Category: Articles
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The Language Of A People
A story of language reclamation may not seem that astounding, but filmmaker Anne Makepeace hopes that the film-loving community and those who are devoted to public television will find We Still Live Here (Âs Nutayuneân) to be a mesmerizing story. The story begins in 1994 when Jessie Little Doe Baird, an intrepid, thirty-something Wampanoag social worker, began dreaming.
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Killing in the Cornfields! Live on Stage!
It’s 1950's B-movie horror at its finest when Coterie At Night presents Children of the Damned Corn, Oct. 13-30 at the newly renovated Just Off Broadway Theatre, 31st & Broadway, Penn Valley Park. The plot, created by director and playwright Ron Megee: After an accident, Milt and Betty end up in Gatlinville, once home of the World's Largest Cream Corn Factory.
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Reflections of the Breast: Breast Cancer in Art Through the Ages
Art has often been held up as a mirror of society's woes, including the tragic disease of breast cancer. For Dr. Francis Arena, a medical doctor with a specialty in breast cancer, and Dr. Tanya Bastianich Manuali, an art historian with a focus on the Italian Renaissance, the exploration of breast cancer can be found in art.
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Kansas International Film Festival Marches On
In 10 years, the Kansas International Film Festival has grown to include films submitted from at least 20 to 30 international countries, plus many documentarians and narrative filmmakers from the United States. Co-founders Ben Meade and Ben and Brian Mossman work diligently to schedule 40 to 50 films during the week-long festival. The festival runs Sept. 30 – Oct. 6 at the Glenwood Arts Theatre.

