|
Sponsors
The Crest
speakers
gospel fest
audience
lobby
The Cemetery
Buffalo soldiers
speakers
wreathlaying
crowd
more
Elks Club
Country Club
Art Center
Chamber coffee
movies
gallery
Zarah Mall
Angus Inn
The Capitol
Misc.


|  |
While speakers were speaking at The Crest, the Barton Arts Center opened its back room to provide an alternate venue where festivalgoers could simply watch movies by Micheaux and other black artists.
 |
| Saturday, March 24, 2001 |
| |
9:00 a.m. |
The Learning Tree, Director Gordon Parks.
Native Kansan Gordon Parks became the first African-American to
direct a Hollywood Studio film The film is autobiographical in many
respects, about an African American boy growing up in Kansas.
|
| 11:00 a.m. |
. "The Blood of Jesus," by Spencer Williams, 1941.
This classic "race movie" by Spencer Williams tells the story of
a near death experience of a recently baptized African-American
woman who was accidentally shot by her husband.
|
| 12:00 m. |
Lunch at the Elks Club |
| 1:15 p.m. |
"Within Our Gates," Oscar Micheaux.
This is the oldest feature-length film by an African-American. The famous lynching scene was banned in most states at the time of release in 1919. |
| 2:30 p.m. |
Ninth Street, by Kevin Willmott. This 1999 film by Lawrence, Kansas
Movie Director Kevin Willmott stars Martin Sheen, and Isaac Hayes, in a movie
about Ninth Street in Junction City, Kansas, a notorious strech of black-owned
jazz clubs, bars and businesses that was known as "The Harlem of Kansas."
|
| 4:15 p.m.
|
The Green Pastures (1936) In the 1930's Warner
Brothers realized that there was money to be made in black cast movies. Instead
of conceding the black cast movie market to people like Micheaux, Hollywood
made movies such as "The Green Pastures," a religious film that explores
Bible stories from an African-American perspective. |
| Sunday, March 25, 2001 |
| |
2:15 p.m. |
"Daughters of the Dust" 1991. Julie Dash's stunning independent film that Siskel and Ebert gave "two thumbs up." Tommy Hicks, who
was in Great Bend in 1988 for the Oscar Micheaux tombstone dedication, plays
the role of a photographer in a movie about a group of black women who try to
maintain thier African heritage on an island off the coast of Georgia after slavery.
|
| 4:15 p.m. |
"Body and Soul" (1925) Oscar Micheaux Paul Robeson's film debut.
|
| 5:15 p.m. |
Imitation of Life, 1959 This Hollywood feature
explores a topic that Oscar Micheaux had broached in the 1920's---
"passing," ----when an African-American "passes" as a white person.
|
|