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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2006
September
U. of I. scholar's documentary
on American Indians to reach broad audience
Andrea
Lynn, Humanities Editor
217-333-2177; andreal@uiuc.edu
9/14/06
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| U.
of I. scholar LeAnne Howe will premiere her new documentary,
“Indian Country Diaries: Spiral of Fire,”
at various locations around the country and on public
television. |
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CHAMPAIGN,
Ill. — A professor of American
Indian Studies and of English
at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is taking her show
on the road quite literally this fall, shifting her venue, if only temporarily,
from the classroom to television and movie theaters.
LeAnne Howe, an award-winning author, playwright and scholar who teaches
in the university’s American Indian Studies program and in the
MFA creative writing program, will premiere, show and broadcast her
new documentary, “Indian Country Diaries: Spiral of Fire,”
at various locations around the country and on public television.
She is both the screenwriter and narrator on Part 2 of the 90-minute
Public Broadcasting Service documentary, Part 1 is titled “Indian Country Diaries: Seat at the Drum,”
and it features journalist Mark Anthony Rolo (Bad River Ojibwa) and
his journey to Los Angeles to speak with some of the thousands of American
Indian families who were relocated from poor reservations to cities
in the last half of the 20th century.
Howe, an enrolled citizen of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, will premiere
the film at the Smithsonian
Institution’s National Museum of the
American Indian at 7 p.m. on Sept. 29 and at 1:30 p.m. on Sept.
30 as part of the museum’s “Native Networks” film
and video series. She will lead a discussion of her work following
the evening screening.
Illinois’ American Indian Studies program will host a special
screening of Howe’s film from 7 to 9 p.m. on Oct. 26 in Room
66 of the University Library, 1408 W. Gregory Drive, Urbana. That event
is free and open to the public.
Screenings and openings have been scheduled “all around the country,”
Howe said, including in California, New Hampshire and Oregon.
The film also will be broadcast nationally on most PBS affiliate stations
throughout November. The U. of I. PBS affiliate, WILL-TV,
will show it at 8 p.m. on Nov. 17.
Ten years in the making, the documentary takes Howe to the North Carolina
homeland of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians “to discover
how their mix of tourism, community and cultural preservation is the
key to the tribe’s health in the 21st century.”
Along the way, Howe, who appears as a character throughout the film,
said she seeks to reconcile her own “complex identity” as
the daughter of a Choctaw woman and a Cherokee man she never knew.
Howe described
the film, with which she was involved over the past four years, as “both
a national story and a very personal story for me.”
“It’s a journey of trying to understand who we are, where
we come from, where we are going. As such, I believe that the film will
speak to mainstream audiences everywhere.”
She also said the documentary, which is a co-production of Native American
Public Telecommunications and Adanvdo Vision, is unique in at least
one aspect.
“American Indians filming American Indians on this large a production
scale for a national audience is a first.”
Howe also wrote and co-produced the documentary “Playing Pastime,”
about American Indian fast-pitch softball and its role in community
and personal survival.
Three-time Emmy award winning filmmaker James Fortier was her co-producer.
She and Fortier have just entered “Playing Pastime” in the
American Indian Film Festival, which will be held in San Francisco in
November.
Howe is founder and director of WagonBurner Theatre Troop; her plays
have been produced in California, Colorado, Maine, New Mexico, New York
and Texas.
A professional writer for 25 years, she has read her fiction all over
the United States and been an invited lecturer in Japan, Jordan, Israel,
Romania and Spain.
Howe’s first novel, “Shell Shaker” (2002), received
an American Book Award from the Before Columbus Foundation.
Her collection of poetry, “Evidence of Red” (2005), received
the Oklahoma Book Award for Poetry in 2006. “Miko Kings,”
an Indian baseball novel set in Ada, Okla., in 1903 and 1969, is forthcoming
this fall.
On leave from Illinois this school year, but returning frequently to
meet with her graduate students, Howe currently is the John and Renee
Grisham Writer-in-Residence at the University of Mississippi, a fellowship
that she was nominated for and won.
Howe said she came to Illinois in the fall of 2005 to help create its
American Indian Studies program. She said arriving on the campus while
it was in the midst of its charged public debates over keeping its “Chief
Illiniwek” has been momentous.
Having just left a teaching post at the University of Minnesota, home
of the oldest American Indian Studies department in the U.S, also has
been remarkable.
“Coming from the oldest and best to the most fragile and youngest
American Indian Studies program was a big step with lots of challenges,
lots of excitement and great potential.
“I am delighted to be here.”
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