Enter here to go to the NMAI Home Page Return to the Home Page
Enter here for News Enter here for Awards and Honors Enter here for the Awards and Honors Archive
Enter here for the Native American Film and Video Festival Enter here for Movie News
Enter here for FVC Programs Enter here for Festival News
Enter here for Close-ups Enter here for Independent Film/Video News
Enter here for Resource Lists Enter here for Radio and Internet News
Enter here for Titles Screened by NMAI

Carlos Efraín Pérez being interviewed by Marcelino Pinto, 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival

Actor Adam Beach (Saulteaux) starred in 2007 in the HBO production Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee, portraying the noted Native medical doctor Charles Eastman. For this work, he has been nominated for the 2008 Golden Globes Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Production Made for Television (an award by the Hollywood Foreign Press Association). He has also been nominated for the 2008 Image Award for Outstanding Actor in a Television Movie (awarded by the NAACP) and the 2008 NAMIC Vision Award for Best Performance-Drama (awarded by the National Association for Multi-Ethnicity in Communications).

In 2007 Beach received the Palm Springs International Film Festival's Rising Star Award. For his portrayal of soldier Ira Hayes in Flags of Our Fathers (director: Clint Eastwood), he was nominated for the Broadcast Critics Association's 2007 Critics Choice Award for Best Supporting Actor and for a 2006 Satellite Award (an award of the International Press Association).

At the end of the 2008 season, Beach will complete his one-year stint as Mohawk detective Chester Lake on the hit NBC series, Law and Order: Special Victims Unit.
4/30/08

Nanobah Becker (Navajo) has been selected for Project: Involve, a 9-month production and professional development program of Film Independent in Los Angeles. In 2007 Becker was featured in an interview with James Ponsoldt published in Filmmaker Magazine. In 2006 she was one of 22 media artists awarded a National Video Resources Media Arts Fellowship to produce Full, a fiction film about a gay (nadleeh) Navajo man who returns to the queer Native American nightlife in Albuquerque after failing as a disc jockey in New York City.
8/03/07

Chad Burris (Chickasaw) has been selected for the Sundance Institute's 2007 Producer Lab. Burris produced Four Sheets to the Wind (director: Sterlin Harjo), which premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival, and is currently producing a new feature film with director Blackhorse Lowe.
8/08/07

Actress Tantoo Cardinal has received the 2007 Sun Hill Award for Excellence in Native American Filmmaking. The award, presented biennially by the Sun Hill Foundation and the Harvard Film Archive, honors significant contributions to the legacy of Native American film. Previous honorees have been directors Chris Eyre and Zacharias Kunuk.
1/12/08

Writer and actor Darrell Dennis (Shushwap) has been selected for the Sundance Institute's 2008 Screenwriters Lab for work on his screenplay for Tales of an Urban Indian, a dark and irreverent comedy about the trials and tribulations of a young First Nations man moving from the reserve to the city. Dennis was nominated for the prestigious Dora Award for writing for his one-man show with the same title, on which his screenplay is based. A 5-day workshop at Sundance Resort in Utah, the Lab is designed to provide independent filmmakers the opportunity to work intensively on their scripts with the support of established writers.
2/22/08

Director Chris Eyre (Cheyenne/Arapaho) has been awarded a 2007 United States Artists Fellowship. He is one of two Native American artists selected since the founding of the program in 2006. Initially funded for three years by a consortium of foundations-Ford, Rockefeller, Prudential, and Rasmuson-the program annually provides $50,000 awards each to about 50 selected artists to enable them to focus freely on their creative projects. Candidates for the prestigious fellowship are proposed by nominators selected for their expertise in the arts, and the winners are chosen by a peer-review panel.

Also in 2007 Eyre is one of 3 media artists selected for a Bush Fellowship in Film/Media. Bush Artists Fellowships are given to up to 15 artists per year in diverse disciplines, awarding sizable grants for the development of new projects.
2/15/08

In 2006 Sterlin Harjo (Creek/Seminole) was awarded the prestigious United States Artists Fellowship, a program established in 2006 to select extraordinary US artists in all disciplines. Harjo, one of 54 artists chosen in the first year, is the first Native American artist selected. This fellowship program has been initially funded by a consortium of foundations-Ford, Rockefeller, Prudential, and Rasmuson. Candidates for the fellowship are proposed by nominators selected for their expertise in the arts, and the winners are chosen by a peer-review panel. The purpose of the $50,000 award is to provide the selected artists with enough income to be able to freely focus for a substantial period of time on their creative projects.

Also in 2006 Harjo was awarded Tribeca All Access Program's top Creative Promise Award and was selected for a National Video Resources Media Arts Fellowship (now known as a Renew Media Arts Fellowship).
2/06/08

Director Melissa Henry (Navajo) won an experimental award of $10,000 from the 2007 New Visions/New Mexico Contract Awards for Blue Heeler, about a Navajo sheep dog who loses his flock. In 2007 the New Visions initiative provided 11 contracts worth $160,00 to winning New Mexico-based producers and directors.
11/25/07

José Alfredo Jiménez Pérez (Tzotzil) has been selected by Renew Media for an award for his documentary project Acteal, 10 anos de impunidad y quantos mas… (working title) about the 1997 massacre of indigenous villagers in Acteal, Chiapas in Mexico. Renew Media annually awards fellowships through a nomination and selection process to approximately 14 film and video artists and 6 new media artists in the United States and six media artists in Mexico.
1/06/08

Terry Jones (Seneca) has been awarded the ABC/Disney Talent Development Scholarship Grant Program award of $20,000 to develop an individual film project in 2006 under the mentorship of experienced professionals from the ABC/Disney studios. Jones, who has attended Pace University in New York, is the producer of Casino Nation, a documentary about the opening of two Las Vegas-style casinos in New York State. He attended the IAIA's 2005 Summer Film and Television Workshop, sponsored by ABC/Disney, the Kellogg Foundation, and the National Museum of the American Indian.
10/30/05

Jennifer Kreisberg (Tuscarora) has received numerous awards for her song "Have Hope," composed and performed for the film Unnatural and Accidental (director: Carl Bessai). She received the 2007 Genie Award for Achievement in Music - Original Song, given by the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television for outstanding achievement in Canadian film. She also received the 2007 Song of the Year Award from NAMMY (Native American Music Awards) and the 2007 Independent Music Award in Film/TV.

In 2007 Kreisberg was also selected for a First People's Fund Cultural Capital Grant and artist fellowships from the New England Foundation for the Arts and the Connecticut Commission of Culture and Tourism.
2/15/08

Producer Milt Lee (Cheyenne River Sioux) is one of 3 artists selected for a 2007 Bush Fellowship in Film/Video. The Bush Foundation awards substantial grants each year to up to 15 artists in various disciplines to realize new projects. Lee has a 30-year career as an independent radio producer and media maker, and with his wife Jamie produced Oyate Ta Olowani, Songs of the People, a 52-part public radio series on Native American music from over 50 triibes. He also maintains "Real REZ," a website and weekly video blog concerned with realties of reservation life.
8/03/07

Actress and producer Georgina Lightning (Cree) has recently been given recognitions by the Independent Feature Project (IFP) and Filmmaker Magazine. She was selected to participate in the 2007 IFP Rough Cut Lab in New York City, a national program that connects mentors with first-time feature filmmakers before the directors submit their works to film festivals. At the September IFP Market in New York, she was nominated for the Adrienne Shelley Director's Grant. See picture below.

Lightning has also been named by Filmmaker Magazine in its annual survey as one of "25 New Faces in Film" in 2007. She is in post-production on her directorial debut, Older than America, a story of the impact of the boarding school experience on generations in a Native community, starring Georgina as Lucy, Adam Beach as Jim and Bradley Cooper as Luke.
10/05/07

Director Larry Blackhorse Lowe (Navajo) received one of two Panavision Awards from the 2007 New Visions/New Mexico Contract Awards, which will provide him with $10,000 in camera equipmental rentals, along with a narrative award of $20,000 towards the short film Masa'n'i, set in the 1940s, about teenager in who must choose whether or not to leave the Navajo reservation. The 2007 New Visions awards provided 11 contracts worth $160,00 to winning New Mexico-based producers and directors. Lowe has also been awarded a 2007 Media Arts Fellowship from Renew Media for the development of his film production, The Left-Handed Path. Renew Media, founded as National Video Resources 20 years ago, annually provides substantial grants to 20 fellows toward the production of new work.
11/25/07

Director Billy Luther (Navajo/Hopi/Laguna Pueblo) has become the first Native American filmmaker to be awarded support from Creative Capital, a premiere national organization founded in 1999 to support individual US artists in film/video and the visual arts. Luther's winning documentary project, Grab (working title), focuses on Grab Day, an annual celebration traditional to Laguna Pueblo, and follows family members as they participate. Luther has previously been the recipient of the Roy W. Dean Fellowship and a selected participant in the Tribeca Film Institute's All Access program. His feature documentary, Miss Navajo, premiered at the 2007 Sundance Film Festival and was aired on PBS' Independent Lens series.

Creative Capital's winning projects receive initial awards of $10,000. As the projects develop, the organization may offer as much as $50,000 each through the tenure of the multi-year grant. The winners also participate in a distinctive Artist Services Program that provides skill-building assistance in areas such as fundraising, networking, marketing, and strategic planning, with the goal of advancing both their projects and their careers. In 2008 forty-one media and visual artists' projects were selected from 2,535 applications.
1/26/08

Lisa Meeches (Ojibwe) has received a 2007 National Aboriginal Achievement Award for her work as one of the most dynamic and respected television producers in Canada.
8/03/07

Chef Loretta Barrett Oden (Citizen Band Potawatomi) has won a Boston/New England Chapter Emmy for the PBS series, Seasoned with Spirit: A Native Cook's Journey. Oden wrote and hosts the series, which is a co-production of Connecticut Public Television and Native American Public Telecommunications.
8/08/07

Filmmaker J. Carlos Peinado (Mandan/Hidatsa) has been named the first Chair of New Media Arts at the Institute of American Indian Arts. Prior to joining IAIA, he directed the documentary Waterbuster, an inquiry to his family's story and the impact on the Mandan of the building of the Garrison Dam on the Missouri River. He previously served as the creative director of Native Peoples magazine.
11/17/07

Heather Rae (Cherokee) has been awarded a 2007 Media Arts Fellowship from Renew Media for the development of a film production, Family: The First Circle, an examination of the American foster care system. Renew Media, founded as National Video Resources 20 years ago, annually provides substantial production grants to 20 fellows toward the production of new work.
11/17/07

Actor August Schellenberg (Mohawk) has been nominated for an Emmy for "Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Miniseries or Movie" for his portrayal of Sitting Bull in HBO's Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee. The film was nominated for an Emmy in the "Outstanding Made for TV" category and received 15 other nominations in various categories.
8/08/07

Nominated for a 2006 Genie Award for Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role is Bernard Starlight, who plays Huey Bigstone in the film Hank Williams First Nation (director: Aaron James Sorenson). The Genie Awards provide recognition for outstanding achievement in the Canadian television industry.
8/03/07

For his role as Plutarco in El Violin (director: Francisco Vargas), a film concerned with the resistance of a peasant community to a Mexican army unit rooting out "subversives, " Don Angel Tavira has received the Best Actor Award in the "Un Certain Regard" section of the 2006 Cannes Film Festival. Tavira is one of many generations of musicians in his family noted for performing music in a traditional style known as Calentaño (i.e., from the Tierra Caliente region of Mexico) and comes from Corralfalso, part of the town Ajuchitlan del Progreso in the state of Guerrero, which is the traditional land of Nahua people.
11/17/07

Bury My Heart at Wounded Knee (director: Yves Simoneau) won the Emmy for Outstanding Film Made for Television at the 2007 Primetime Emmy Awards. Produced by HBO, the film stars August Schellenberg as Sitting Bull, Adam Beach as Charles Eastman M.D., Aidan Quinn as Senator Henry Dawes, Anna Paquin as Elaine Goodale Eastman, Eric Schweig as Gall and Wes Studi as the prophet Wovoka, with an outstanding supporting cast, in a story that spans the period in which the Lakota were compelled to settle on reservations. For their performances both August Schellenberg and Aidan Quinn were nominated for Emmy awards.
11/17/07

** indicates that a short description of the film can be found in the PDFs of titles screened at the 1995, 1997 and 2000 Native American Film and Video Festivals. To open the PDF sorted by title, enter here.

Image credit: Carlos Efraín Pérez being interviewed by Marcelino Pinto, 2000 Native American Film and Video Festival - Photograph by Amalia Cordova, NMAI

Archive

 

 

 


Enter here to Contact us!  Enter here for About Native NetworksEnter here for FAQs.Enter here for Search/Site Map


copyright 2004, Smithsonian Institution