LOOKING FORWARD
LOOKING BACK
Fortieth Anniversary Celebration
David Kintzler
Mary Kintzler
Vince Baldassano
Tom Anastasio
Barbara Rothenberg
Alberta Cifolelli
Burt Chernow
Michelle Mackey
Sharon Greytak
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RECEPTION
FOR THE ARTISTS
MARCH 8, 2007
5:30 - 7:00
PM
The 40th anniversary of the founding of the Community College system
in general, and Housatonic Community College and its galleries in particular,
is a milestone
that provides an ideal opportunity to reflect on and
celebrate the rich contribution that the College and the Museum have made
to the cultural life of Bridgeport, Fairfield County and the New England
Region.
The 40th Anniversary Exhibition opens March
8 with a reception for the artists from 5:30 until 7:00 pm and remains on view through Sunday, March
25. Participating artists are Professor Emeritus David Kintzler and the
late Burt Chernow, founder of the Housatonic Museum of Art, along with
former faculty members Mary Kintzler, Vince Baldassano, Tom Anastasio,
Barbara Rothenberg, Alberta Cifolelli, and Michele Mackey to exhibit.
Filmmaker and Housatonic Community College alumna Sharon Greytak will
be screening her films.
Screening Times
March 9- 14
Noon- Weirded Out and
Blown Away
7:00 pm- Losing It
March 15-20
Noon- The Love Lesson
7:00 pm- Hearing Voices
March 21- 25
Noon- The Love Lesson
7:00 pm- Weirded Out and
Blown Away
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ABOUT THE DIRECTOR
Sharon Greytak, independent filmmaker and HCC alumna, has written, produced
and directed feature-length fiction films including Losing It, The
Love Lesson, Hearing Voices, Weirded Out and Blown Away, Some Pleasure
on the Level of the Source and Czechoslovakian Woman. She has been
at the forefront of writing and directing films that address difficult
subjects such as gay/lesbian themes, overcoming physical disabilities
and
producing independent films with complex story lines.
Most recently, Greytak's early short films were included in Tomorrowland:
CalArts in Moving Pictures at MoMA which travels to the Pompidou Center
in Paris next month. She is also a 2006 Anchor Award recipient from the
University of Hartford. Currently she is preparing her next
dramatic feature.
Sharon Greytak's work has been screened at the Museum of Modern
Art in New York, Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the Film Society at
Lincoln Center, East Village Cinema NYC, George Eastman House, Museum
Fine Arts, Boston; REDCAT Hollywood; Anthology Film Archive, Margaret
Mead Film Festival, Laemmle Theatres Los Angeles, American Cinamatheque
at the Egyptian Theatre, Hollywood, Pacific Film Archive and numerous
festivals abroad. She is the recipient of a CINE Golden Eagle and has
won awards at Double Take Documentary Film Festival, Chicago International
Film Festival, Black Maria, Athens and Houston International Film Festival.
She was invited to participate in the American Film Institute's
Directing Workshop for Women, and has received fellowships from New York
State Council on the Arts, New York Foundation for the Arts, Soros Documentary
Fund, Jerome Foundation, ArtsLink and the American Film Institute. She
is a Yaddo and MacDowell Fellow. Her films are in the collection of MoMA,
the New Museum of Contemporary Art, Open Society Archive: Budapest, and
are distributed by Leisure Time Features and the Cinema Guild, NYC.
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Weirded Out and
Blown Away. 1986. USA. Directed by Sharon Greytak.
Being
disabled presents many problems which are visible to the human eye, but
what about
the social and personal relationships that disabled men and women deal
with everyday? Filmmaker Sharon Greytak, who has rheumatoid arthritis and
uses a motorized wheelchair, has made a frank video about these issues
using herself and four other professionals from New York City and Los Angeles
who offer insights into their lives as disabled individuals. Speaking bluntly
and with humor, they discuss the victim/superhero stereotypes, perceptions
of sexuality, vulnerability to crime, as well as the common ground shared
by people without disabilities. 43 minutes.
Hearing Voices. 1990. USA. Directed by Sharon Greytak. Despite advice
to the
contrary, a model (Erika Nagy) stricken with scoliosis refuses to increase
her public visibility by advertising treatments for her disease. As she
leaves her doctor's office, she meets the doctor's gay
lover Lee (Stephen Gatta), and
they begin an affair. 87 minutes.
Losing It. 2000. USA. Directed by Sharon Greytak. The filmmaker travels
to Siberia, Italy, Hong Kong, Brazil, and New York, interviewing people
with disabilities. In English, Portuguese, Russian, and Italian with
English subtitles.
90 minutes.
The Love Lesson. 1996. USA. Directed by Sharon Greytak. Seventeen years
ago Camille made a verbal adoption agreement with Grace to care for her
son. The only proviso was that Grace would continue to live nearby. She
has secretly watched her son grow up but things change when she realizes
he has contracted AIDS. 87 minutes.
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