Film Festival 2006 (April 2-8)
Schedule of events
<Welcome>
**All events are free and open to the public with the exception of screenings at Naro Expanded Cinema (where a regular admittance charge will apply).**
If you have any questions, please contact us at: (757) 683-3973.
Navigation:
February 8
7:00 "An Evening with Peter Engel" (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU). Peter Engel is an internationally recognized award-winning Hollywood producer. While serving as Chairman of Peter Engel Productions, a subsidiary of NBC Enterprises, Engel was executive producer of the Emmy-nominated series "Saved By The Bell." His most recent TV show on NBC, the hit reality series "Last Comic Standing," was nominated for an Emmy Award.
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March 26
2:3-3:30 Jeremy Dauber, Chair, Department of Yiddish, Columbia University: "What's in a Ghost Story? Between History and Allegory in a Seventeenth-Century Jewish Tale of Spirit Possession." (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
Sponsored by the Institute for Jewish Studies and Interfaith Understanding.
4:00-6:00 screening of Der Purimshpiler (The Jester) (1937, 90 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
Presented by the ODU Yiddish Club.
Negotiating the romantic rapids in this musical are a lonely jester, a slick circus performer, and Esther, a newly rich shoemaker's daughter in a parade of costumes, buffoonery, and music during the festival of Purim.
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Sunday, April 2:
-Symposium: "The Last Days of Cinema? New Directions in Film and Media Studies"
Symposium Flyer (.pdf) <view>
1:30-4:15 (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
-Welcome: Chandra DeSilva, Dean of the College of Arts and Letters
-Opening Remarks: Gary Edgerton, Chair, Department of Communications and Theater Arts and Artistic Director of the Festival.
-Sheldon Lu, Professor of Comparative Literature, University of California, Davis,
author of Transnational Visuality, Global Postmodernity (Stanford UP, 2002) and the editor of Transnational Chinese Cinema: Idenitity, Nationhood, Gender and China (University of Hawaii, 1997).
"Wavering between Socialism and Capitalism: Nostalgia in Postsocialist Cinema."
-Patricia White, Associate Professor of English, Swarthmore College, author of Uninvited: Classical Hollywood Cinema and Lesbian Representability (Indiana UP, 1999). "Feminist Film in the Age of the Chick Flick."
-Steven Shaviro, DeRoy Professor of English, Wayne State University, author of The Cinematic Body (U of Minnesota P, 1993) and Connected: Or What it Means to Live in the Network Society (U of Minnesota P, 2003).
"Haunted Media: Temporality in New Film and Video"
4:15-4:45 coffee break
4:45-5:15 Panel Discussion: "New Directions in Teaching Film" (Sheldon Lu, Patricia White, Steven Shaviro) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
Moderator: Dana Heller, Professor of English and Director of Humanities Institute, Old Dominion University
(the symposium is funded by a Faculty Development Grant)
6:00-7:00 reception at Azar's Restaurant, 2000 Colley Avenue, Ghent with filmmaker Jacques Richard
7:30-10:00 Keynote Filmmaker: screening of Jaques Richard's documentary Henri Langois: The Phantom of the Cinematheque (140 minutes), followed by discussion with the filmmaker.
Naro Expanded Cinema
"Langlois was a filmmaker whose work consisted of other people's films." --Jacques Richard
Henri Langois: The Phantom of the CinemathJque is a documentary of a visionary who co-founded the most important film archives in Europe in 1936. Despite meager financial resources, Henri Langlois was able to save and store thousands of film copies - even during the Nazi occupation of Paris. Jacques Richard brings to light both the qualities and faults of a man whose passion for films has not only marked individuals, but also the history of cinema. (with Pierre Cardin, Claude Chabrol, Michel Climent, Georges Franju, Alfred Hitchhock, Maurice Pialat, Werner Schroeter, Simone Signoret, Jack Valenti)
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Monday, April 3:
-Focus on digital cinema/new media/animation
10:00 The King of Comedy (1983; 103 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
Rupert Pupkin is obsessed with becoming a comedy great. However, when he confronts his idol, talk show host Jerry Langford, with a plea to perform on the Jerry's show, he is only given the run-around. He does not give up, however, but persists in stalking Jerry until he gets what he wants.
Introduction and comments by Burton St. John, Assistant Professor of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University.
1:00 Grizzly Man (2005; 103 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
Werner Herzog's devastating take on grizzly bear activists Timothy Treadwell and Amie Huguenard, who were killed in October of 2003 while living among grizzlies in Alaska.
Introduction and comments by Jeff Jones, Assistant Professor of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University.
3:00 "Merging Digital Media" presentation by Nora Barry (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU).
Nora Barry is the creator of The Bit Screen, the first online web venue for made-for-the- Internet films, which launched in June of 1998. She also created Streaming Cinema, the first US festival exhibition of made-for-the-Internet video, film and multimedia work. She is the creator and producer of Descent to the Underworld: A Game-Film.
4:00 Copy Shop (2001) (12 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
A copy shop worker's world turns upside down when he accidentally takes a photocopy of his hand.
Introduction and comments by Peter Eudenbach, Video Artist and Lecturer in the Art Department, Old Dominion University.
5:00 "Reality after Cinema: Identification and Spectacle in the Digital Age" (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU).
Lecture by Bish Sen, University of Oregon, author of Of the People: Essays on Indian Popular Culture
6:00 The Lady and the Duke (2001; 21 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
During the French Revolution, a Scottish aristocrat and her former lover, the Duke of Orleans, find themselves on opposite sides of the conflict. Shot with an innovative technique using digital imagery. In French with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Dr. Ouafaa Zouali, Instructor of French,Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University.
(sponsored by Face/Tournées)
6:00 The Last Broadcast (1998; 86 minutes), (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
After three members of a TV crew are murdered, their coworker is found guilty. But did he really commit the crimes?
Introduction and comments by David Pagano, Lecturer of English, Old Dominion University.
7:10 Peter Collier, "Cutting vs Cutting and Pasting: The Leap from Tape to Computer" (Constant 1024)
Peter Collier was a music editor for animated features such as Mummies
Alive! The Legend Begins (1998), The Transformers: The Movie (1986) and
GI Joe: The Movie (1987).
8:00 Featured Filmmaker: Jeanne C. Davis, writer, director, The Uniform Nature of Folly (2006; 96 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU) After her husband dies, Ella and her two children must move from the privilege of Malibu to the struggling rural family farm of her brother-in-law. While the family members cope with their loss, Ella is gripped by the fear of hereditary effects of suicide.
Jeanne C. Davis was a screenwriter and producer of the hit television series Dr. Quinn Medicine Woman starring Jane Seymour. She will be screening her first feature film as a director which she premiered to much critical acclaim at the Santa Barbara Film Festival.
Screening and discussion about independent filmmaking
(co-sponsored by Women's Studies)
10:00 Cowboy Bebop (1998; 116 minutes)(102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
A terrorist explosion releases a deadly virus on the masses, and it's up to the bounty-hunting Bebop crew to catch the cold-blooded culprit. Japan.
Introduction and comments by Kyle Nicholas, Assistant Professor, Department of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University.
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Tuesday, April 4
-Focus on Asian Cinema
11:00 presentation on Filipino film by Visiting Professor Nicanor Tiongson, Fulbright Visiting Scholar, of University of California, Berkeley who will be presenting the Filipino film Himala / Miracle (1982; 126 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
In a remote village, a young girl named Elsa (Aunor) claims that the Virgin Mary has spoken to her. She reveals her visions and starts healing people, thus pushing the village to finally confront its own needs and beliefs. In Tagalog with English subtitles.
(sponsored by the ODU Institute for Filipino American Center.) Reception follows at the Filipino American Center, 49th St.
1:30 Masala (1993, 105 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
A cutting-edge black comedy that takes you into the lives of an eccentric mix of characters that make up a close-knit East Indian community in Canada.
Introduction and comments by Victoria Farmer, Visiting Assistant Professor, Department of Political Science and International Studies, Old Dominion University.
Indian snacks courtesy of Rajput Indian Cuisine.
3:30 Lecture and presentation by Sangita Gopal, Assistant Professor of English, University of Oregon, with clips: "Post-nuptual Contracts: Love and Marriage in the New Bollywood" (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU).
Gopal is co-editor of the forthcoming book Planet Bollywood (University of Minnesota Press).
4:30 Not On the Lips (2003, 115 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
A frothy 1925 operetta, performed by a glittering cast that includes Sabine Azema and Audrey Tautou, might not sound precisely like the great director Alain Resnais's glass of champagne. But Not on the Lips (Pas sur la bouche) is in a line of Resnais films that uses false sets and stylized acting for its effect. In French with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Steve Foster, Professor of French, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University.
7: 00 Featured Filmmaker: Screening and discussion of Request and Lunch, Korean filmmaker Jinoh Park, NYU film school graduate whose films have been officially selected at the Cannes and Sundance Film Festivals. (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
-Lunch (4min / Fiction / B&W)
With dignity, an elderly lady goes to a park to find and eat her lunch.
-Request (12min / Fiction / Color)
A small boy makes a request to witness an event most children will never see.
(co-sponsored by Asian Studies)
7:30 Panel Discussion on Jinoh Park's films, Jinoh Park and Dr. Hyunjin Min (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
8:00 "New Korean Cinema": Lecture by Hyunjin Min, University of Maryland, College Park and director of the DC Korean Film Festival. (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
(2006 Humanities Institute Lecture)
9:00 Joint Security Area (Chan-wook Park: Korea, 2002; 110) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
A firefight occurs in the Korean de-militarized zone and two North Korean soldiers are killed. The North claims that the incident was an attack by the South Koreans, while the South claims that one of their soldiers was kidnapped. In order to resolve the dispute, the Neutral Nations Supervisory Commission dispatches intelligence officer Major Sophie E. Jean (Lee Young-ae) to investigate and what she finds surprises both sides. In Korean with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Dr. Min, University of Maryland.
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Wednesday, April 5
-Focus on silent films
9:00 Abouna (2002, 87 minutes)(Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
Introduction and Comments by Dr. Lee Slater, Instructor of French, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University.
Eight-year-old Amine and fifteen-year-old Tahir's world is shattered when they awake one morning to find that their father has deserted them and their mother. The brothers leave their poor Chad village and head for the Cameroon border to begin their journey in search of him.
10:00 Buster Keaton's Sherlock Jr. (1924, 44 minutes) (Constant 1042)
Sherlock Jr. is a delightfully surreal fantasy of a film projectionist and amateur detective who climbs into his movie screen. Like Daffy Duck in the famous cartoon "Duck Amuck," Buster is at the mercy of sudden scene changes, sent from desert to snowstorm to lake in simple cuts while he remains helplessly fixed onscreen
Introduction and comments by Dennis Bounds, Professional in Residence: Cinema/TV, Regent University.
12:00 Metropolis (1927, 114 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
Introduction and comments by Frederick A. Lubich, Chair and Professor of German, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University.
It is the future, and humans are divided into two groups: the thinkers, who make plans (but don't know how anything works), and the workers, who achieve goals (but don't have the vision). Completely separate, neither group is complete, but together they make a whole. One man from the "thinkers" dares visit the underground where the workers toil, and is astonished by what he sees.
**From 3:00 pm to 9:00 on April 5, all events will take place at the Chrysler Museum of Art
3:00 Harold Lloyd's Safety Last! (1923, 73 minutes)(Kaufman Theatre, Chrysler Museum), Introduction and comments by Esther Arnold, Norfolk Academy.
Country boy (Lloyd) heads to the big city to seek success. While working as a clerk in a department store, he talks the manager into offering $1000 to anyone who can bring more customers to the store. He then arranges for a friend, a "human fly," to climb the face of the store building as a publicity stunt. Unfortunately the "human fly" is a wanted man, and our hero must make the climb himself.
4:30 Extra Girl (1923, 68 minutes)(Kaufman Theatre, Chrysler Museum)
Introduction and comments by Terry Lindvall, Virginia Wesleyan College.
In this film starring Mabel Normand, Sue Graham is a small town-girl who wants to be a motion picture star. She wins a contract when a picture of a very pretty girl is sent to a studio instead of her picture. When she arrives in Hollywood, the mistake is discovered and she starts working in the props department of the studio instead. Her parents then come out to California and invest some money with a very shifty individual.
6:15 Simon Joyce, Associate Professor of English, College of William and Mary, "Mabel's Dramatic Career: The Rise and Fall of Mabel Normand" (Kaufman Theatre, Chrysler Museum) (Sponsored by the Department of English, ODU)
7:00-8:00 Buster Keaton's The General (1927, 75 minutes) followed by a viewing of the Chrysler's special exhibit on Civil War photography. (Kaufman Theatre, Chrysler Museum)
introduced by Brooks Johnson, Chrysler's Curator of Photography.
When Union spies steal an engineer's beloved locomotive, he pursues it single-handedly and straight through enemy lines
8:00-9:00 Jazz concert and cash bar in Huber Court, Chrysler Museum
10:00 (at ODU) State and Main (2000; 106 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
A small Vermont town is turned upside-down when a Hollywood movie crew moves in for a new production in David Mamet's ensemble comedy of manners and morals.
Introduction and comments by Konrad Winters, Associate Professor of Communication and Theater Arts and Director of the Film and Video Studies Minor, Old Dominion University.
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Thursday, April 6:
-Focus on Independent cinema
9:00 am The Truman Show (1998) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU). Peter Weir's widely acclaimed satire on the omnipresence of television. With Jim Carrey, Laura Linney, Noah Emmerich and Ed Harris. (103 minutes)
Introduction and comments by David Earnest, Assistant Professor of Political Science and International Studies, Old Dominion University.
11:00-1:00 Good Night and Good Luck (2005) (Constant 1005)
George Clooney's film chronicles the real-life conflict between television newsman Edward R. Murrow and Senator Joseph R. McCarthy and the Permanent Sub-committee on Investigations (Government Operations Committee) which took place during the early days of broadcast journalism in 1950's America. Cinematographer Robert Elswit miraculously recreates the black-and-white look of that era.
Introduction and presentation by Gary Edgerton, Chair of Department of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University.
1:00 Once Upon a Time Cinema (2003; 90 minutes) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU Room). Mohsen Makhmalbaf's tenth feature and first comedy is set during the Qajar dynasty. It tells the story of a cinematographer who introduces the magic of the movies to the Persian court. The Shah is initially opposed to the medium, but after a screening he falls desperately in love with the film's heroine. In Persian with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Fran Hassencahl, Assistant Professor of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University.
3:00 Circe (1963) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
This Argentine classic, an adaptation of a short story by Julio Cortázar by director Manuel Antin, is a dark and foreboding vision of love and death, realized using revolutionary cinematic techniques. (In Spanish with English subtitles, 90 min)
Introduction and comments by Angelica Huizar, Assistant Professor of Spanish, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University.
5:00-6:00 "Independent Cinema in Hampton Roads": Panel on Independent Cinema Owners at
Speakers: Tench (co-owner of the Naro Expanded Cinema, Tim Cooper (owner of Naro Expanded Video) and Fred Schoenfeld (owner of the Commodore Theater in Portsmouth).
Moderated by Kyle Nicholas, Assistant Professor, Department of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University. (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
6:30 Reception at Cora's Restaurant, 723 West 21st (Ghent) with filmmaker Matt Tauber
8:00 Featured Filmmaker: Presentation by Matt Tauber, producer of The Great New Wonderful, a post-9-11 film (see below). (at Naro Expanded Cinema)
The Great New Wonderful (2005) (87 minutes) weaves five stories against the backdrop of an anxious and uncertain post-9-11 New York City. Beautifully woven, complex and subtle, this film captures an essence of NYC after 9/11. A great script, some stunning photography, an excellent score that helps tie it all together, and a great ensemble cast make this small film seem quite large. The emotions that bubble under the surface, only sometimes breaking through, give this film its strength and its power. Different stories of different people all struggling with day to day life sharing the common experience of being New Yorkers post 9/11. The references to what happened are almost all unspoken, evoked through the images displayed or the background sounds, yet there is no doubt that what happened is a force in the lives of all of these people. Intelligent film-making at its best. Danny Leiner developed the Sam Catlin script with producing
partner Matt Tauber for their new Sly Dog Films. The cast includes Maggie
Gyllenhaal, Edie Falco, Tony Shalhoub, Olympia Dukakis, Tom McCarthy and
Naseeruddin Shah.
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Friday, April 7:
-Focus on European Cinema
900 Master Class with Matt Tauber for filmmakers and actors
10:00 The Man Without a Past (2002) (Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
Finnish writer/director Aki Kaurismaki paints a compassionate portrait of life on the margins of society in this gently amusing, Oscar-nominated fable. After suffering from a severe robbery/beating, a man awakens in a hospital with no memory. In Finnish with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Thomas Allen, Associate Professor and Director of Geography
Dept. of Political Science & Geography, Old Dominion University.
10:00 My Wife is an Actress (2001) (Constant Hall 1042, ODU)
Charlotte Gainsbourg plays the wife and actress who stirs jealousy within her husband (writer-director Yvan Attal) when she is cast opposite Terence Stamp, playing an actor infamous for his womanizing. This sexy, romantic comedy benefits greatly from the chemistry between real-life partners Gainsbourg and Attal and a typically charismatic turn by Stamp. In French with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Christelle Redden, Instructor in French, Department of Foreign Languages, Old Dominion University.
12:00 Fitzcarraldo (1982)(Hampton/Newport News Room, Webb Center, ODU)
Introduction and comments by Kurt Taylor Gaubatz, Associate Professor in the Graduate Program in International Studies, Old Dominion University.
1:00 The Twilight Samurai (2002, 129 minutes) (Constant Hall 1042, ODU)
Seibei Iguchi, a low-ranking samurai, leads a life without glory as a bureaucrat in the mid-XIX century Japan. New prospects seem to open up when Tomoe, his long-time love, divorces a brutal husband. However, even as the Japanese feudal system is unraveling, Seibei remains bound by the code of honor of the samurai and by his own sense of social precedence. In Japanese with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Mieko Ishibashi, Senior Lecturer in Japanese, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University.
2:00-3:30 Panel Discussion: "European Cinema Today," held at Port City Java: 4416 Monarch Way (behind Constant Center), with refreshments and coffee; with paner members Imke Meyer, Bryn Mawr College; Dana Heller, Old Dominion University; Nicole Yancey, Honorary Consul of France.
Moderated by Frederick A. Lubich, Chair and Professor of German, Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures, Old Dominion University. (Sponsored by the Office of International Programs)
4:00 Enlightenment Guaranteed (2001; 105 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
The director of Men and Nobody Loves Me returns with a witty and humane comedy about two brothers traveling to Japan to visit a Buddhist monastery. When one brother's marriage falls apart, he calls upon the other to join him on a hastily arranged spiritual quest. Shot entirely in digital. In German and Japanese with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Susan Wansink, Professor of German, Virginia Wesleyan College.
6:30 Ten Souls Rising (2005), original short film by director/writer Emily Rosdeitcher (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
Ten Souls Rising is the story of eight New Yorkers and two French tourists who get stuck in an elevator in a Manhattan skyscraper. Chaos ensues as the passengers have trouble dealing with each other and with their own anxieties.
Emily Rosdeitcher received her M.F.A. from New York University's Tisch School of the Arts. Ten Souls Rising won the 2002 Richard Vague Screenwriting Award, a 2004 Warner Bros. Pictures Film Production Grant, and the 2005 NYU Craft Award for Cinematography, and was an official selection at the 2006 Cleveland International Film Festival.
7:00 Cinema Paradiso (1989; 123 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
This crowd-pleasing, Best Foreign Language Film Oscar winner is an affectionate salute to the magic of the movies and the individuals who spend their lives in the projection booth. Philippe Noiret stars as Alfredo, the projectionist for a small Sicilian village movie palace, who opens up new worlds for one very inquisitive child. In Italian with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Lane Dare, Producer/Announcer 90.3 WHRO.
9:30 Day for Night (1973; 116 minutes) (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
The French director Truffaut's love poem to the movies and movie-making features Truffaut playing a director who struggles to complete a film while at the same time handling the emotional problems of staff and crew. Funny and bittersweet, Day for Night provides insights into the movie-making process. Oscar winner for Best Foreign Picture. In French with English subtitles.
Introduction and comments by Konrad Winters, Department of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University.
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Saturday, April 8:
10:30 The Beautiful Country (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU; 125 minutes)
This is the story of Binh, who was the love child of a GI and and a Vietnamese woman conceived during the Vietnam War. The film details Binh's voyage as he is forced from his village at 17, goes to Saigon to find his mother, and then tries to escape to America with his much younger half brother, Tam.
Introduction and comments by Tram Tran, Vietnamese Student Group, Old Dominion University.
1:00 "The Making of Jerry Night Live" Presentation by Lawrence Zoeller, ODU alumnus. Hosted by David Pagano, Lecturer of English, ODU. (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
2:00 Student Films hosted by Konrad Winters, Department of Communications and Theater Arts, Old Dominion University (102 Mills Godwin Jr. Building, ODU)
6:00-8:00 Closing Event: "Ecliptic Projection: A Video Installation." Conceptual artist Peter Eudenbach uses sculpture, installation, video, and multiples to explore the history of ideas while playing with our expectations of the commonplace.
(Pretlow Planetarian, Old Dominion University)
Light refreshments will be served.
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Festival Committee Members:
Heidi Schlipphacke and Peter Schulman, Co-Directors
Gary Edgerton, Artistic Director
Juliet Welch, Assistant to the Directors
Sandra Mathews, Budget and Administrative Support
Susan Hughes, Graphic Designer
Ryan Fulcher, Web Site Development
Acknowledgments:
Office of the President, Old Dominion University
Office of the Provost, Old Dominion University Office of the Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs, Old Dominion University
Dean's Office, College of Arts and Letters, Old Dominion University
University Publications, Old Dominion University
University Events, Old Dominion University
Faculty Senate, Old Dominion University
Department of Communication and Theatre Arts, Old Dominion University Department of English, Old Dominion University
Institute of Asian Studies, Old Dominion University
Institute for Jewish Studies and Interfaith Understanding, Old Dominion University Graduate Program in International Studies, Old Dominion University Office of International Programs, Old Dominion University
Department of Foreign Languages & Literatures, Old Dominion University
Art Department, Old Dominion University
Filipino-American Center, Old Dominion University
Department of Women's Studies, Old Dominion University
Humanities Institute, Old Dominion University
Student Services, Old Dominion University
Virginia Wesleyan University
Bryn Mawr College
Regent University CI Travel
Port City Java
Naro Expanded Cinema
Chrysler Museum of Art
WHRO
FACE/TournJes
Naro Expanded Video
Commodore Theater
Norfolk Academy
Rajput Indian Cuisine
Cora
Azar's
French consulate
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