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Simon James

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septiembre 2005

Sheila TouseyDirector Dan Bigbee (Comanche) and producer and screenwriter Lily Shangreaux (Oglala Lakota) co-founded BIG Productions in 1993. They produced the self-government segment of Who We Are, a short film which screens daily at the Lelawi Theater at NMAI in Washington, DC, and Surviving Strong, a short documentary about the 2004 Grand Opening of NMAI on the National Mall. Their PBS documentary, The Great American Footrace, was honored as Best Documentary at the 2004 Cherokee Film Festival and Best Public Television Entry at the 2003 Great Plains Film Festival.

Bigbee has served as the president of the American Indian Chamber of Commerce of Oklahoma and as a panelist evaluating funding proposals for Independent Television Services (ITVS). He became interested in documentary in 1976, as the cataloguer of the Native American Videotape Archives for the Bicentennial Office of the Bureau of Indian Affairs. Bigbee received an Associate's Degree in fine art from Bacone College in Muskogee, Oklahoma, and attended the US Naval School of Photography. He grew up in Oklahoma and Alemaya, Ethiopia.

In 2004 Shangreaux participated in the NAPT/PIC workshop "Storytelling for the Screen" and she has also participated in the Writers Guild of America television-writing workshop. Shangreaux has served as a panelist for ITVS and as state board secretary of the American Indian Chamber of Commerce of Oklahoma. Formerly she worked in development at the Institute of American Indian Arts. Shangreaux, who was raised on the Pine Ridge Reservation in South Dakota, received her BA in psychology from Princeton University. Bigbee and Shangreaux live in Stillwater, Oklahoma.

Dan Bigbee on documentation in Native communities: "There is a nationwide cry to preserve languages and oral histories. Pre-reservation days everybody had a role within the community. There were the hunters, the warriors, the medicine people, the winter count people- the historians. Here we are moving that traditional role of the winter counter/ tribal historian to the little guy standing there in the corner with this mountain of tape. For instance, through video people can see what it was like to be Indian in the mid-seventies when AIM members were raising their fists and raising a new consciousness. I have a real appreciation for the fact that this traditional role is being filled, and how each tribe wants to approach that is pretty much up to them."

Lily Shangreaux: "Since founding BIG Productions, we have been committed to the accurate representation of the Native American perspective on life, community, and culture. As Native people, Dan and I know the importance of our cultures to our life. Our mission is to produce quality programs that accurately and positively portray Native peoples and our cultures."

Presentado por NMAI

Créditos Fotográficos: Dan Bigbee y Lily Shangreaux - gentileza del realizador

Presentado por NMAI

 

 

 

 

 


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