the university of oklahoma - College of Arts and Sciences
Transcription
the university of oklahoma - College of Arts and Sciences
the university of oklahoma college of arts and sciences film and video studies program November 2008 Volume 10, Number 1 The Director’s Chair By TIMOTHY SHARY DIRECTOR OF FVS Having started my second year as FVS director, Timothy Shary I am eager to help the program continue to make progress toward its goals, the next of which will be our return to Old Science Hall in early January. We are still working toward establishing the Center for Cinema Comedy, although the current economic crisis has delayed our plans to develop a graduate program. At least our program‘s name change to Cinema Studies soon will be an official reality. We were happy to give four students awards in the spring for their work in critical analysis, screenwriting and filmmaking, and we have been honored to host or co-host many visitors from the film industry and academics this year. In the spring, we plan to have more professional guests visit with our students, and we plan the annual trip to Los Angeles to have students meet with industry professionals. I will be the representative for OU at the February film festival in our French sister city, ClermontFerrand, where hundreds of people will view films by our students. I‘d like to welcome the newest member of our staff, Anna Reynolds, who replaced Valoree Biggs this past summer. Valoree and her husband Aaron welcomed a baby boy into the world in July, and we wish them Perspectives from Our Visiting Professor By JAMES RAGAN FEATUREpresentation FVS FACULTY "Openness" and "friendliness" are two words that have a greater personal meaning for me as I begin my second semester at OU as a visiting professor in the Film and Video Studies Program. How can one not appreciate a university, and by extension, a program where students, faculty, staff and total strangers respond genuinely with a smile and a greeting on the South Oval. For me, it has been a time of re-engagement in the belief that something extraordinary always is possible on the written page or on a theater screen And I have found it here. I've been the beneficiary of the principled promise of a vision, based on academic quality and diversity, a marriage of minds and passion, featured most enviably in the FVS Program, and reflected by goals set down by OU President David Boren whom I met at the Oklahoma Arts Institute at Quartz Mountain nearly 20 years ago. I have found the FVS Program to be a thriving community of accomplished faculty committed to nurturing the creative dreams and talents of mutually accomplishing students. Like me, they share in the common goal of encouraging students to pursue the promise of gigantic intensions by exploring their own visions, or in a phrase, to stoke the "fires in their bellies." It is my pleasure to be associated with faculty who are selfless in their pursuit of an even greater promise of success for their students. I'm impressed by the range of travel, internships, festivals and professional accolades the FVS graduates have enjoyed. And to watch the program build on this has made my effort to contribute even more inspired. And, incidentally, there's nothing more fulfilling than having a new book of poetry coming out of this university's distinguished press. Nothing more satisfying than working at an institution committed to academic achievement. Nothing wrong with living in a community ranked number six as one of America's "Most Livable Cities." Oh, yes, and there's also Greece, WLT, the Neustadt, Sooners Football and the promise of returning to the renovated Old Science Hall. Page 2 James Ragan, professor emeritus, lectures during the FVS 3810 Intermediate Screenwriting class. Photo courtesy of Noel Alsdorf/The Daily [Why I write…] “I write to break down borders. My sensibility has always been global, to find expression through my poetry, plays and films to bring individuals and worlds, seemingly apart, closer in understanding. The cafes I write in are my libraries—from Paris to Prague to Los Angeles. I write to live out loud, and through the expansive reach of art, hope to achieve community through common language.” -James Ragan COVER PHOTOS (left to right): Shane Loader, Rangimoana Taylor and Andy Horton at the Oklahoma City Bombing Memorial; 2008 FVS Faculty and Staff - see page 8; Director Timothy Shary and Famke Janssen. FVS Goes Online By Victoria Sturtevant FACULTYfocus FVS FACULTY For summer semester 2008, I taught the first online Film and Video Studies course offered at OU. It was a section of our required core course, Writing About Film, which teaches students critical skills in researching problems, forming arguments and capturing the complexities of a visual medium in lively and forceful language. The online format works particularly well for a summer course, when students are often scattered around the country. With the magic of the Internet, it is possible to make progress toward graduation from wherever you may be. For instance, one of my students was working on an internship at a studio in Los Angeles. One was spending the summer as a videographer at a day camp, getting practical media experience far from campus. Several were traveling around to summer weddings and reunions, or had gone home to stay with family for the summer months. Students completed their assignment on lunch breaks, in coffee shops, in basements and offices and libraries and cousins‘ houses. There was something invigorating about how the course could accommodate this mobile, flexible population. Participants brought their varied experiences to the virtual table, and created a dynamic community of scholars, writers and film lovers, out in the real world. The general format is similar to a live course—the instructor posts a lesson on a designated day, and the student has a certain window of time (it could be 24 hours, it could be a week), to complete all the components of that lesson, which can include quizzes, discussionboard posts, worksheets, paper assignments or group projects. It‘s a wonderful format for selfmotivated, engaged students to get some work done on a flexible schedule. Of course, for some students there is such a thing as too much flexibility—so it‘s best to know your own work habits before enrolling! Deadlines are deadlines, whether you are in a classroom or a coffee shop. This being my first experience with online teaching, my biggest worry was that Internet courses would be cold and impersonal. One of the great pleasures of teaching, after all, is interacting with students. If the virtual classroom turned out to be a faceless void, the experience could hardly be a rich one for either me or the student. My solution to this problem was to set up regular online chats with students to ―talk‖ over paper drafts. Each participant in the course was required to set up a series of realtime appointments with me. Using the chat-room function of our home page, we typed back and forth in the style of a real conversation, and each student got my undivided attention for questions, feedback and just some lively discussion of films, directors and the joys of writing. After a whole day of these 30-50 minute appointments, my typing fingers would certainly be worn down, but I enjoyed them so much that I didn‘t even care. I was surprised to discover at the end of the semester that I ―knew‖ my online students—their tastes and talents and quirks and particular learning circumstances—as well as I knew my in-person students. This experience, more than anything, sold me on the virtues of online education. I found that, far from de-personalizing the classroom experience, savvy use of online resources can actually create a well-tailored tutorial for each student‘s skill level and instructional needs. If my fingers can hold up against the onset of carpal tunnel syndrome, I look forward to more semesters of productive teaching from behind the keyboard. Page 3 Student Film Production Club: 24-Hour Film Making Blitz! and More By KATRINA BOYD FVS FACULTY FACULTY ADVISOR FOR THE SFPC FEATUREpresentation When the Student Film Production Club (SFPC) began meeting again in September of this semester, club members were anxious to build on the successes of last year and to organize new initiatives that would both help elevate the profile of the club on campus and help raise funds for future activities. We had been well pleased with the success of the Norman Film Festival in April of 2008, which showcased 13 student-made short films at the Fred Jones Art Museum, attracting a supportive audience of more than 60 students and faculty, in addition to the four faculty judges. The SFPC plans to renew the festival in the spring but wanted to find a new activity for the club to focus its energies on in the fall semester. The SFPC was pleased to see many students returning to the club and quite a few new faces as well. After officially registering the club for the 2008-2009 academic year and holding officer elections (see list below), the officers set about figuring out what activity would be the center-piece of the club‘s activities in the fall. Club secretary Keshav Tyagi suggest a 24-hour film festival, a contest in which, at a pre-designated time, teams of filmmakers are given a set of elements that must be included in a short film. The teams then have a mere 24 hours to write, shoot and edit. The other officers recognized that this would be an ideal club activity because it could serve multiple functions, allowing inexperienced filmmakers to work on teams with more experienced students, letting club members get to know each other better by collaborating on a project, providing an additional opportunity for socializing and general merriment at a screening for the sleep-deprived filmmakers and other students, and, last but not least, permitting fundraising for the club. As a neutral party who would not be participating on a team, I was chosen to select elements for inclusion in the films. Andrew Hajek, who had already participated in these types of competitions, encouraged me to provide a range of options in order to avoid excessive repetition. So, students had to choose one of three story lines, three of ten props, and one of five lines of dialogue. I attempted to make the story lines generic enough that they could be handled in a variety of modes (comedy, drama, etc.) and would offer a wide range of possible treatments (see our forum page, www.soonerfilms.com, for the specifics of the required elements). While the event was still in the planning stages we learned that a group of film students from OCCC were interested in participating. While our promotion of the event (using flyers, e-mail lists, chalking, Facebook, etc.) was certainly important, it was clear that the event concept generated real enthusiasm, making spreading the word that much easier. A reporter from the OU Daily contacted us and asked to cover the story. Ultimately OU‘s television news crew showed up to cover the Friday-night kick-off event on October, 24th, which showed on the OU Nightly News program the following week. The SFPC was pleased to have 12 teams show up to register, including a team from the OU Daily. After a hectic blur of writing, shooting and editing, the students gathered in Dale Hall 200 to eat some well-deserved pizza and watch their films. The costs of the event were covered by the nominal $5.00 fee charged to each team member, which helped the club to cover the food -related expenses and net a small profit that will go towards funding future events. To learn more about the club, please see our page linked to the FVS home page, join our Facebook group or see the forum page. We look forward to seeing you at future meetings and events. SFPC Officers From left: Andrew Hajek, Jessica Martin, Bijon Amed Imtiaz, Jack Patchell, Keshav Tyagi and Virginia Duke 2007-2008 SFPC Officers President: Jack Patchell Vice President: Jessica Martin Secretary: Keshav Tyagi Page 4 Treasurer: Bijon Amed Imtiaz Programming Chair: Virginia Duke Webmaster: Andrew Hajek Making It Happen STUDENTstories By Virginia Duke FVS SOPHMORE In the spring, I decided I wanted a summer internship—something exciting, educational and good for my resume. But since I was only a freshman and a newly-declared FVS major with very little experience in the film world, I figured my chances of getting anything good were slim. That was until I had a fortuitous conversation with Andrew Horton at a film conference that I almost didn‘t attend. In the first five minutes of our chat, he asked me what I wanted to do with my life. I told him I was interested in documentaries, and he told me to come by the office in the next few days so he could set me up with an internship for a film company in New York City. Just like that. Two days later I had a job with the Center for New American Media (CNAM), a documentary production company. It turned out that while getting an internship for the summer was not very difficult, finding enough money to live in New York City for a month was. This is where something wonderful called the Heidi Karriker Scholarship came into my life. After applying and anxiously awaiting the notification date for one whole painful month, I was in the FVS office when Dr. Shary came over, shook my hand and congratulated me on winning the award. And just like that, because of the generosity and help from the FVS department it happened. I found myself two months later sitting at a desk in a documentary production company‘s office on the 21st floor of a busy building in the middle of downtown Manhattan. I had made it. For the first half of my internship, I worked on CNAM‘s website, creating over 100 pages to display clips from their award-winning documentaries. The second half of my internship was by far the best, however, because I got to work in CNAM‘s editing room and learn how to use AVID. In a true trial-by-fire situation, I was asked to make a trailer for their new project. It was a video game to teach history to middle school children which was then distributed to potential sponsors. Of course, spending a month in New York City meant doing other things besides getting coffee, making a trip into Queens to pick up a printer and other intern-worthy tasks. I also got to see Bon Jovi perform live for free in Central Park. I watched the over-night construction of a set and the beginning minutes of a shoot for All Good Things, a Hollywood film starring Ryan Gosling. I saw Werner Herzog‘s Encounters at the End of the World in a tiny independent theater and I explored the Metropolitan Museum of Art. All of this, all my wanderings and doings and learning's—all of it was because one morning, I decided that I did indeed want to go to that film conference where I talked to Andrew Horton and later to Dr. Shary. From those two conversations that day, I got an incredible month-long internship in New York City and the scholarship to make it FVS Student Achievement Spring 2009 Classes Every year, LOOK@OKC magazine hosts a contest for a 30-second commercial promoting the greater OKC metro area’s free entertainment guide. This year, Temple Tucker, a 2008 FVS graduate, and Cassie Ketrick, an FVS senior, submitted their commercial, “There’s Nothing to Do in Oklahoma!” Tucker and Ketrick were the only female contestants to submit a commercial. After their commercial was announced as one of the top two, an online voting contest commenced to decide the winner; Tucker and Ketrick won the prize, which includes $1,000 and two weekend film passes to the Austin Film Festival. The two plan to use their prize money to make their way down to the festival for the first time and enjoy a plethora of indie films and filmmaker panels. FVS 1013 Introduction to FVS/Katrina Boyd FVS 2023 Film History 1945 - Present/Betty Robbins FVS 2033 Writing About Film/Katrina Boyd FVS 2123 Acting For the Camera/Darryl Cox FVS 3213 Media Theories/Misha Nedeljkovich FVS 3223 Hollywood Musical/Katrina Boyd FVS 3313 Single Camera Production/Misha Nedeljkovich FVS 3810 Script Analysis/James Ragan FVS 3810 Cinematic Remakes FVS 3853 Screenwriting/James Ragan FVS 4013 Senior Seminar/Timothy Shary Page 5 You Only Live Twice By Philip Jecty FVS Senior The most important thing that I've learned through my FVS trips to L.A and Greece, and also the Venice Film Festival, is that it's not what you know, but rather who you know. As sad as it is to say, you can be a talented filmmaker, screenwriter or what-have-you, and not get recognized simply because of your networking skills— or lack thereof. My recent trip to the 65th Venice Film Festival has really opened my eyes to the reality that going to film festivals and putting yourself ―out there‖ in terms of selfpromotion is something that everyone hoping to make it in the ―biz‖ needs to do. I simply cannot stress to you the importance of going to festivals, or submitting films or screenplays to festivals, no matter the outcome. Also, take the time to meet with other students and professionals in your field of interest. If I can give you one piece of advice, it is that if you want to be writer, write as many screenplays as you can, not STUDENTstories just one. If you want to be a director, direct as many shorts as you can and try to raise funds to maybe direct a feature. No matter what you want to do, you should try to create an extensive catalog of your work. Like many of you, the cost of attending many of these programs weighed heavily on my mind, but don¹t worry, there¹s hope. For those of you who might not be able to afford the Morocco trip with Andy Horton or the L.A. trip with Tim Shary, or the American Pavilion¹s Cannes or Venice programs, I want to tell you that once you decide to go, finding the funds necessary is the easiest thing you¹ll ever do. There are so many scholarship opportunities that are available, some even within the FVS program, that no FVS student should graduate without having at least attended one film festival and without going on one serious film-related trip. After all, you only live twice. FVS Alumni Update If you are an FVS alumnus who would like to be included in the FVS Takes Update, please write to fvs@ou.edu with your name, graduation year and what you have been up to since graduation. If you know anyone who would like to be included in our newsletter mailing, please send their address to fvs@ou.edu. Derek Gordon ’08 After Derek Gordon graduated from the FVS program in May, 2008, he went on to attend the master‘s film program at Loyola Marymount University in Los Angeles. He recently wrote a letter to his screenwriting professor, Andy Horton: Hey Dr. Horton, Just wanted to let you know that I received bonus points in class yesterday. While going around the room to introduce ourselves during a screenwriting class, nearly the entire class claimed to be diehard Coen brothers fans. The professor didn't buy it. He asked the class if they are such huge Coen brothers fans, what film was the movie O Brother, Where Art Thou? inspired by? Silence. The entire class was lost. I confidently raised my hand and answered Sullivan's Travels. The professor was impressed and shocked. Not only did he then lecture how film theory and history is extremely essential to know how to write and make great films, but he continuously used me as an example of an aspiring writer who really knows his field. I must admit that before grad school started, I was kind of intimidated that students from all these huge film schools in L.A. might have an edge over me. But after starting classes, I am very confident that the diverse education I received from the University of Oklahoma is much better than the majority of "well known" schools. It's funny because I used to be one of the students that took it for granted when you said, "So-and-so got the job in Hollywood because he knew who Buñuel was, etc." But now I know it is so true. The majority of people competing for jobs in Hollywood all have great talent, ambition and skills. Yet what separates these thousands of talented individuals are the few who have true knowledge of the art form. Those are the ones that stand out. Thanks for everything. I'll definitely keep in touch. Derek Gordon Page 6 Greg DeCuir, Jr., a former OU student of Dr. Misha Nedljkovich, is pursuing a PhD at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts at Singidunum University in Belgrade. He translated following article about his experience in Serbia that appeared in the October 23, 2008 issue of Politika. In Love with Hip-Hop and Yu Film ALUMNIfocus By S. Stamenkovic 10/23/2008, Politika DeCuir (34) came a long way from his hometown of Los Angeles to Belgrade, to work on a doctoral thesis on Yugoslav film at the Faculty of Dramatic Arts. While DeCuir has lived and studied in Serbia for a year, he has delivered lectures in Sremski Mitrovica and also organized a series of lectures on hip-hop culture to share his knowledge of this art form with the youth of Serbia. DeCuir could have undertaken his doctoral studies at the Sorbonne in Paris but chose to come to the Faculty of Dramatic Arts in Belgrade. Before coming to Belgrade and graduating from the University of Southern California, he attended the University of Oklahoma. While studying with UCLA professor Todd Boyd, a world-renown expert on pop culture, he became interested in the study of hop-hop. ―When I contacted the people at the Sorbonne with an interest in studying there, they tried to steer me towards a thesis on American film noir, but I‘ve already studied that and it didn‘t interest me. I wanted to study Yugoslav film, and my former professor at the University of Oklahoma, Misha Nedeljkovich, put me in touch with the Faculty of Dramatic Arts and connected me with people there,‖ said DeCuir. In his words, hip-hop culture was born in the late 70s in New York‘s South Bronx and draws from a number of artistic disciplines: painting, poetry, dance and music. ―The South Bronx was a dangerous area, and when hiphop emerged, many immigrants had arrived from the West Indies and Jamaica. They, with African-Americans, created the art form of hip-hop,‖ said DeCuir. The golden age of hip-hop arrived in the mid-80s, and the father of hip-hop is DJ Kool Herc. He came up with idea of utilizing break beats, accenting the rhythmic breaks of a song, as the musical backdrop for a party atmosphere. And that became hip-hop music. In the early 80s hip-hop culture had become commercialized through record sales and the graffiti that was gaining recognition in New York art galleries. ―The godfather of hip-hop is Afrika Bambaataa, a hiphop artist who also founded the Zulu Nation to promote the positive aspects of the art: education and unity,‖ DeCuir said. DeCuir is now working on a doctoral dissertation on the Black Wave in Serbian film. He has interviewed Dusan Makaveyev whom he credits as giving him a lot of help. He plans to turn his dissertation into a book and to produce a documentary film on the subject. He has also interviewed directors Boro Drashkovich (son of Zika Pavlovich) and Zelimir Zilnik. He also plans to speak with Gordan Mihich and Jovan Jovanovich. Among his favorite films are: Jovanovich‘s Young and Healthy Like a Rose, Pavlovich‘s When I am Dead and Pale, and Zilnik‘s Early Works. DeCuir was a little late for this interview because of a breakdown on a trolley bus, so he had to come on foot. However, he said that it wasn‘t a problem because in Los Angeles there are always traffic jams and walking isn‘t an option there. He loves Serbian cuisine, the gracious people of Belgrade, and of course, the beautiful girls here. Greg DeCuir, Jr. Page 7 Favorite Films By Timothy Shary FVS Director FACULTYfocus So often as a film professor I am asked to name my favorite films, and now that I‘ve been director of Film and Video Studies for over a year, I feel it‘s time to go public with my list. And while I recommend all of these films to you, please understand that these are my favorites, and not necessarily the films I consider the best. That is a crucial distinction for any critic, since we all have guilty pleasures, and we must recognize the difference between the ―best‖ qualities of our field and the qualities that simply please us on a subjective level. With that disclaimer given, below are my favorite films. I invite all of you to send us a similar list, to fvs@ou.edu, which we can gather into the ultimate list of FVS favorites! 1. Bliss (Australia, 1985) 2. Persona (Sweden, 1966) 3. The Breakfast Club (U.S., 1985) 4. Hannah and Her Sisters (U.S., 1986) 5. Manhunter (U.S., 1986) 6. Thief (U.S., 1981) 7. Brief Encounter (Britain, 1945) 8. Family Viewing (Canada, 1987) 9. Sweet Movie (Yugoslavia, 1974) 10. Blue Velvet (U.S., 1986) 11. Speaking Parts (Canada, 1989) 12. Pink Floyd: The Wall (Britain, 1982) 13. Mirror (U.S.S.R., 1975) 14. Heat (U.S., 1995) 15. The Hustler (U.S., 1961) 16. The Best Years of Our Lives (U.S., 1946) 17. City Lights (U.S., 1931) 18. The Searchers (U.S., 1956) 19. Elvira Madigan (Sweden, 1967) 20.The Verdict (U.S., 1982) From Page 1: The 2008 FVS faculty and staff Welcome Party, hosted by Director Timothy Shary and his wife Rebecca. Seated, from left to right: Sarah Denton (FVS Librarian and Media Lab Director), Ned Hockman (Professor Emeritus, Journalism and Mass Communication), Joanna Rapf (Professor, English), Victoria Sturtevant (Associate Professor, FVS), and Clemencia Rodriguez (Associate Professor, Communication). Standing, from left to right: Dr. Shary (Associate Professor, FVS), Andy Horton (Jeanne Hoffman Smith Professor, FVS), Kristin Dowell (Assistant Professor, Anthropology), Debbie Rush (FVS Account and Budget Rep), Hester Baer (Associate Professor, Modern Languages and Literature), Kathryn Jenson White (Associate Professor, JMC), Dinah Assouline Stillman (Instructor, MLL), Bernard Roddy (Assistant Professor, Art), Darryl Cox (Instructor, FVS), Katrina Boyd (Lecturer, FVS), Yoshiko Fukushima (Associate Professor, MLL), Norman Stillman (Professor, History), Gigi Hu (Instructor, International and Area Studies), James Regan (Visiting Professor Emeritus, FVS), Alexander Bain (Assistant Professor, English), Jane Dye (FVS Program Administrator), Randy Lewis (Associate Professor, Honors), Ralph Beliveau (Assistant Professor, JMC) and RE Davis (Graduate Teaching Assistant, FVS). Congratulations to Our Fall 2008 graduates! Cassandra Ketrick Randall Martin Madison Potts Jared Ransom Royce Sharp Temple Tucker Christopher Allison Blake Brown Matthew Cates Bryan Climer Jimmie Edwards Lauren Hussey Page 8 FVS Faculty Keep Busy Katrina G. Boyd continues to serve as the faculty adviser for the Student Film Production Club (see article in this issue). She also delivered a paper, ―Popular Genres as Centuries Turn: Firefly, Serenity and the Space Western‖ at the Film and History Conference in Chicago this fall. At present she plans to incorporate this work into her manuscript, The Shock of the Now: Science Fiction, Entertainment and Cultural Critique, which is forthcoming from Illinois University Press. In addition to these projects, her proposal for an article entitled, ―Oklahoma Crude: Wild-Cat Oil and the Strong-Willed Woman,‖ a critical study of the off-beat 1973 Stanley Kramer film, has been accepted for inclusion in an as yet untitled book about films that include representations of Oklahoma from a new Oklahoma-based press. Andrew Horton recently published three book chapters: ―Is it a Wonderful Life?: Families and Laughter in American Film Comedies,‖ in A Family Affair (Wallflower Press, 2008), edited by Murray Pomerance; ―Cinema Haunts My Memory: Filmmaking in the Former Yugoslavia,‖ in Cinema in Transition: Post-socialist Filmmaking in East—Central Europe, edited by Catherine Portuges and Peter Hames (Temple University Press, 2008); and ―We All Live Two Lives: Serbian Cinema & Changing Values in Post Yugoslavia‖ in Building a ‗Civic Culture‘ in the Post-Yugoslav Region, edited by Dr. Sabrina P. Ramet. He also presented a paper on Serbian Cinema at the Serbia after Yugoslavia Conference that was held in Oslo, Norway in late May. In June Horton led the FVS Study Seminar in Greece with 22 travelers on board. During this trip, he gave a one-day screenwriting seminar for Greeks at the Hellenic American Union. His New Zealand–New Orleans screenplay, Make a Joyful Noise, co-written with Russell Campbell has been taken over for production by Inspire Films of Wellington, New Zealand. In September, he hosted New Zealand filmmaker Shane Loader and Moari actor Rangimoana Taylor who screened their 2007 feature film Taking the Waewae Express and visited a variety of FVS classes. Also in September, Dr. Horton led a screenwriting seminar in Ithaca, New York at the Cinemapolis Cinema. He was a plenary speaker at the XIVth Biennial Conference of the Film and History Association of Australia and New Zealand at the University of Otago in November discussed the topic ―From Otago to Oklahoma: The Emerging Carnival of Global Independent Filmmaking.‖ Al LaValley’s introduction to the script of Mildred Pierce, ―Mildred Pierce: A Hard Property to Script,‖ was reprinted in Authorship in Film Adaptation, edited by Jack Boozer (University of Texas Press 2008). He also presented a chapter on John Steinbeck from a book in progress with a working title of Benign Interventions: Transnational Influences on Mexican Cinema in the Golden Age, at Dartmouth in August. He continues to work on FACULTYfocus chapters about John Ford, B. Traven, Roberto Gavaldón and Graham Greene. Randy Lewis and Ralph Beliveau co-authored an article that surveys the career of English filmmaker Alex Cox in the Australian film journal Senses of Cinema (Issue 48). Also, Lewis‘s documentary, Texas Tavola: A Taste of Sicily in the Lone Star State, co-produced with Circe Sturm, was named an official selection of the American Anthropology Association‘s annual convention in San Francisco, November 2008. James Ragan gave a talk and served on a panel with U.S. Poet Laureate Robert Pinsky and California Poet Laureate Al Young at the 2008 Los Angeles Times Book Festival last spring. Also during the spring and summer he gave poetry readings for the Czech ambassador to the United Nations and his wife at the Czech Center in New York City and at Prague Castle in the Czech Republic. He returned to the Czech Republic in the fall for another poetry reading for Czech President Vaclav Klaus. Three works of his poetry have been published or are forthcoming: Too Long a Solitude (University of Oklahoma Press 2008), Womb-Weary, a translation into Spanish (Travesias 2008), and Selected Poetry, a translation into Portuguese (Academia Internacional de Cinema 2009). Professor Ragan presented the literary keynote address at the World Literature Today Conference in Beijing in October. In January 2009, he is scheduled to present a two week screenwriting and poetry seminar at the Academia Internacional de Cinema in São Paulo, Brazil. Timothy Shary continues his work on American Movie Masculinity, an anthology to be published by Wayne State University Press, as well as his study of the elderly in U.S. cinema, The Silver Screen. He presented a paper on the career of Art Carney at the Southern Popular Culture Association meeting in Louisville in October, and he will be presenting a paper on depictions of elderly death from his forthcoming book at the international conference ―Interrogating Trauma‖ in Perth, Australia, in December. Victoria Sturtevant was awarded tenure and promoted to associate professor in summer 2008. She presented a paper, ―‘Leather-Lunged Lady‘: The Working Class Body of Marjorie Main,‖ at the annual Society for Cinema Studies Conference in March, 2008. Her first book, A Great Big Girl Like Me: The Films of Marie Dressler will be published by the University of Illinois Press in Spring 2009. Professor Sturtevant and her husband, Professor Jim Zeigler (OU English Department), are also excited to announce that they are expecting their first baby, a boy, in January. They look forward to taking the new baby to OU Women‘s Basketball games to root for Courtney Paris. Page 9 University of Oklahoma Film and Video Studies Program 729 Elm Avenue, Hester Hall 170 Norman, OK 73019-2100 122-764700 Non-Profit Organization U.S. Postage PAID University of Oklahoma Thanks to our kind donors FVS wants to thank our donors for helping to make a difference for FVS students and faculty. For instructions on how to donate to the FVS program, visit our Web site: www.ou.edu/fvs. We Want to Hear From You Please send suggestions to FVStakes at fvs@ou.edu. We’d like to hear from you so we can better direct FVS programs and newsletter content to meet your needs and interests. We’re interested in hearing your thoughts on article ideas, speaker/program suggestions, special screenings, reactions to specific articles in the newsletter and ways in which you would like to contribute to the program. Editor Anna Reynolds Copy Editor Jane Dye Other Contributors FVStakesfacts Katrina Boyd — Victoria Sturtevant — James Ragan — Virginia Duke — Philip Jecty — Timothy Shary FVStakes is published by the University of Oklahoma College of Arts and Sciences Film and Video Studies Program, 729 Elm Avenue, Norman, OK 73019-2100 and authorized by Timothy Shary, director of the Film and Video Studies Program. OU Printing Services printed 600 copies at no cost to the taxpayers of the State of Oklahoma. The University of Oklahoma is an equal opportunity institution.