Showing posts with label films. Show all posts
Showing posts with label films. Show all posts

Monday, February 27, 2017

New Event! Local Journalists On Stage at His Girl Friday Screening

Rosemary Armao, Marion Roach Smith and Casey Seiler will engage the audience in conversation about women in journalism at our free upcoming screening of His Girl Friday (this coming Friday, March 3rd).
March 3 (Friday): HIS GIRL FRIDAY
Pre-screening talk with Rosemary Armao, Marion Roach Smith and Casey Seiler about the challenges facing women in journalism — 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus, 1400 Washington Ave.
Film screening to follow— 8:00 p.m.
Directed by Howard Hawks (United States, 1940, 92 minutes, b/w)
Starring Cary Grant, Rosalind Russell, Ralph Bellamy
A newspaper editor uses every trick he can think of to stop his top reporter—and ex-wife—from quitting journalism and hopping a train to Albany to marry another man with the intention of settling into a new life as a housewife. This fast-paced comedy with overlapping dialogue was adapted by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur from their  Broadway hit The Front Page. Chicago Reader reviewer Dave Kehr described Cary Grant’s performance as “…truly virtuoso— stunning technique applied to the most challenging material.” The American Film Institute ranked His Girl Friday at #19 in its list of the best American comedies of all time. Quentin Tarantino credits the film with teaching him to write dialogue.

A new high-definition digital restoration of His Girl Friday will be shown.

Rosemary Armao, a star of WAMC’s “The Roundtable,” is the Director of the Journalism Program at the University at Albany. She is a former Executive Director of Investigative Reporters and Editors and former President of the Journalism and Women Symposium.

Marion Roach Smith is the author of four mass-market books. A former staffer at The New York Times, she has been a commentator on NPR’s All Things Considered and a talk show host on Sirius Satellite Radio. She currently teaches writing online and serves as a working member of the Friends of The New York State Writers Institute.

Casey Seiler is the Times Union state editor and columnist, and previously served as the paper’s entertainment editor.

For more information contact the New York State Writers Institute at 518 442 5620 or visit us online at www.writers.edu/inst.
A newspaper editor uses every trick he can think of to stop his top reporter—and ex-wife—from quitting journalism and hopping a train to Albany to marry another man, with the intention of settling into a new life as a housewife. This fast-paced comedy with overlapping dialogue was adapted by Ben Hecht and Charles MacArthur from their Broadway hit The Front Page. Chicago Reader reviewer Dave Kehr described Cary Grant’s performance as “…truly virtuoso— stunning technique applied to the most challenging material.” The American Film Institute ranked His Girl Friday at #19 in its list of the best American comedies of all time. Quentin Tarantino credits the film with teaching him to write
A new high-definition digital restoration of His Girl Friday will be shown.


Rosemary Armao, a star of WAMC’s “The Roundtable,” is the Director of the Journalism Program at the University at Albany. She is a former Executive Director of Investigative Reporters and Editors and former President of the Journalism and Women Symposium.


Marion Roach Smith is the author of four mass-market books. A former staffer at The New York Times, she has been a commentator on NPR’s All Things Considered and a talk show host on Sirius Satellite Radio. She currently teaches writing online and serves as a working member of the Friends of The New York State Writers Institute.


Casey Seiler is the Times Union state editor and columnist, and previously served as the paper’s entertainment editor.


For more information contact the New York State Writers Institute at 518 442 5620 or visit us online at www.writers.edu/inst.


 








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Friday, February 17, 2017

New Event! Sacco & Vanzetti Brown Bag Lunch 2/21

You are invited to bring your lunch to the following free events:
February 21 (Tuesday): THE TRIALS AND EXECUTIONS OF SACCO AND VANZETTI...
Discussion-- 12:15 pm, Husted Hall, Room 014, University at Albany Downtown Campus
Moderator: Frankie Bailey, Ph.D. – Professor of Criminal Justice
Panelists: Gerald Zahavi, Ph.D. – Professor of History, “The Anarchist World of Sacco and Vanzetti”
Richard Hamm, Ph.D. – Professor of History, “What the Sacco and Vanzetti Case Meant to One Legal Liberal”

Picture:  Ben Shahn's Sacco and Vanzetti
Sponsored by the School of Criminal Justice’s “Crime and Multiculturalism in the 21st Century”

series in association with Friday’s free upcoming film event:


February 24 (Friday): SACCO AND VANZETTI
Film screening followed by a conversation with director Peter Miller and film editor Amy Linton — 7:00 p.m. [note early start time], Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus
Directed by Peter Miller (United States, 2006, 80 minutes, color)
This documentary, winner of the American Historical Association’s best film award, tells the story of two Italian politically radical immigrants charged with the 1920 robbery of a Massachusetts shoe factory and the murder of two of its employees. As it recounts their trials, public protests, and appeals on their behalf the film offers insights into present-day issues of civil liberties and immigrant rights. Ken Burns called it “A wonderful film, as timeless as the struggle for human justice, as relevant as today’s headlines.”
Peter Miller is an award-winning documentary filmmaker whose films include the theatrically-released A.K.A. DOC POMUS, JEWS AND BASEBALL, and SACCO AND VANZETTI. He has directed numerous documentaries for PBS and has been a producer for documentaries by Ken Burns and Lynn Novak including THE WAR and JAZZ, and the Peabody Award-winning FRANK LLOYD WRIGHT.
Amy Linton has edited numerous award-winning films including Julie Dash’s DAUGHTERS OF THE DUST, a Sundance winner that was selected for the Library of Congress’ National Film Registry. She has worked on dozens of documentaries, feature films, and music videos in her 25-year career.
Sponsored by the Writers Institute in conjunction with UAlbany’s School of Criminal Justice’s Justice & Multiculturalism in the 21st Century: Crime, Justice, and Public Memory Film Series

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Tuesday, January 10, 2017

Announcing the Spring 2017 Series!

Here are a few highlights of a truly exciting season:

Robert Coover, beloved American fiction writer, with Huck Out West, a rollicking sequel to Huckleberry Finn.

Convicted murderer Shaka Senghor, with his memoir of redemption, Writing My Wrongs.

Jazz violinist and MacArthur Genius Regina Carter on stage with Joe Donahue.
Diane Ackerman, with the new film tie-in edition of Zookeeper’s Wife which will star Jessica Chastain.  
Preeminent Postmodernist painter David Salle with his book How to See, on stage with Joe Donahue.
Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor presenting her memoir, My Beloved World.
MacArthur Genius and filmmaker Stanley Nelson with his acclaimed new documentary, The Black Panthers.
Young Irish novelist Ruth Gilligan, the youngest author to reach #1 on Ireland’s Bestseller List, with a novel about Ireland’s Jews.
Iraq war interrogator and torturer Eric Fair with a memoir about his crisis of conscience.
Douglas Brinkley, CNN’s official Presidential Historian, with a new book on FDR’s crusade for public lands.
David Ebershoff, author of The Danish Girl, the basis of the Oscar-winning film.
AND MANY, MANY MORE!
All events are free and open to the public!
For a complete schedule, see the Visiting Writers Series here:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/vws.html
For more information, contact the Writers Institute visit our website at www.albany.edu/writers-inst.

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Thursday, February 5, 2015

A searing directorial debut-- Jason Osder

Jason Osder, who visits UAlbany on Friday, is profiled in Filmmaker magazine:
Osder’s searing directorial debut, Let the Fire Burn, which premiered at the 2013 Tribeca Film Festival, is an archival footage marvel. With no narration and sparse title cards, it dives into the maelstrom that was the Philadelphia Police Department’s tragic raid on the black separatist group MOVE’s West Philadelphia compound in 1985, during which the home, where 13 men, women and children lived, was shot upon 10,000 times, doused with unspeakable amounts of water and then finally firebombed. Almost everyone inside died, and nearly 70 other homes in the surrounding working-class black community were destroyed.

More in Filmmaker magazine:  http://filmmakermagazine.com/people/jason-osder/#.VNO-ll8o7s0

More about Osder's visit tomorrow:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/osder_jason15.html

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Let the Fire Burn reviewed in the L. A. Times

L. A. Times critic Kenneth Turan reviews Let the Fire Burn (2013), by Jason Osder who visits UAlbany for a screening and Q&A tomorrow, Friday 2/6 at 7PM in Page Hall.

"Let the Fire Burn" is a brooding, disturbing documentary about an inferno that becomes an enigma. It earns its considerable impact by telling an unnerving story and leaving it, in ways both daring and effective, fundamentally unresolved.

The events detailed here are some of the most unsettling in modern American urban history. On May 13, 1985, the Philadelphia police, stymied in a standoff that stemmed from a bitter conflict with a radical group called MOVE that had sputtered on and off for more than a decade, dropped an incendiary device on the row house that was the group's headquarters.

More in the L. A. Times:  http://articles.latimes.com/2013/oct/17/entertainment/la-et-mn-let-fire-burn-review

More about our event with Jason Osder:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/osder_jason15.html

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Thursday, January 15, 2015

William Wellman Film Festival in the Times Union

Amy Biancolli blogs our upcoming William A. Wellman Film Festival in the Times Union:

A mini-festival of five movies from the long-running, wide-ranging career of Hollywood heydey director William A. Wellman forms the core of this spring’s classic film series offered by the New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany, which has announced its slate of free movies and related events for the upcoming season.

The run of Wellman films opens with rat-a-tat gangster saga “The Public Enemy” on Friday, Jan. 30, and concludes on Friday, May 1, with a reading and discussion by the director’s son, William Wellman Jr., an actor and author of the forthcoming biography “Wild Bill Wellman: Hollywood Rebel.” “Wings,” Wellman’s soaring, silent 1927 Oscar winner (the first ever) depicting World War I fighter pilots, will screen on Friday, April 24. Also in the festival: “The Public Enemy,” “Nothing Sacred” and “Beau Geste.”

Besides the helpings of Wellman, other films in the springtime lineup at Page Hall include Tanya Hamilton’s 2010 Black Panther drama “Night Catches Us,” Kenneth Branagh’s 1993 adaptation of “Much Ado About Nothing” (screened in conjunction with an April 13 Writers Institute appearance by Shakespeare & Company founder Tina Packer) and the classic 1939 iteration of Emily Brontë’s “Wuthering Heights” from another legendary Hollywood Bill, William Wyler.

In the TU:   http://blog.timesunion.com/localarts/wellman-festival-anchors-writers-institute-spring-movie-series/36137/

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Monday, January 12, 2015

New Spring Series!

You are invited to attend our Spring 2015 series of free events.

The Visiting Writers Series will feature  social critic Katha Pollitt, major novelist Alice McDermott, celebrated New Yorker proofreader Mary Norris, rising literary stars Yelena Akhtiorskaya and Elisa Albert, two-time Booker Prize winner Peter Carey, major American poet Alicia Ostriker, prize-winning Caribbean author Caryl Phillips, Shakespeare authority and stage actress Tina Packer, a celebration of local civil rights crusader Barbara Smith, and many other events!

The Classic Film Series will feature young prize-winning director Tanya Hamilton (Night Catches Us), theater and film producer Ron Simons (winner of Tony Awards for for A Gentleman’s Guide to Love and Murder; Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike; and the 2012 Porgy & Bess), prize-winning documentary filmmaker Jason Osder (Let the Fire Burn), and William Wellman, Jr., son and biographer of legendary Hollywood director William A. Wellman, whose career spanned four decades, from the Silent Era to the 1950s.



We hope to see you soon!

Best regards and Happy New Year,

The New York State Writers Institute

For more information, visit our website at http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/vws.html#.VK1JEF8o7s1 and our blog at http://nyswiblog.blogspot.com/ , or call us at 518-442-5620.

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Thursday, May 1, 2014

Kill Your Darlings in the New York Times


A. O. Scott reviews the 2013 film Kill Your Darlings, co-written by Austin Bunn, who visits Albany
tomorrow.

More about the visit:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/bunn_austin14.html

From the NY Times:    Long before Allen Ginsberg became the benevolent, bearded Buddha of the counterculture — and one of the most beloved American poets — he was a skinny, anxious Columbia freshman who fell in with a group of literary rebels. John Krokidas’s debut feature, “Kill Your Darlings,” is intent on studying these not-yet-Beats in their fledgling state, as they write the first drafts of their own legends.

More in the Times:  http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/16/movies/kill-your-darlings-stars-daniel-radcliffe.html?_r=0

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Monday, April 7, 2014

Francesca Marciano in the New York Times

Michiko Kakutani reviews the new story collection, The Other Language (2014), by acclaimed Italian author and Oscar-nominated screenwriter Francesca Marciano, who visits the Writers Institute this coming Friday.

"Francesca Marciano’s magical, fleet-footed stories leap around the globe, from Rome to New York to Mombasa, from a small Greek village to a remote island off the coast of Tanzania to a fortress on the banks of the Narmada River in India. She has an uncanny ability to conjure specific places...."

More in the New York Times:   http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/31/books/no-safe-harbor-for-travelers-in-the-other-language.html

More about Marciano's visit:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/marciano_francesca14.html

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Wednesday, February 12, 2014

Film Showcases Jerome Kern's Songwriting

Lovely to Look At (1952) will be screened this Friday in honor of Valentine's Day as part of the New York State Writers Institute's Classic Film Series.

The film features 10 songs by major American songwriter Jerome Kern including "Smoke Gets In Your Eyes," "I Won't Dance," the title song "Lovely to Look At," "I'll Be Hard to Handle," "Opening Night," "Lafayette," "Yesterdays," "You're Devastating," "The Most Exciting Night," and "The Touch of Your Hand."

Complete film series:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/cfs.html

From Jerome Kern tribute page at Stanford University:

More than fifty years after his passing, the music of Jerome Kern remains a cornerstone of the Great American Songbook, having survived the fads and fashions of four generations—it continues to be performed on the Broadway stage and recorded by major artists. Known for creating the musical Show Boat, Jerome Kern composed his enduring classics for both stage and movie musicals; works such as “The Way You Look Tonight,” “Old Man River,” “Smoke Gets in Your Eyes” and more.

More: http://riverwalkjazz.stanford.edu/#program/magic-jerome-kern-tribute


 

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Tuesday, January 7, 2014

NYS Writers Institute Announces Spring 2014 Schedule of Events


E. L. Doctorow! Julia Glass! Walter Mosley! Christopher Durang! And many more….

The New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany announces its Spring 2014 schedule of visiting writer appearances and film series screenings. Events take place on the UAlbany uptown and downtown campuses and are free and open to the public (unless otherwise noted).

Spring 2014 Visiting Writers Series:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/vws.html

Spring 2014 Classic Film Series:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/cfs.html

"The Spring 2014 Visiting Writers Series features old friends and new faces, always a good mix for literary events," said Institute Director Donald Faulkner. Highlighting the spring season are appearances by literary icon E. L. Doctorow, author of the new novel Andrew's Brain, which Booklist described as "an exquisitely disturbing, morally complex, tragic, yet darkly funny novel of the collective American unconscious;" poet and human rights activist Carolyn Forché, co-editor of the new anthology Poetry of Witness: The Tradition in English, featuring poems "composed at an extreme of human endurance;" a performance of American Place Theatre's adaptation of Richard Wright's classic autobiographical work Black Boy; Robert H. Patton, the grandson of legendary World War II General George S. Patton, and author of Hell Before Breakfast, a history of American War journalism; and Austin Bunn, who co-wrote the screenplay for the hit film KILL YOUR DARLINGS.

In addition to Doctorow, visiting fiction writers will include National Book Award winner (Three Junes) Julia Glass; novelist Walter Mosley, best known for his detective fiction, who will be reading with mystery writer and UAlbany's criminal justice scholar Frankie Y. Bailey; Dinaw Mengestu and Akhil Sharma, two distinguished young writers whose new work explores African and Asian immigrant experiences; and three authors with new short story collections-Albany Law School professor James D. Redwood; Italian novelist and Oscar-nominated screenwriter Francesca Marciano; and 2013 Man Booker International Prize winner Lydia Davis.

Nonfiction authors include investigative journalist Nick Turse, whose New York Times bestseller Kill Anything that Moves documents U. S. war crimes in Vietnam; and Walter Kirn, author of the new true crime nonfiction book Blood Will Out, about serial con artist Clark Rockefeller.

Playwright Christopher Durang, winner of the 2013 Tony Award for his comic Broadway hit Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike will deliver the 18th Annual Burian Lecture on his career as a playwright. The Institute and UAlbany's English Department will also cosponsor a special celebration of the work of poet, translator, and former UAlbany professor Pierre Joris.

The Spring 2014 Classic Film Series features several film screenings that tie in with guests of the Visiting Writers Series, as well as appearances by three filmmakers. In addition to screening KILL YOUR DARLINGS followed by commentary by co-screenwriter Austin Bunn, the Institute will also be screening SWEET DREAMS, a documentary about a group of Rwandan women who form the first all-female drumming troupe and open the country's first ice cream parlor, with the film's director, Rob Fruchtman, providing commentary; and the Italian film MIELE (HONEY), with commentary by the film's screenwriter Francesca Marciano, who will also be visiting the Institute to read from her new story collection. Additional screenings of films with visiting writer tie-ins will include RAGTIME, based on E. L. Doctorow's award-winning novel, and UP IN THE AIR, based on the novel by Walter Kirn.

Rounding out the Classic Film Series will be screenings of the Vietnamese film CYCLO [XICH LO]; a Valentine's Day treat, the musical LOVELY TO LOOK AT; THE GRAPES OF WRATH, sponsored in conjunction with UAlbany's School of Criminal Justice's Food, Crime, and Justice Film Series; a St. Patrick's Day offering, THE QUIET MAN, starring John Wayne as a retired prizefighter; the Satyajit Ray film MAHANGAR [THE BIG CITY]; and the silent film THE DOCKS OF NEW YORK, with live piano accompaniment by Mike Schiffer.

The complete listing of the Visiting Writers Series and Classic Film Series schedules follows.

VISITING WRITER SERIES

January 30 (Thursday): Carolyn Forché, poet and human rights activist

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Carolyn Forché has written poetry about her firsthand experiences of political strife and violent conflict around the globe. Most recently, she is the co-editor with Duncan Wu of a new anthology, Poetry of Witness: The Tradition in English, 1500 – 2001 (2014), featuring 300 poems "composed at an extreme of human endurance." The book is a companion to Forché's landmark 1993 anthology, Against Forgetting: Twentieth-Century Poetry of Witness. Forché received the 2013 Academy of American Poets Fellowship for "distinguished poetic achievement."

February 4 (Tuesday): Walter Mosley, novelist, and Frankie Y. Bailey, mystery writer and criminal justice scholar

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Walter Mosley, bestselling author of more than 40 books, and "one of this nation's finest writers" (Boston Globe), is America's leading author of detective fiction in the tradition of Dashiell Hammett and Raymond Chandler. Mosley is best-known for a series of mystery novels set in Los Angeles featuring African American private investigator Easy Rawlins. Mosley's twelfth Rawlins mystery, his first in six years, is Little Green (2013).

Frankie Y. Bailey, UAlbany Criminal Justice professor and novelist, is the author most recently of The Red Queen Dies (2013), the first novel in a "near-future" police procedural series set in Albany. She is also the author of five books in the Silver Dagger mystery series, featuring crime historian Lizzie Stuart.

February 12 (Wednesday): American Place Theatre performance of Black Boy

Performance - 7:30 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Pre-performance discussion at 7 p.m.

Tickets: general public $15 in advance, $20 day of; students/seniors/UA faculty & staff $10 in advance, $15 day of

Box Office: (518) 442-3997; tickets@albany.edu

The "Literature to Life" program of American Place Theatre presents a verbatim one-man adaptation of the first half of Richard Wright's classic autobiographical work, Black Boy. The performance, in which the actor plays more than a dozen characters, dramatizes Wright's journey from childhood innocence to adulthood in the Jim Crow South.

Presented by the Performing Arts Center in conjunction with the Writers Institute, with support provided by the Diversity Transformation Fund, administered through the Office of Diversity and Inclusion; and the Holiday Inn Express.

February 18 (Tuesday): James D. Redwood, short story writer

Reading - 4:15 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

James D. Redwood, Professor of Law at Albany Law School, is the author of a first collection of stories, Love Beneath the Napalm (2014), inaugural winner of the Notre Dame Review Book Prize. The stories are based on Redwood's experiences as an English teacher and social worker in 1970s Vietnam.

February 19 (Wednesday): Nick Turse, investigative journalist and military historian

Reading and discussion - 4:15 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Nick Turse, award-winning journalist specializing in national security and military issues, is the author of the New York Times bestseller Kill Anything That Moves: The Real American War in Vietnam (2013), an account of U.S. war crimes against Vietnamese civilians based on previously classified documents. His investigations of U.S. war crimes have earned him the Ridenhour Prize.

Cosponsored by Women Against War, and UAlbany's Journalism Program in conjunction with its 40th Anniversary

February 27 (Thursday): E. L. Doctorow, fiction writer

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

E. L. Doctorow, recipient of the American Academy of Arts and Letters 2013 Gold Medal, and the National Book Foundation's 2013 Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters, is "a writer of dazzling gifts and boundless, imaginative energy.... our great chronicler of American mythology" (Joyce Carol Oates). His novels include World's Fair (1985), winner of the National Book Award, and four other finalists for the same prize--The Book of Daniel (1971), Loon Lake (1980), Billy Bathgate (1989) and The March (2005). His newest novel is Andrew's Brain (2014), one man's reflections on his eventful life, loves, and tragedies, and a probing inquiry into the reliability of memory.

March 5 (Wednesday): A Celebration of Poet and Translator Pierre Joris

Panel discussion on the works of Pierre Joris - 2:00 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

Moderated by Donald Faulkner, with poets and scholars Robert Kelly, Peter Cockelbergh, Belle Gironda, and Don Byrd

Conversation with Pierre Joris - 4:15 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

Moderated by Tomás Urayoán Noel

Reading by Pierre Joris - 8:00 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

Pierre Joris, poet, translator, and scholar taught at UAlbany from 1992 to 2013. Joris's work bridges North American, European, and North African literary traditions and cultures. He is the author of more than 25 books and chapbooks of poetry, including Breccia: Selected Poems 1972-1986 (1987), Poasis: Selected Poems 1986-1999 (2001), and Barzakh: Selected Poems 2000-2012 (forthcoming 2014). Other notable works include three volumes of the avant-garde anthology series, Poems for the Millennium. He received the 2005 PEN Award for Poetry in Translation.

Cosponsored by the Writers Institute and UAlbany's English Department, with additional support from University Auxiliary Services, the Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures, Fence, and Barzakh.

March 10 (Monday): The 18th Annual Burian Lecture presented by Christopher Durang, playwright

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

The Burian Lecture - 8:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Christopher Durang is the author of the comic Broadway hit, Vanya and Sonia and Masha and Spike, winner of the 2013 Tony Award, New York Drama Critics' Circle Award, and Outer Critics Circle Award for Best Play. Winner of three Obie Awards for playwriting, Durang was also a Pulitzer Prize finalist for his 2005 play, Miss Witherspoon.

Cosponsored by UAlbany's Theatre Department and funded by the Jarka and Grayce Burian Endowment

March 13 (Thursday): Dinaw Mengestu, fiction writer and journalist

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Campus Center Room 375

Dinaw Mengestu received a MacArthur Fellowship in 2012, and was named one of the New Yorker magazine's "20 under 40" writers in 2010. Born in Ethiopia, and raised in Illinois, Mengestu is the author of the novels The Beautiful Things That Heaven Bears (2007), which received the Los Angeles Times Book Prize. His newest novel is All Our Names (2014), about an African university student who attempts to escape his revolutionary past and invent a new identity for himself in America.

March 25 (Tuesday): Walter Kirn, journalist, and fiction and nonfiction writer

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Assembly Hall, Campus Center

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Recital Hall, Performing Arts Center

Walter Kirn is the author of the new nonfiction book Blood Will Out: The True Story of a Murder, a Mystery, and a Masquerade (2014), about the author's 10-year "friendship" with Clark Rockefeller, the serial con artist and murderer, who is currently serving a life sentence. Kirn is the National Correspondent for the New Republic, where he covers "politics and culture and their convergence." His books include the memoir, My Mother's Bible (2013) and the novels, Up in the Air (2001), and Thumbsucker (1999) that were made into major films. (see Classic Film Series March 7 listing for screening of UP IN THE AIR)

April 3 (Thursday): Julia Glass, novelist

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Campus Center Room 375

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Huxley Theatre, NYS Museum, Cultural Education Center, Downtown Albany

Julia Glass published her first novel, Three Junes (2002), at the age of 46. The book earned extraordinary praise from reviewers and received the National Book Award for Fiction. Her new novel, And the Dark Sacred Night (2014), set in the Vermont woods and on Cape Cod, tells the story of a middle-aged man who seeks to discover the identity of the father he never knew.

Cosponsored by the Friends of the New York State Library

April 11 (Friday): Francesca Marciano, novelist, short story writer, and screenwriter

Reading - 4:15 p.m., University Hall Room 110

Francesca Marciano is an acclaimed Italian novelist and short story writer who writes her fiction in English, and an Oscar-nominated screenwriter who writes her scripts in Italian. Her newest book is the story collection, The Other Language (2014), which Jhumpa Lahiri called "an astonishing collection.... a vision of geography as it grounds us, as it shatters us, as it transforms the soul." Her novels include The End of Manners (2008), and Casa Rossa (2002). (see Classic Film Series April 11 listing for the screening of MIELE [HONEY], written by Francesca Marciano)

April 16 (Wednesday): Lydia Davis, short story author and translator

Reading and McKinney Writing Contest Award Ceremony - 8:00 p.m., Biotech Auditorium, Center for Biotechnology and Interdisciplinary Studies Building, Rensselaer (RPI), Troy

Lydia Davis, winner of the 2013 Man Booker International Prize, will read from her newest story collection, Can't and Won't (2014). Masterpieces in miniature, the stories feature complaint letters, reflections on dreams, and small dilemmas. Davis has been called "one of the quiet giants of American fiction" (Los Angeles Times Book Review), and "one of the best writers in America" (Oprah's O Magazine). Her previous collections include The Collected Stories (2009), Varieties of Disturbance (2007), and Samuel Johnson is Indignant (2001).

Cosponsored in conjunction with Rensselaer's 72nd Annual McKinney Writing Contest and Reading and Vollmer W. Fries Lecture. For map and directions see: http://rpi.edu/tour/directions.html

April 22 (Tuesday): Akhil Sharma, Indian-American fiction writer

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Assembly Hall, Campus Center

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Assembly Hall, Campus Center

Akhil Sharma, "a supernova in the galaxy of young, talented Indian writers" (Publishers Weekly), received the PEN/Hemingway Award and the Whiting Writers' Award for his first novel, An Obedient Father (2000). His much-anticipated second novel is Family Life (2014), the story of Indian-American immigrants who are forced to cope after one of the family's two sons suffers a dreadful accident.

April 29 (Tuesday): Robert H. Patton, novelist and historian

Seminar - 4:15 p.m., Standish Room, Science Library

Reading - 8:00 p.m., Assembly Hall, Campus Center

Robert H. Patton, novelist, historian, and grandson of legendary World War II General George S. Patton (1885-1945), is the author most recently of Hell Before Breakfast (2014), a history of American war journalism between 1860 and 1910, from the Civil War and Spanish American War to conflicts in Europe and Asia. He is also the author of the bestselling memoir, The Pattons: A Personal History of an American Family (1994), which Jonathan Yardley of the Washington Post named one of the best books of the year.

CLASSIC FILM SERIES

January 31 (Friday): CYCLO [XICH LO]

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Tran Anh Hung (Vietnam, 1995, 123 minutes, color, in Vietnamese with English subtitles)

The first Vietnamese film to be nominated for an Oscar, and the winner of two top prizes at the Venice Film Festival, CYCLO tells the tale of a bicycle-taxi driver in Ho Chi Minh City who becomes entangled in a world of drugs and crime.

February 7 (Friday): RAGTIME

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Milos Forman (United States, 1981, 155 minutes, color)

RAGTIME is based on E. L. Doctorow's best-selling novel of sprawling plot lines, and fictional characters and historical figures whose lives intersect in New York City during the early 1900s. The film version focuses on the story of Coalhouse Walker, Jr., a black piano player who seeks justice for an incident involving a group of racists. The film was nominated for eight Oscars and seven Golden Globe awards. (see Visiting Writers Series February 27 listing for an appearance by E. L. Doctorow)

February 14 (Friday): LOVELY TO LOOK AT

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Mervyn LeRoy and Vincente Minnelli; choreographer Hermes Pan (United States, 1952, 103 minutes, color)

A lush 1950s Technicolor remake of the 1935 Astaire and Rogers musical ROBERTA, this romantic comedy is among the most visually dazzling films of its era.

February 28 (Friday): THE GRAPES OF WRATH

Film screening - 7:00 p.m. [note early start time], Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by John Ford; cinematographer Gregg Toland (United States, 1940, 129 minutes, b/w)

Based on John Steinbeck's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel about an Oklahoma family forced off their land during the Dust Bowl, THE GRAPES OF WRATH was widely considered the greatest American movie of its time. Nominated for seven Oscars, it won for Best Director. UAlbany history professor Kendra Smith-Howard will moderate a discussion immediately following the screening.

Sponsored in conjunction with UAlbany's School of Criminal Justice's Food, Crime, and Justice Film Series

March 7 (Friday): UP IN THE AIR

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Jason Reitman (United States, 2009, 109 minutes, color)

George Clooney portrays a corporate downsizing expert who travels around the globe restructuring companies and firing people in this acclaimed adaptation of the 2001 novel by Walter Kirn. The film received over 70 award nominations, winning Golden Globe awards for Best Screenplay and Best Actor for George Clooney, and the American Film Institute's Movie of the Year. (see Visiting Writers Series March 25 listing for an appearance by Walter Kirn).

March 14 (Friday): THE QUIET MAN

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by John Ford (United States, 1952, 129 minutes, color)

Director John Ford called upon his friend and favorite actor, John Wayne, to play a former prizefighter who retires to the Irish village of his birth. Unexpectedly, he falls in love with a fiery red-head (Maureen O'Hara), but must negotiate his way around her disapproving brother (Victor McLaglen).

March 28 (Friday): MAHANAGAR [THE BIG CITY]

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Satyajit Ray (India, 1963, 122 minutes, b/w, in Bengali with English subtitles, and English)

In Calcutta during the 1960s, a young housewife takes a job as a salesperson to help support her family. That decision puts her in conflict with her children, her in-laws, and eventually her husband. Famed Indian director Satyajit Ray won the Best Director Award at the 1964 Berlin International Film Festival for this celebrated landmark of world cinema.

April 4 (Friday): THE DOCKS OF NEW YORK

Film screening - 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Josef von Sternberg (United States, 1928, 76 minutes, b/w, silent with live musical accompaniment by Mike Schiffer)

In this 1928 silent masterpiece directed by Josef von Sternberg, a steamboat stoker working on the New York City waterfront saves a woman who has jumped off a pier into the briny water below attempting to commit suicide. The selfless act changes his life forever.

April 11 (Friday): MIELE [HONEY]

Film screening of MIELE [HONEY] and discussion with screenwriter Francesca Marciano - 7:00 p.m. [note early start time], Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Valeria Golino (Italy, 2013, 96 minutes, color, in Italian with English subtitles)

An official selection at Cannes, HONEY is the story of Irene, an "assisted suicide activist" who performs illegal services to assist the terminally ill. She faces a painful dilemma when a healthy man requests her help in ending his life. The film's screenwriter, Francesca Marciano, will provide film commentary and answer questions immediately following the screening. Marciano's recent films as a co-screenwriter include A FIVE STAR LIFE (2013), Bernardo Bertolucci's ME AND YOU (2012), and the Oscar-nominated DON'T TELL (2005). (see Visiting Writers Series April 11 listing for an afternoon reading by Francesca Marciano)

April 25 (Friday): SWEET DREAMS

Film screening with commentary by producer/director Rob Fruchtman - 7:00 p.m. [note early start time], Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by Rob and Lisa Fruchtman (Rwanda and United States, 2012, 84 minutes, color, in Kinyarwanda with English subtitles)

SWEET DREAMS is a documentary that follows the remarkable story of a group of Rwandan women who, in the aftermath of the 1994 genocide, form the country's first all-female drumming troupe, and open the country's first ice cream parlor, with the help of the Brooklyn-based Blue Marble Ice Cream Company. Rob Fruchtman, the film's producer/director will provide commentary and answer questions immediately following the screening.

Sponsored in conjunction with UAlbany's School of Criminal Justice's Food, Crime, and Justice Film Series

Seminar: Rob Fruchtman will hold an informal seminar on documentary filmmaking at 4:15 p.m. on Friday in the Standish Room, Science Library, on the UAlbany uptown campus. Fruchtman won the Documentary Director award at the 2002 Sundance Film Festival for his HBO feature film SISTER HELEN. He has also won three Emmys for his work with PBS.

May 2 (Friday): KILL YOUR DARLINGS

Film screening and discussion with screenwriter Austin Bunn - 7:00 p.m. [note early start time], Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus

Directed by John Krokidas (United States, 2013, 104 minutes, color)

Austin Bunn co-wrote the screenplay for the hit film KILL YOUR DARLINGS (2013) with his college roommate John Krokidas, the film's director. Nominated for the Grand Jury Prize at Sundance, the film stars Daniel Radcliffe as poet Allen Ginsberg and Dane DeHaan as Lucien Carr in a story of murder and gay awakening set in New York City amid the nascent Beat poetry scene.

Seminar: Austin Bunn will hold an informal seminar on screenwriting at 4:15 p.m. in the Science Library, Room 340, on the UAlbany uptown campus.

For additional information contact the Writers Institute at 518-442-5620 or online at http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst.

 

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Friday, October 25, 2013

Stig Dagerman Celebration Tonight

Impressive praise blurbs grace the cover of Sleet, a new collection of stories in English translation by Swedish author Stig Dagerman, translated by former Writers Institute grad assistant Steven Hartman. The book also features an introduction by National Book Award winner Alice McDermott. The collection will be available for sale tonight at Page Hall at a celebration of Stig Dagerman's life and works, featuring films and readings, and a discussion with Steve Hartman and Lo Dagerman, Stig's daughter.

Picture: Steve Hartman

More about tonight's event:  http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/archives/dagerman_hartman13.html

Dagerman wrote with beautiful objectivity. Instead of emotive phrases, he uses a choice of facts, like bricks, to construct an emotion. --Graham Greene

An imagination that appeals to an unreasonable degree of sympathy is precisely what makes Dagerman s fiction so evocative. Evocative not, as one might expect, of despair, or bleakness, or existential angst, but of compassion, fellow-feeling, even love. --from the preface by Alice McDermott

Stig Dagerman writes with the tension that belongs to emergency—deliberately, precisely, breathlessly. To read Dagerman is to read with your whole body—lungs, heart, viscera, as well as mind. At once remote and intimate in tone, these works by one of the great twentieth-century writers come fully to life in a remarkable translation by Steven Hartman.
—Siri Hustvedt, author of The Summer Without Men

Stig Dagerman s fearless, moving stories should be placed alongside the short fiction of such luminaries as James Joyce, Anton Chekhov, and Raymond Carver. You ll find yourself holding your breath in wonder as you read, grateful to Dagerman (and Steven Hartman) for the gift of these stories. --Edward Schwarzschild, author of The Family Diamond

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Friday, January 11, 2013

Writers Institute Announces Spring 2013 Series


Dear Readers, Writers, Teachers, Students and All Members of the General Public,

The New York State Writers Institute at the University at Albany announces its Spring 2013 schedule of visiting writer appearances and film series screenings. Events take place on the UAlbany uptown and downtown campuses and are free and open to the public (unless otherwise noted).



The Spring 2013 Visiting Writers Series features appearances by a Tony-nominated Broadway actor; a leading voice of the New York Times Editorial and Op-Ed pages; a visionary scientist who is the "founding father" of nanotechnology; a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist who explores spiritual and moral crises in America; a MacArthur fellow who has been called "the funniest writer in America"; a major American novelist who, at age 87, will present his first novel in 30 years; and a new, award-winning Ken Burns documentary to be screened, by special arrangement, eleven days in advance of its national PBS television air date.

"The new spring 2013 Visiting Writers Series was a profound pleasure to put together-so many interesting, talented authors!-from first book writers like the memoirist Christa Parravani and New York historian Marguerite Holloway, through to well-established novelists like Marilynne Robinson, Chris Bohjalian, and James Salter, we're once more able to present the best in contemporary literature. This is one of our strongest line-ups in recent years," said Institute Director Donald Faulkner.

The season will open with the annual Burian Lecture delivered by Tony-nominated actor Colman Domingo, a rising star of the American stage, a "blazingly charismatic performer" (New York Times), and a playwright whose work has been called, "Wicked, tender, outrageous and profound" (Newsday).

That same week, influential futurist and ground-breaking environmental scientist Jorgen Randers will present his new book, 2052: A Global Forecast for the Next Forty Years, a cautionary view of the earth's future and the collapse of its natural resources. An opposite forecast is offered at the end of our season by K. Eric Drexler, the "founding father" of nanotechnology presenting his latest book, Radical Abundance, which argues that nanoscience will usher in a new age of plenty. Other nonfiction writers featured this season include noted photographer Christa Parravani with a piercing memoir about the death of her identical twin sister; award-winning poet and nature writer Gretel Ehrlich, who writes about her visits to tsunami-ravaged Japan; Columbia University Science Journalism program director Marguerite Holloway presenting a deep history of Manhattan's street grid; colonial historian Russell Shorto, whose work on Dutch New York "permanently alter[ed] the way we regard our collective past" (New York Times); and Gail Collins, one of the wittiest political commentators in American journalism.

George Saunders and Nathan Englander, major prize-winning short story writers, will be featured among our visiting fiction writers. UAlbany Professor Emeritus Gene Mirabelli will present his new novel about the valiant struggles of an aging painter. Mirabelli will share the stage with Ann Hood, bestselling author of The Knitting Circle, who is well-known for finding inspiration in the challenges posed by grief and loss. Eighty-seven-year-old James Salter, one of the most acclaimed American novelists of the last half century, will present his first novel in 30 years, All That Is (Salter will not be touring with his book, and his appearance at the Institute will be a unique privilege). Novelist Marilynne Robinson, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Gilead (2004), will deliver the 72nd Annual McKinney Reading and Vollmer Fries Lecture at Rensselaer (RPI). Manil Suri, Indian-American novelist and mathematician, will visit with a new novel set in Mumbai under threat of nuclear attack. Finally, Chris Bohjalian, a prolific writer of bestsellers and Oprah Book Club author, will present his new epic of the Armenian genocide, Sandcastle Girls.

"Our re-energized film series continues its year-long collaboration with the School of Criminal Justice, and also with film critic J. Hoberman, who has acted as guest curator in the selection process," said Faulkner.

The spring selections for the Future of Film series curated by Hoberman include the Russian 2002 film, RUSSIAN ARK, the French-Taiwanese 2007 film, FLIGHT OF THE RED BALLOON; the Romanian 2005 film, THE DEATH OF MR. LAZARESCU; and, in advance of St. Patrick's Day, HUNGER, an Irish 2008 film about Bobby Sands and the 1981 Prison Hunger Strike.

The second mini-series, Justice & Multiculturalism in the 21st Century, is part of a multifaceted project sponsored by UAlbany's School of Criminal Justice, aimed at engaging conversations about the intersection of social justice and criminal justice. The spring series will open with HOMELAND: FOUR PORTRAITS OF NATIVE ACTION (2006), an artfully constructed film about environmental disasters on American Indian reservations. The second film will be CENTRAL PARK FIVE (2012), a new look at the Central Park Jogger case by major documentary filmmaker Ken Burns, codirected with his daughter Sarah Burns and David McMahon, based on Sarah Burns' book. The film received "Best Documentary" at the 2012 New York Critics Circle Awards. A member of the film's directorial team is scheduled to attend the screening and provide commentary. The final film in the series will be ONCE WERE WARRIORS (1995), a Maori drama about alcoholism and family violence set in a New Zealand housing project.

As is our tradition, the Institute will also screen a silent film with live musical accompaniment-the influential 1921 German film by Fritz Lang, DESTINY [DER MÜDE TOD], a dark fairy tale about love and death.

For more information, visit our website at http://www.albany.edu/writers-inst/webpages4/programpages/vws.html.   Also, don’t forget to like us on Facebook!

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Tuesday, September 25, 2012

A Rare Privilege for Writers Institute Audiences

Hadidja Zaninka, star of Kinyarwanda, a film that won the Sundance Film Festival's World Cinema Audience Award, will be in attendance at our screening of the film.

She herself has seen the film only once before (despite being the star) because access to the film is strictly limited in Rwanda.

Albany is the first stop on her US road trip.

This is also her first trip out to the US and (the filmmakers believe but haven't confirmed) her first trip out of southern Africa. It was difficult for her to obtain a visa, despite the success of the film which has won many international awards. Obtaining a visa required a direct appeal to the President of Rwanda.

More on the film:  http://www.kinyarwandamovie.com/

More on the event: 
KINYARWANDA
September 28 (Friday)Film screening — 7:30 p.m., Page Hall, 135 Western Avenue, Downtown Campus
Written and directed by Alrick Brown
(United States, Rwanda, France, 2011, 100 minutes, color)
In English and Kinyarwanda with English subtitles

Winner of the World Cinema Audience award at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, KINYARWANDA is based on the heroic true story of local Muslim clergy who risked their lives to save both Tutsi and pacifist Hutu—Christians as well as Muslims—during the Rwandan genocide. In a four star review, Roger Ebert said, “Here is a powerful film.”

NOTE: The film’s producer Darren Dean and leading Rwandan actress Hadidja Zaninka will answer questions immediately after the screening.

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