[Giving Birth: Margaret Mead 1]
Raw footage of an interview with anthropologist Margaret Mead for the documentary Giving Birth: Four Portraits.
Raw footage of an interview with anthropologist Margaret Mead for the documentary Giving Birth: Four Portraits.
Videomakers John Reilly and Julie Gustafson recording clean readings of questions asked of Margaret Mead during the interview conducted for the documentary Giving Birth: Four Portraits.
Raw footage of an interview with anthropologist Margaret Mead for the documentary Giving Birth: Four Portraits.
A musical performance by Appalachian folk band The Pineconers, followed by a discussion with them about their musical heritage, recorded for the documentary Joe Albert’s Fox Hunt and Other Stories from the Pine Barrens of New Jersey.
Media Burn presents: Gay Liberation, Gay PrideDoc Films at the University of ChicagoSaturday July 30 at 5pm1212 East 59th Street, Chicago, IL 60637$7 ticket/$25 summer pass (Cash only) Join us for a series of short videos from Media Burn Independent Video Archive offering a brief and vivid history of Gay Liberation and queer community in Chicago and elsewhere. The program includes: 1. An interview with Gay Liberation activist Jim Fouratt, taken from a 1969 compilation made by the group Global Village. It […]
Raw footage of an interview with activist Molly Rush for the video Pursuit of Happiness, produced and directed by Julie Gustafson and John Reilly.
An interview with cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead for the documentary Giving Birth: Four Portraits, directed by Julie Gustafson and John Reilly.
Features definitive versions of Beckett’s recent works written or adapted for television. There are three additional works in The Beckett Project series produced by Global Village: What Where (1988/10 minutes), a video version of Beckett’s last play overseen by the playwright himself, Godot in San Quentin (1988/27 minutes), a fascinating version of Waiting For Godot, produced by inmates of this maximum-security prison, and Waiting for Beckett (1994/86 minutes), a unique television documentary on the life and work of the Nobel Prize-winning writer Samuel Beckett, which includes a rare scene with the playwright critiquing a video performance of one of his plays.