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February
2009
Chris
Eyre (Cheyenne/Arapaho) has been described as "the
preeminent Native American filmmaker of his time" by People
magazine. In 2007 he was selected for two prestigious artist awardsthe
United States Artists Fellowship and the Bush Foundation Artists
Fellowship in Film/Media. In 2007 he also received an All Roads
Film Project Seed Grant for Lazarus Rises (working title).
Eyre has been awarded many other artists honors and fellowships.
He was one of three established filmmakers selected to participate
in the inaugural Tribeca All Access program in 2004. He was a
1995 recipient of the Rockefeller Media Arts Fellowship (now a
fellowship program of the Tribeca Film Institute).
Eyre recently has been chosen to direct three of the five films
in the groundbreaking Native American history series We Shall
Remain, produced by PBS' American Experience and scheduled
for broadcast in April 2009. The theatrical world premiere of
one of these, Trail of Tears, opens the 2009 Native American
Film + Video Festival. He has also directed recent episodes of
two popular NBC series, Friday Night Lights and Law
& Order: Special Victims Unit.
Eyre has been working with emerging filmmakers as an executive
producer and producer, and recent works include Imprint
(director: Michael Linn) and California Indian (director:
Tim Ramos (Pomo)). Eyre's first feature, Smoke Signals,
was one of the five highest-grossing independent films in 1998.
It won the Audience Award at the 1998 Sundance Film Festival,
and Eyre was awarded the festival's Filmmaker's Trophy.
In 2004 Eyre was again honored at Sundance when Edge of America,
based on a true story of a reservation high school girls basketball
team's road to the state finals, was selected for the festival's
Salt Lake City opening night. In 2006 Edge of America,
produced by Showtime, received the Peabody Award, one of the most
prestigious awards in electronic media. The film also received
the 2005 Award for Outstanding Directorial Achievement from the
Directors Guild of America and the 2006 Parents' Choice Award.
In 2005, for the opening of the new National Museum of the American
Indian, Eyre produced the museum's signature film, A Thousand
Roads, and has been invited to be a selector for NMAI's 2009
Native American Film + Video Festival. His other films include
A Thief of Time and Skinwalkers, based on the novels
of Tony Hillerman, for the PBS series Mystery!, documentaries
and music videos. He currently resides in Rapid City, South Dakota,
with his daughter, Shahela.
"With my work I like the shades: very rarely are our thoughts
really black or white except in the case of our own bias and the
limitations of our own experience. We tend to be so limited in
our perceptions of what AMERICA is. We don't know about our own
history, about being real with those that aren't of us. We need
some more social/shared understanding and laughter. There is no
one truth to our diversity."


Screened by NMAI

Image credit:
Chris Eyre - courtesy of Gwendolen Cates and Native Peoples Magazine;
Chris Eyre - photograph by Tim Warner
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Chris Eyre Interview
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Participant, 2011 Native
Cinema Showecase
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Participant, 2010 Native
Cinema Showcase |
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Participant, 2009 Native
Cinema Showcase |
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Selector, 2009 Native
American Film + Video Festival
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Participant, Film
Indians Now!, DC
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Participant, 2008 Native
Cinema Showcase
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Participant, 2007 Native
Cinema Showcase, NM
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Participant, 2005 Native
Cinema Showcase
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Participant, First Nations/First
Features
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Participant, 2004 Native
Cinema Showcase
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Participant, 2003
Native American Film and Video Festival
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Participant, 2002 Native
Cinema Showcase
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Participant, 2002 At the
Movies
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Selector, 1995 Native American Film and Video
Festival
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