lldv_49z8-o[/youtube]
Twitter @Donn_T
website donn-t.com
Facebook https://www.facebook.com/pages/Donn-T/105596011218
Instagram https://instagram.com/dtonevic/
By Keri Wilborn
THANK YOU! Now let’s STREEEETCH!
We want to thank all of you who have donated to the Mixed Remixed Festival and are helping to keep this event viable and free! We have met our target goal of $10000! Whew! Now, can you help us meet some of our stretch goals?
With more funding we are excited to tackle some of these goals for the Mixed Remixed Festival for 2016:
What can we do if we raise more than our goal? A lot!
- Travel Scholarships for Participating Artists
- Travel Scholarships for Festival Attendees
- Add more days of programming to create a 3-day Festival
- Sponsor a money prize merit scholarship for an emerging artist
- Stream the Mixed Remixed Festival Live
- Produce regional festivals in New York, Seattle, San Francisco, etc.
- Institutionalize this annual festival with a paid staff member so that the festival has a long life and supports many artists and attendees
And we’re making this easy for you: you can donate just $1! We just need to know that you value this project! We need to know that you need this home space for stories that reflect you and your family. Make sure the crowd is funding this crowdfunder!
Our Indiegogo crowdfunder ends on MAY 4! HURRY! DONATE NOW!
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