Fifth Season of Community Cinema Nashville Focuses on Women’s Issues, Current Events, Soul Food and More

The Revolutionary Optimists

Season begins September 15 with Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide.

NASHVILLE, Tennessee – August 28, 2012 – ITVS, Nashville Public Television and the Nashville Public Library are proud to announce the 2012-2013 season of Community Cinema Nashville. Now in its fifth season, the free screening series presented in partnership with Hands on Nashville and the Nashville Film Festival kicks off Saturday, September 15 at the downtown Nashville Public Library with Half the Sky: Turning Oppression Into Opportunity for Women Worldwide by Maro Chermayeff. This landmark documentary miniseries (based on the bestselling book of the same name by Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn) follows six actress-advocates — America Ferrera, Diane Lane, Eva Mendes, Meg Ryan, Gabrielle Union, and Olivia Wilde — as they travel to Africa and Asia and meet inspiring, courageous individuals who are confronting oppression and developing real, meaningful solutions.

Community Cinema Nashville this year takes on diverse issues from current news headlines, such as As Goes Janesville, Brad Lichtenstein’s three-year chronicle about the debate over the future of America’s middle class, a debate that has become a pitched battle over unions in the normally tranquil state of Wisconsin; Macky Alston’s Love Free or Die, a portrait of Gene Robinson, the first openly gay elected bishop in the high church traditions of Christendom, whose 2003 elevation in the New Hampshire diocese ignited a worldwide firestorm in the Anglican Communion; and Soul Food Junkies, Byron Hurt’s personal look at the black community’s love affair with soul food, its significance, and its health consequences.

This year, the series continues to align its programming with the Women and Girls Lead campaign — a multiyear public media initiative to focus, educate, and connect citizens worldwide in support of the issues facing women and girls — now nearing the end of its second year.  Women and Girls Lead programs featured this season include:

Solar Mamas, by Jehane Noujaim, introduces the women of India’s Barefoot College, which provides rural women living in poverty with an education that empowers them to make their communities self reliant and sustainable; Kristy Guevara-Flanagan’s Wonder Women: The Untold Story of American Superheroines traces the fascinating evolution and legacy of the original comic book Amazon, Wonder Woman, reflecting society’s anxieties about women’s liberation; and Revolutionary Optimists, by Nicole Newnham and Maren Grainger-Monsen, takes a look at a teacher who empowers the children of Kolkata’s slums to become leaders in improving their own community’s health.

ITVS Community Cinema Nashville, coordinated by Allison Inman, began in 2008 and has steadily built to an audience ranging from 70-200 per screening, with dozens of community partners contributing each month to reception activities and panel discussions. The monthly screening series features upcoming selections from the Independent Lens season, which airs locally on Nashville Public Television. Over 90 cities across the country participate in the Community Cinema program, making a real contribution on a range of current social issues by connecting communities with organizations, information, and the opportunity to get involved.

The complete 2012-2013 slate of films is below. Films begin at 3:00 p.m. and are preceded by a reception at 2:30 p.m., at the downtown main branch of the Nashville Public Library unless also otherwise noted.

SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 2012

Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide
by Maro Chermayeff, Jamie Gordon and Mikaela Beardsley

This special Community Cinema screening will preview one of six stories featured in the upcoming PBS mini-series based on Nicholas Kristof and Sheryl WuDunn’s best-selling book. In the episode on Sex Trafficking, Kristof and actress Meg Ryan meet Somaly Mam, a Cambodian woman who sold herself into slavery as a young girl and who is now a world-renowned leader in the anti-trafficking struggle. Following the film, representatives from End Slavery Tennessee will discuss efforts to stop sex trafficking in Nashville and holistically care for trafficking survivors.

TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 2012 (Reception at 5:45 p.m. / Screening at 6:15 p.m.)

As Goes Janesville
by Brad Lichtenstein

America’s middle class is dwindling, and the debate over how to save it is nowhere fiercer than in the normally tranquil state of Wisconsin. In Janesville, as jobs disappear and families are stretched to their breaking point, citizens and politicians are embroiled in an ideological battle about how to turn things around.

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2012

Solar Mamas
by Jehane Noujaim

Rafea — a 30-year-old Jordanian mother of four — is traveling outside of her village for the first time to attend a solar engineering program at India’s Barefoot College. She will join other poor women from Guatemala, Kenya, Burkina Faso, and Colombia in learning concrete skills to create change in their communities.

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2012

Beauty is Embarrassing
by Neil Berkeley

Winner of the Audience Award for Best Documentary at the 2012 Nashville Film Festival, Beauty Is Embarrassing is the funny, irreverent and inspiring story of one of America’s most important artists, Wayne White. Raised in Tennessee, Mr. White has spent the last 30 years making his indelible mark on pop culture. From his humble roots as a puppeteer in Nashville to his work as one of the creators of the “Pee-wee’s Playhouse” TV show to his current life as a darling in the fine art world, White has inspired millions of people across the country. The film chronicles the vaulted highs and the crushing lows of an artist focused on making every day a chance to create.

SATURDAY, JANUARY 19, 2013

Soul Food Junkies
by Byron Hurt

Soul food lies at the heart of African American cultural identity. The black community’s love affair with soul food is deep-rooted, complex, and in some cases, deadly. Soul Food Junkies puts this culinary tradition under the microscope to examine both its significance and its consequences.

SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 2013

The Powerbroker
by Bonnie Boswell

Whitney M. Young, Jr. was one of the most celebrated and controversial leaders of the civil rights era. As executive director of the National Urban League, he took the struggle for equality directly to the powerful white elite, gaining allies in business and government, including three presidents.

SATURDAY, MARCH 16, 2013

Wonder Women! The Untold Story of American Superheroines
by Kristy Guevara-Flanagan

Trace the fascinating evolution and legacy of the original comic book Amazon, Wonder Woman. From her creation in the 1940s to the superhero blockbusters of today, pop culture’s representations of powerful women often reflect society’s anxieties about women’s liberation.

SATURDAY , APRIL 20, 2013 (Presented at the Nashville Film Festival, Regal Green Hills Stadium 16)

The Island President
by Jon Shenk, Bonni Cohen and Richard Berge

Maldives President Mohamed Nasheed is confronting a problem greater than any world leader has ever faced — the literal survival of his country and everyone in it. His is the most low-lying country in the world; a minor rise in sea level would literally erase it from the map.

SATURDAY, MAY 18, 2013

The Revolutionary Optimists
by Nicole Newnham and Maren Grainger-Monsen

Amlan Ganguly teaches the children of Kolkata’s slums to become leaders in improving their own community’s health and sanitation. Using street theater, dance, and data as their weapons, the children have cut malaria and diarrhea rates in half, increased polio vaccination rates, and turned garbage dumps into playing fields.

SATURDAY, JUNE 15, 2013

Love Free or Die
by Macky Alston

Love Free or Die is about a man who has two defining passions that the world cannot reconcile: his love for God and for his partner Mark. The film is about church and state, love and marriage, faith and identity — and openly gay Bishop Eugene Robinson’s struggle to dispel the notion that God’s love has limits.

ITVS COMMUNITY CINEMA is a monthly screening series featuring upcoming selections from the Independent Lens season. Presented in partnership with local public television stations and leading community organizations, ITVS Community Cinema holds preview screenings in over 90 cities across the country making a real contribution on a range of current social issues by connecting communities with organizations, information, and the opportunity to get involved.

ABOUT ITVS AND INDEPENDENT LENS
ITVS is a leading funder and presenter of award-winning documentaries and dramas on public television, innovative new media projects on the Web, and the Emmy Award-winning weekly series Independent Lens on Tuesday nights at 10 PM on PBS. Independent Lens is jointly curated by ITVS and PBS and is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB), a private corporation funded by the American people, with additional funding provided by PBS and the National Endowment for the Arts.

(Community Cinema) Daisy Bates Inspires Mentors at Nashville Screening (Video)

Mentors

At the ITVS Community Cinema Nashville screening of DAISY BATES: FIRST LADY OF LITTLE ROCK at the Nashville Public Library, mentors and mentees from several organizations in Nashville shared their experience. In these two FLIP camera videos, Clemmie Greenlee, a mentor and founder of Nashville Peacemakers, and her mentee Mykeshia Sanders; and Barbara Woenker, a volunteer mentor with Big Brothers Big Sisters of Middle Tennessee, and her mentee Alasia; talk about their experiences together.

(Community Cinema) Teens Take Over Panel Discussion for `Taking Root` (Video)

taking root panel

metro treesOn Saturday, December 17, Community Cinema Nashville hosted a special screening at the Nashville Public Library of TAKING ROOT: THE VISION OF WANGARI MAATHAI. To celebrate the work of Kenya’s Maathai, the Nobel-prize winner and Green Belt Movement founder who died in September,  students from Whites Creek High School and Sierra SCENE (Student Coalition Empowering Nashville Environmentalists) presented their research projects for guests during a pre-screening reception and eco fair.  Following the film, Dr. Cliff Cockerham from Whites Creek High School led a discussion with Sierra SCENE student representatives who all offered eloquent and confident responses to the film and the issues it raised. Cockerham also presented awards to several students for their outstanding environmental science research projects. To further honor the legacy of Maathai, Metro Beautification and Environment Commission donated 75 bald cypress seedlings to attendees and announced plans to plant a special tree at Whites Creek High School in honor of the event.

Raw video of the panel discussion is embedded below.

(Community Cinema) TAKING ROOT Screening Celebrates Maathai: Includes Student Eco Fair

Wangari Maathai

STUDENT-LED SUSTAINABILITY FAIR TO AUGMENT SCREENING OF TAKING ROOT: THE VISION OF WANGARI MAATHAI, CELEBRATE LIFE OF KENYA’S NOBEL-WINNING ACTIVIST

Nashville Screening To Also Include Seedling Giveaway from Metro Beautification & Environment Commission

Whites Creek High School junior Hailie Wilson took her mysterious health problems to school – specifically, to her environmental science class. When a doctor suggested that Wilson’s vertigo, migraines, asthma and skin growths might be environmental, Wilson, who lives in Bordeaux, began a research project. She’s since been studying the relationship between her symptoms and synthetic chemicals found in soil, water and air in her community, which is near the DuPont chemical plant.

Wilson’s research project, which involves testing and comparing soil samples from the DuPont area and Bethel Church of Christ in Joelton, will be on display at the December 17, 2:00 p.m. ITVS Community Cinema Nashville screening at the downtown Nashville Public Library of TAKING ROOT: THE VISION OF WANGARI MATHAAI as part of a student-led sustainability fair. High school students from Sierra SCENE (Student Coalition Empowering Nashville Environmentalists) will present their research projects before a panel of judges. Prizes will be given to winning projects during the post-screening discussion, which is also led by students and their teacher mentors.

In addition, Metro Beautification and Environment Commission will give away dozens of seedlings to people who sign up to receive one at the screening (first-come, first-served while they last), and announce plans to plant a tree in Nashville to memorialize the life and work of Wangari Maathai.

WHAT:
FREE screening/discussion of TAKING ROOT: THE VISION OF WANGARI MAATHAI and student-led sustainability fair.

WHO: ITVS Community Cinema Nashville, presented by NPT, Nashville Public Library, Nashville Film Festival and Hands On Nashville with special partners Sierra SCENE, The Sierra Club of Middle Tennessee, and Metro Beautification and Environment Commission.

WHEN: Saturday, December 17, 2 p.m. reception/sustainability fair, 3 p.m. film/discussion
For more information, visit: http://www.itvs.org/engagement.

Where: Nashville Public Library, Downtown Branch, 615 Church St., Nashville, TN 37219

Please contact Allison Inman (allison_inman@itvs.org or 615-585-8321) by Thursday, December 15, for accessibility or accommodation requests, including captioning, sign language translation, or audio description services.

Here’s a clip:

Kicking off Community Cinema with a Focus on Women and Girls

Women and Girls Lead

Before September 17’s season opener for Community Cinema, Women, War & Peace: Peace Unveiled, a diverse group of women gathered for lunch at the downtown library to learn about Women and Girls Lead, a multi-year initiative from ITVS to use media to bring attention to issues facing girls and women worldwide, and discuss how make Nashville a better place for girls and women.

Women and Girls LeadThe group got an overview of the initiative from Nashville Public Television (NPT) president and CEO Beth Curley, and watched clips from this season’s Community Cinema season films that are part of Women and Girls Lead. Together with NPT,  I invited those assembled to get involved by partnering on Women and Girls Lead films, taking advantage of free educational tools, tuning into Independent Lens this season, and hosting community discussions. I invite you to the same,  and ask that you join our Facebook community page, Women and Girls Lead Nashville, for updates.

In an informal engagement session during the lunch, NPT’s director of education, Jo Ann Scalf, asked the group to envision how a city can be most hospitable to girls and women. Ideas ranged from introducing them to better heroines (not princesses) to celebrating their math and science skills to creating a hub for all girl-related programs and services in Nashville. Two teachers from the group expressed interest in hosting documentary screenings for students, a service we’re excited to provide in select schools this season as part of the Belcourt Theatre’s education program.

Women and Girls LeadAfter the luncheon, we officially opened our Community Cinema season with Peace Unveiled, an unsettling but ultimately inspiring documentary about Afghan women fighting for a seat at the negotiating table between the Afghan government and the Taliban. Instead of a panel discussion, we heard from Elizabeth Barger, cofounder of CODEPINK, a women-led grassroots peace and social justice movement, and Judy Meeker, another CODEPINK cofounder and founder or More Than Warmth, a quilt project that promotes friendship with nations at war and provides opportunities for cultural understanding among children worldwide.

On October 15, we’ll screen the fabulous Deaf Jam, another great film that focuses on a powerful young woman. It follows New York City’s Aeta Brodski as she prepares to be one of the first deaf poets to compete in a youth slam, leading to an unexpected collaboration. Following the film, we’ll be treated to an ASL poetry performance from local deaf poets, thanks to a partnership with Hearing Bridges. And thanks to our new partnership with the Belcourt Theatre, we’re able to bring Deaf Jam to Hume-Fogg High School for its Food For Thought series and to Martha O’Bryan Center’s middle school afterschool program—another chance to promote cultural understanding through film!

And don’t forget our September 28 screening another part of Women, War and Peace, the award-winning Pray the Devil Back to Hell, at Lipscomb University. The film is screening as part of the university’s excellent HumanDOCS series and starts at 8:30 p.m. in Ward Hall. See you there!

Allison Inman is a national engagement coordinator for ITVS and the Community Cinema coordinator in Nashville.  She is also the education and engagement coordinator for the Belcourt.