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Margaret Mead Film Festival Offers New Yorkers a Chance to See Acclaimed Docs Without Distribution

Margaret Mead Film Festival Offers New Yorkers a Chance to See Acclaimed Docs Without Distribution

Yahoo07-05-2025
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience.
Yahoo is using AI to generate takeaways from this article. This means the info may not always match what's in the article. Reporting mistakes helps us improve the experience. Generate Key Takeaways
Given the risk-averse economics of the current documentary business, it has become hard for audiences to find a place to see some of the most acclaimed docs out of film festivals, including Sundance, TIFF, and the International Documentary Film Festival Amsterdam. Mainstream streaming services' lack of interest in not only political documentaries, but practically all independent doc fare, has made regional film festivals, like the annual Margaret Mead Film Festival, vital to the life of a nonfiction film.
This year's edition of the Margaret Mead festival kicks off on May 2 at Manhattan's American Museum of Natural History. The three-day event includes the New York debut of 15 documentaries, many of which do not have U.S. distribution. They include Olivier Sarbil's 'Viktor,' which premiered at TIFF in 2024, Meena Nanji, Zippy Kimundu's 'Our Land, Our Freedom,' which made its world premiere at IDFA in 2023, and the 2025 Sundance Grand Jury Prize winner 'Seeds,' directed by Brittany Shyne.
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About the everyday life of Black generational farmers and the legacy of the declining community in the American South, 'Seeds' will screen at the Museum's 924-seat LeFrak Theater.
Shot fully in black and white, 'Seeds' weaves together vignettes of farm life for multiple aging farmers and their families, depicting the slow pace and communal beauty of agricultural living, but also the deep economic injustice black farmers have historically faced and continue to today.
Director of public programs at the American Museum of Natural History and Mead Festival Director Jacqueline Handy says that 'Seeds' reminds her of 'home.'
'As a Black woman growing up in New York with southern roots, 'Seeds' pulled on my heart strings and pulled me in,' says Handy. 'It's one of the ways that I see myself reflected in the work of this festival. We are trying to have that balance where folks can see themselves reflected in the festival and also discover something new.'
Shyne spent nine years making 'Seeds,' which is her doc feature debut.
'It took a long time for a myriad of reasons,' Shyne says. 'It's hard to get financial support for your first feature, and then just networking, and understanding how the industry works, also takes time. For documentary filmmakers, it's a very untenable and unpredictable environment. We are all pulling from the same resources.'
After garnering the Sundance U.S. documentary prize in January, Shyne took 'Seeds' to a number of regional U.S. festivals, including Full Frame and RiverRun. However, despite being a favorite with critics and audiences alike, 'Seeds' does not have a distribution deal.
Shyne credits regional fests with helping keep 'Seeds' part of the conversation.
'I feel very lucky that the film has been doing so well and has been well received,' she says. 'In terms of distribution, we are still trying to figure things out. We hope to have an impact campaign eventually. There are so many different phases of the film that we hope to do eventually, but I think at this point we're just enjoying where it's at.'
Following a world premiere at Maine's Camden International Film Festival, director Max Keegan took his doc 'The Shepherd and The Bear' to IDFA in November 2024. On May 3, the film will make its New York debut at Margaret Mead.
Set high in the majestic French Pyrenees, 'The Shepherd and The Bear' explores a conflict provoked by the controversial reintroduction of wild brown bears into a remote shepherding community. The doc follows an aging shepherd who struggles to find a successor as bears prey on his flock, and a teenage boy who becomes obsessed with tracking the bears.
'It just seemed like such a weird conflict because both sides were really right,' says Keegan, who spent two years filming in the French Pyrenees. 'I really felt like I could sympathize with farmers in the area who feel like this is a decision that's been taken by people who live so far away from them and who don't understand their lives. But I also really sympathize with the people who are interested in the bear as a symbol and want to protect these sorts of animals. The idea that these two things could be true at the same time really drew me into the subject.
In November, Jour2Fête acquired French distribution rights to 'The Shepherd and The Bear.' The film does not have U.S. distribution.
'The festival run has been really significant,' says Keegan. 'It has been really important and we have been really lucky to have been selected for a variety of festivals that really valued the film.'
Oscar-nominated filmmakers Heidi Ewing and Rachel Grady's most recent film, 'Folktales,' which debuted at Sundance 2025, will close the Margaret Mead Film Festival on May 3. About a trio of teenagers taking a 'gap year' at a Norwegian Folk High School in Pasvik, located 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle, 'Folktales' is a universal story, according to Ewing.
'The film is about growing up, and we have all done that,' says Ewing. '(The film) is about being insecure and wanting to learn how to be brave and not knowing how to.'
After screening in Park City, Ewing and Grady took 'Folktales' to festivals including Full Frame, Thessaloniki, and San Francisco Intl. Film Festival.
In April, Magnolia Pictures acquired North American rights to 'Folktales.' The doc will be released in theaters on July 25.
'I really hope that there is a shift back to the original roots of how Heidi and I started in this industry, which was word of mouth and a theatrical run,' says Grady. 'No one was making a cajillion dollars, but you had a fan base.'
The recent theatrical success of documentaries like 'No Other Land' and 'Secret Mall Apartment' is a good sign, according to Grady.
'When I started in this business, there were not very many places to show your documentaries,' says Grady. 'There were no streamers. It was basically HBO and PBS. Everything else was theatrical. So, it's not a return to that, exactly but there is a feeling of more community and getting back to our fans. Our constituents.'
The lineup for the 2025 Margaret Mead Film Festival:
May 2
Seeds – New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Brittany Shyne (in attendance)
2025 | 125 min | USA
May 3
Remaining Native – New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Paige Bethmann (in attendance)
2025| 87 min | USA
The Shepherd and the Bear – New York Premiere
Director: Max Keegan (in attendance)
2024 | 100 min | France, Spain
Favoriten – New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Ruth Beckermann (in attendance)
2024 | 118 min | Austria
Our Land, Our Freedom – New York Premiere
Presented by Mira Nair, executive producer (in attendance)
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Meena Nanji, Zippy Kimundu (in attendance)
2023 | 100 min | Kenya
Land with No Rider –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Tamar Lando (in attendance)
2024 | 100 min | USA
The Return of the Projectionist – New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Orkhan Agazade (in attendance)
2024 | 77 min | Azerbaijan
Night of the Coyotes –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Clara Trischler (in attendance)
2024 | 79 min | Mexico
Brink of Dreams –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Nada Riyadh, Ayman El Amir
2024 | 101 min | Egypt
May 4
How Deep Is Your Love –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Eleanor Mortimer (in attendance)
2025 | 101 min | United Kingdom
Folktales –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Directors: Heidi Ewing, Rachel Grady (in attendance)
2025 | 106 min | Norway
Partition –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Diana Allan (in attendance)
2025 | 61 min | Palestine
River of Grass –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Sasha Wortzel (in attendance)
2024 | 83 min | USA
Make it Look Real –New York Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Danial Shah (in attendance)
2024 | 67 min | Pakistan
Bright Future –U.S. Premiere
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Andra MacMasters (in attendance)
2024 | 89 min | North Korea
Viktor – New York Premiere
Presented by Darren Aronofsky, producer (in attendance)
Followed by post-screening discussion
Director: Olivier Sarbil (in attendance)
2024 | 91 min | Ukraine
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The Life Of Harriet E. Wilson: The 1st Black Woman To Publish A Novel

Source: MarkNH / Getty Harriet E. Wilson, born Harriet Adams around 1825 in Milford, New Hampshire, is widely recognized as the first Black woman to publish a novel in the United States. Yet for more than a century, both her life and work were largely forgotten. In 1859, Wilson published Our Nig; or, Sketches from the Life of a Free Black, in a Two-story White House, North . Showing that Slavery's Shadows Fall Even There. Printed by George C. Rand and Avery in Boston, the semi-autobiographical novel tells the harrowing story of Frado, a biracial girl abandoned by her mother and raised by a white family in New Hampshire who subjected her to relentless abuse, despite living in a region known for its abolitionist leanings, according to Blackpast. Cultural Front notes that the book was published Sept. 5, 1859; however, Encyclopedia reports that 'the first edition' of Our Nig was printed by Rand and Avery, and copyrighted by Wilson on Aug. 18, 1859. We care about your data. See our privacy policy. The novel, likely selling fewer than 100 copies at the time, quickly faded into obscurity, NHPR noted. It wasn't until 1981 that scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. rediscovered the work in a New York City bookstore. Upon republishing it in 1983, Gates revealed that Wilson was not white—as previously assumed—but a free Black woman writing largely from her own experience. This revelation reshaped the history of African American literature, which had previously credited Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (with lola Leroy , published in 1892) as the first Black woman novelist. Harriet E. Wilson's life story, according to historians. Wilson's life was marked by hardship. Her father, a free Black man, died when she was 7. Her mother, possibly a white woman from Portsmouth, abandoned her shortly after. Historians believe she was placed in indentured servitude with the Hayward family. She attended school sporadically and worked for various families before eventually relocating to Massachusetts to work as a seamstress and servant. In 1851, she married Thomas Wilson—a man later revealed to be a con artist—who abandoned her before the birth of their son, George Mason Wilson. Struggling with poor health and poverty, she was forced to place her infant son in a poorhouse while she returned to Boston to earn a living. Historians believe that her inspiration behind the book may have been largely fueled by her desperation to regain custody of her son. Wilson was certain she could make a living off the book to finally be able to provide for George. During this time, she began writing Our Nig , inspired by the growing popularity of slave narratives. She also launched a hair care business, selling 'Mrs. Wilson's Hair Regenerator,' one of the earliest known Black-owned beauty products. Ads for the product date back to 1857, NHPR reported. JerriAnne Boggis, executive director of the Black Heritage Trail of New Hampshire, said she was stunned to learn the book was published by an abolitionist printer in Boston, defying the era's most 'treasured institutions.' 'Take motherhood – Mrs. B, the protagonist, was an evil woman to her children. Motherhood took a blow. She called the church hypocrites. The abolitionist movement was hypocritical because here you are fighting for us, but you won't have one of us to dinner in your home,' Boggis explained during an interview with NHPR in 2018. Tragically, Wilson's son died not long after the book was published. His death certificate identified Harriet as a Black woman—an important detail that Gates Jr. uncovered during his research into the true identity of the author. Though little else is known about her later life, Wilson's contribution to American literature is now firmly cemented, and we wonder what life would have been like for the author had she continued writing. SEE MORE: Keke Palmer Announces New Novel's Upcoming Release Naval Academy Returns Library Books Removed for DEI Concerns SEE ALSO The Life Of Harriet E. Wilson: The 1st Black Woman To Publish A Novel was originally published on

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