Casting Call

DISCLAIMER: This event is NOT sponsored or hosted by the IBWFF. This is a re-post. As with any audition or casting call announcement, you are strongly encouraged to use your best judgment in attending an audition or casting call. It is your responsibility to contact local authorities if you suspect illegal activities, exploitation or violence from the hosts, attendees or other parties in attendance

JLK Publishing and Black River Press
Present
A casting call for the upcoming movie trailer

 

PLEASE COME PREPARED WITH A 1-MINUTE DRAMATIC MONOLOGUE

Thursday, March 31 · 2:00pm – 5:00pm
620 Glen Iris – Conference room/lobby level Atlanta, GA. 30308

  • Scheduled appointments between 2:00PM – 6:00PM
  • Open casting call will take place between 6:00PM – 9:00PM

Please set an appointment prior to the open casting call.

Don’t miss the opportunity to be on the ground floor in the creation of this science-fiction thriller that is being shown to network executives!

Contact Casting Associate Porsha Huff to schedule appointments
at porshahff@yahoo.com or call at #: 1-678-235-8798

Casting Location: Ponce Springs Lofts
620 Glen Iris – Conference room/lobby level
Atlanta, GA. 30308
PARKING: Garage (visitors)
DATE: Thursday, March 31, 2011

Please bring head-shots and resume with you to the casting!

This project is being directed by Shandra McDonald-Bradford.

And the Winnies Go To…

Jennifer Hudson and Terrence Howard will star in the movie Winnie, about South African activist and legend Winnie Mandela. As I reported in 2009, the Creative Workers of South Africa boycotted the movie not on the terms that they didn’t like Ms. Hudson’s acting, but on the terms that the movie failed to hire local Africans in front of and behind the camera. Since I haven’t seen Jennifer Hudson in anything except Dreamgirls and “American Idol,” I will wait to give my opinion.

However, Americans seemed to have missed the commanding performance of British actress Sophie Okonedo in the BAFTA-award nominated, BBC mini-series, “Mrs. Mandela.” Here are both trailers of the iron souled (and controversial) queen of the anti-apartheid movement Winne Mandela.

Winnie

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=48REgxDlvFY&feature=player_embedded[/youtube]

Mrs. Mandela

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFbV61QEnmA[/youtube]

Mrs. Goundo’s Daughter to Air on PBS Feb. 9th

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGowr4ZvFkA[/youtube]

According to an announcement from Women Make Movies:

“Barbara Attie and Janet Goldwater’s stirring film, MRS. GOUNDO’S DAUGHTER, will premiere nationally on AfroPop: The Ultimate Cultural Exchange, on PBS, February 9, in honor of the United Nation’s International Day of Zero Tolerance to end Female Genital Mutilation (February 6).

The film tells the story of one mother’s fight for political asylum in the United States in order to protect her daughter from the traditional practice of female genital mutilation (FGM) and the legal ramifications of doing so.”

  • Female genital mutilation (FGM) includes procedures that intentionally alter or injure female genital organs for non-medical reasons.
  • The procedure has no health benefits for girls and women.
  • Procedures can cause severe bleeding and problems urinating, and later, potential childbirth complications and newborn deaths.
  • An estimated 100 to 140 million girls and women worldwide are currently living with the consequences of FGM.
  • It is mostly carried out on young girls sometime between infancy and age 15 years.
  • In Africa an estimated 92 million girls from 10 years of age and above have undergone FGM.
  • FGM is internationally recognized as a violation of the human rights of girls and women.

There are few who have addressed this issue publicly due to the social and cultural stigma attached to those still practicing FGM and those who feel pressure from their communities to have their daughters go through an often unsanitary and traumatic experience that plagues girls and women for the rest of their lives.

the United Nations Population Fund claims that, “Female genital mutilation, or cutting, predates Christianity and Islam – it is thought to have originated in the time of the pharaohs,” but there’s no concrete evidence of this. What is true is that FGM is a social practice –not a religious one– and it is practiced in primarily Muslim countries or in immigrant Muslim communities including  in Asia, the Middle East, Africa, and Europe.

More about Female Genital Mutilation:

Bennie Pearl Brown memorial fund supports black women in film, “Glory Days” project

According to InsightNews.com, Bennie Pearl Brown, age 85, of Minneapolis., passed away January 14, 2011, and the family requests donations be made in support of “Glory Days: A Tradition of Achievement,” a documentary film history of Black Women in development for public television. Tax deductible contributions made payable to “Glory Days the Film” with “Bennie Pearl Brown Legacy Fund” on the memo line can be sent to: “Honor Thy Mother” Bennie Pearl Brown Legacy Fund, c/o New York Women in Film & Television, 6 East 39th St, 12th Floor, New York, NY 10016. For information on the film, email GloryDays@JanusAdams.com.

for questions on the fund, email Irma McClaurin: mcclaurinsolutions@gmail.com. You may also contribute to the Greater Friendship Missionary Baptist Church, 2600 E. 38th Street, Minneapolis, MN 55406 in memory of Bennie Pearl Brown.

You can read more at InsightNews.com

Faces to See in 2011

Television has a horribly low number of Black women and this season is no different. Even with one of the highest viewed programs written by a Black woman (Shonda Rhimes for Grey’s Anatomy and Private Practice), Black actresses can’t seem to get a break.

The bright side is that there are some faces that are representing Black women in television –now that Queen Oprah is switching gears.

Here are our picks to watch in 2011 (our tweaked list from the Daily Dish):

[slideshow]

When is Somebody Gonna Remake This Movie?: Buck & the Preacher

With the build up and buzz around the Cohen brothers’ movie True Grit, it’s obvious that the American movie psyche still has a tast for a well made American Western. There’s something about the mythic unknown of the American push out west. Of course reality knows that the expansion included some pretty nasty attempts at genocide against the indigenous population, but for some reason everyone likes to gloss over that part… or if it’s addressed at all, Native Americans are usually on the losing team.

Even though we know that the Old West wasn’t all butter and cream, there are some thoughtful, well made stories surrounding it. Ever since Spaghetti Westerns and Peckinpah epics rewrote the western on screen we’ve been fascinated about the violence, outlaw characters, and the underdog.

There have been a number of westerns featuring Blacks, but many have been forgotten.

Black Westerns in the 1930′s

According to film historian Donald Bogle’s book Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams: The Story of Black Hollywood
there were westerns featuring  –and often directed and produced by– African American stars as early as the 1930′s. These films included Bronze Buckaroo, Harlem Rides The Range, and Harlem on the Prairie , to name a few. (The word “Harlem” wasn’t just a location in New York, but it was also a euphemism for someone “Black” to easily designate it as race film.)

Black Westerns Become Less Popular

The Black western lost popularity as Sunday serials waned in movie theaters. Films that came out during the 1940′s and 1950′s and featured actors like John Wayne, Henry Fonda, Gary Cooper and James Stewart, became more complex in their views of American West. The characters were written as flawed humans, but they still kept the manifest destiny ethos in their roles as anti-heroes. Westerns were costly to make and required stunt people, animals, new sets and period costumes, that many Black filmmakers didn’t have available. During the 1950′s, Black films veered into another popular film genre during this time period: Musicals.

Black Western Revival & Civil Rights

It wasn’t until the 1960′s and 1970′s when the anti-hero Western character began to incorporate real images of the old west, namely, violence, the subjugation of women, realistic Mexican characters that were heroes and villains, discrimination against Native Americans and government mistrust. Film historians note that this change in focus was mainly due to the introduction of “foreign” films from Japan that featured samurai heroes and villains who used violence to underscore the violent era. (The Magnificent Seven, Seven Samurai starring Yul Brenner was a direct western translation from Akira Kurosawa’s  . The quintessential Spaghetti Western movie A Fistful of Dollars starring  Clint Eastwood was a direct western [albeit Italian] remake of Kurosawa’s Yojimbo.)

Akira Kurosawa's The Seven Samurai

Now that stories in the western genre were being retold with more historical references –such as Little Big Man starring Dustin Hoffman– Black actors and screenwriters saw an opportunity to tell their own stories from the wild west. The 1960′s and 1970′s were also seeing an upswing in films featuring Black people due to the efforts of civil rights and Black empowerment organizations who put pressure on Hollywood to show more Black representation in movies.

Actor Sidney Poitier had seen westerns while growing up in Nassau. Even though he wasn’t born anywhere near the American west, he was “transfixed” by actors such as Gene Autry and Roy Rogers. It wasn’t until he did more research about the real American west that he understood the impact and achievements of Blacks in the old west, especially such African Americans as Nat Love (better known by his cowboy nickname of Deadwood Dick), frontier woman Mary “Stagecoach Mary” Fields, Cherokee Bill, and others.

Nat "Deadwood Dick" Love

In 1972, Sidney Poitier directed and starred in the film Buck and the Preacher, which also starred Ruby Dee and Harry Belafonte. Buck and the Preacher was remarkable for audience goers because the last time they’d seen a western starring Black actors was during the 1930′s …and those films were in segregated theaters and targeted to a very specific audience. This film was the first time that integrated movie goers had experienced the Old West from a Black viewpoint, and one in which the Black characters weren’t shuffling buffoons and used as comedy relief for the “real” white hero or heroine.

[polldaddy poll=4298201]

Sidney Poitier’s film also introduced a gun slinging Black heroine (in the role of Ruby Dee) and hinted at the results of miscegenation through Harry Belafonte’s character. The main character (played by Poitier) was a leader, a diplomat who had contact with surrounding Indian tribes, and was vengeful against his oppressors. None of these features had been so blatantly portrayed by a Black actor in the history of Blacks in westerns.

[polldaddy poll=4298220]

Buck and the Preacher spurred other stories about Blacks in the west, including Thomasine & Bushrod (starring Vonetta McGee and Max Julien), the television series “The Biography of Miss Jane Pittman” (starring Cicely Tyson), and others. Many of the Black westerns following Buck and the Preacher got caught up in the Blaxploitation era of films and lost their impact –and opportunity– to tell an accurate or truthful story of Blacks in the West.

[polldaddy poll=4298211]

Black Westerns Back in Decline

Later films in the 1980′s and 1990′s took on the Black western theme, but none had the impact of Buck and the Preacher. Many of the characters were sensationalized, inaccurate and buffoon-ized.

Since Hollywood thinks that True Grit is worth remaking, I am putting my hat in the ring to push for a remake of Buck and the Preacher.

You’re welcome.