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Articles
Documentary
celebrates work of African-American artists
By Scott Tady, The Beaver County Times, Feb. 13, 2002
PITTSBURGH
-- All kidding about captive audiences aside, inmates at the Allegheny
County Jail genuinely enjoyed their advanced screening Tuesday
of a new TV documentary, "BrotherMen."
"It
touched inside of me," 33-year-old inmate Mike Barron of Pittsburgh
said of "BrotherMen," which chronicles the historic, political
and cultural realities of the African-American experience.
"BrotherMen" director Demetria Royals chose to premiere her one-hour
documentary at the Pittsburgh jail because she knows firsthand
how the arts can convince troubled people to turn around their
lives. Royals, a Harlem native, served an 11-month stint in a
juvenile detention center.
"People
ask me what I'd be doing if I wasn't a filmmaker, and I say 20-to-life,"
Royals told 20 mostly youthful inmates hand-picked by jail officials
to attend the "BrotherMen" screening.
"BrotherMen"
debuts publicly Feb. 20 on WQED-TV (Channel 13), the Pittsburgh
Public Broadcasting Station, which sponsored the documentary.
Other PBS stations can begin airing "BrotherMen" in June.
Produced
in association with the National Black Programming Consortium,
which has a satellite office at WQED, "BrotherMen" mixes music,
dance, performance, photography, archival footage and interviews
to celebrate the achievements of five African-American artists.
The
five profiled subjects are famed Philadelphia songwriters Kenneth
Gamble and Leon Huff, photographer Chester Higgins Jr., choreographer
and dancer David Rousseve, and the late Pops Staples, a singer
and civil rights activist.
Most
of Tuesday's inmate audience had never heard of Rousseve and Staples,
or were old enough to recall the early 1970s "Philly soul" sound
created by Gamble and Huff.
Royals,
the documentary director, had every reason to worry that the inmates
would show indifference to her one-hour work. Seated beforehand
in a makeshift theater in one of the jail's recreation rooms,
Royals nervously tapped her feet on the ground, seated in a corner,
out of view of the inmates.
When
the documentary ended, she marched to a podium and was relieved
to hear the enthusiastic response from the 11 black and nine white
inmates who, without prompting, began to applaud, then volunteered
their comments and questions.
Barron,
the 33-year-old inmate from Pittsburgh, said he appreciated how
"BrotherMen" painted a positive portrait of the African-American
experience. He told Royals he has seen other historical accounts
of African Americans that dwelled too much on the negative. "A
lot of them make us want to get radical and stuff," he said, adding
that "BrotherMen" evoked a peaceful vibe.
"I
thought it was time for someone to publicly write a love letter
to black men," Royals said.
Orlando
Pagone, 25, an inmate from Pittsburgh's North Side, said what
he drew from "BrotherMen" is that men of all races need to come
together and show responsibility in raising their children.
"We
need unity," Pagone said. "As men, we need to stand up and take
our place in society."
Jerry
DeSabato, 27, of Pittsburgh's Bloomfield section, also liked the
documentary's positive message, adding, "It's not about black
and white anymore. It's about taking care of our children."
Wearing
their red jail uniforms, inmates thanked Royals for taking the
unusual step of premiering a TV show behind bars.
©Beaver
County Times/Allegheny TimesÊ2002
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