Heidi W. DurrowHeidi W. Durrow

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Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival June 12-13, 2010

The 3rd Annual Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival is coming up next week--June 12-13, 2010--and I hope you'll join us. This is a project co-founded and co-produced by me and my friend Fanshen Cox.

We created the Festival in 2008 because we wanted to offer a forum to other artists whose work was about the Mixed experience, the forum that was denied us for so long. Won't you please join me? We have a fantastic line-up. Below are the details and highlights. And please consider donating if you can, this is an all-volunteer non-profit effort, as a fiscally sponsored project of the New York Foundation for the Arts. Donations are tax-deductible.

Multiracial Americans, the country’s largest growing community, will celebrate stories of the Mixed experience at the 3rd Annual Mixed Roots Film & Literary Festival, June 12-June 13, 2010, at the Japanese American National Museum (369 East First Street) in downtown Los Angeles. Pre-registration is now open at www.mxroots.org.

In the Obama age, the free two-day Festival brings together film and book lovers, innovative and emerging artists, and multiracial families and individuals for workshops, readings, film screenings, and special family activities in collaboration with the Target Free Family Day at JANM. The Festival is also held in conjunction with the Museum’s interactive exhibit of Mixed: Portraits of Multiracial Children by celebrated Hapa artist, Kip Fulbeck.

The Festival hosts the largest West Coast Loving Day reception, a nationwide grassroots celebration of the anniversary of the Supreme Court decision that allowed people of different races to marry.

This year’s Loving Day celebration features the annual Loving Prize Presentation and Conversation with Kip Fulbeck and Maya Soetoro-Ng, writer, educator and sister of President Barack Obama discussing identity, family, and what it means to be multiracial in America. Well-known Hapa actress Amy Hill will moderate.

The Festival, a fiscally sponsored project of the New York Foundation for the Arts, a non-profit organization, is produced by the co-hosts of the award-winning weekly podcast Mixed Chicks Chat (www.mixedchickschat.com).

Today, 7 percent of all marriages are interracial, according to the Census. More than 6.8 million individuals identify as Mixed. New Census figures reveal that multiracial Americans are the fastest-growing demographic; and 1 in 5 mixed-race individuals lives in California.

The Festival highlights include:

• Target Free Family Day at JANM, Saturday, June 12, 11am-4:30pm, features storytelling by TV actress Kim Wayans and husband, Kevin Knotts, reading from their popular children's book series, Amy Hodgepodge; educator and sister of President Obama, Maya Soetoro-Ng reading from her children’s book; and curly-hair expert Teri LaFlesh author of the newly released Curly Like Me, demonstrating hair tips and tricks. Families can also enjoy interactive craft activities all day, and a special dance performance by Culture Clash.

• The Festival hosts the largest West Coast Loving Day celebration, Saturday June 12, 2010, at 7:00pm. Tickets are $20 at the door, and $15 for pre-registered Festival attendees. The reception is held in conjunction with the 1000-person New York City Loving Day celebration hosted by Loving Day (www.lovingday.org).

• Maya Soetoro-Ng and community activist Nancy Brown, founder of the Multiracial Americans of Southern California, will each receive a Loving Prize, the Festival's annual award for inspirational storytelling of the Mixed experience during the Saturday night Loving Prize Presentation, June 12, 2010 at 7:00pm. National Football League star Hines Ward and award-winning screenwriter Jenny Lumet (Rachel Getting Married) will receive their prizes in absentia.

• KTLA’s Frank Buckley moderates a discussion among historians and scholars, “Exploring the Historical Context for Contemporary Stories of the Mixed Experience,” Sunday, June 13, 2010 11:30pm-12:30pm.

• Among the dozen films that the Festival will screen is HBO’s A Family is a Family is a Family: A Rosie O’Donnell Celebration about the touching, profound and funny insights of blended and non-traditional families, and Off and Running about a transracial adoptee’s journey. The Festival is also pleased to present several award-winning short films and a handful of feature films including a follow-up to last year’s hit debut Biracial Not Black Damn It: Part 2.

• The Festival includes author readings by best-selling novelist (and Festival co-founder) Heidi W. Durrow (The Girl Who Fell From the Sky), novelists Carleen Brice (Orange Mint and Honey, Children of the Water), and Marie Mockett (Picking Bones From Ash), and poets Neil Aitken (Winner of the Philip Levine Prize, The Lost Country of Sight), and Tara Betts (Arc and Hue).

Events are free and open to the public. Tickets, however, are required for the Loving Prize Presentation and Conversation June 12, 2010, at 7:00pm. Tickets are $20 at the door, and $15 for pre-registered Festival attendees.

The complete Festival schedule can be found on-line at www.mxroots.org.

Pre-registration is strongly encouraged. On-line registration is now open at www.mxroots.org.

Festival sponsors and donors include: Japanese American National Museum, Social Justice Works!: The Aaronson Fund, Zerflin.com Graphic Design, Target, Grassroots.org, Pandora Web Box.
 

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