PROGRAM

As part of its Pride Month programming, the LGBTQ Policy Center at Roosevelt House is pleased to present a showcase of new short films made by local, award-winning LGBTQ filmmakers. The screening will be followed by a question and answer session featuring the directors of each film.

Included in the showcase are the following short films:

Pink and Blue, directed by Carmen LoBue, tells the heartwarming story of the joys and sorrows of first-time parenting for a trans couple of color.

How to Raise a Black Boy, directed by Jamal Justice Jones, is an experimental fairytale dedicated to the modern black boy in which four children disappear one night, and find themselves on a fantastical journey to break the curses of black boyhood.

Ice Cold, directed by Sekiya Dorsett, also the moderator of the post-screening Q&A, is about a blushing bride having the best and worst day of her life.

F**k Em Right Back, directed by Harris Doran, is about a queer Black aspiring Baltimore rapper who must outwit his vengeful day-job boss to avoid getting fired after accidentally eating an edible.

Hold Onto Me, directed by Te Shima Brennan and Rajvi Desai, follows Mother LaTravious as she tries to hold her nonprofit organization together and struggles with health issues.

 

Panelists:

Te Shima Brennen (They/Them), co-director of Hold Onto Me, is a visual storyteller and journalist based in Brooklyn. As an emerging documentary filmmaker, they aim to tell nuanced stories about Black, queer, and trans people as they navigate institutions and systems not built to support them. Currently, Te Shima is co-directing a documentary that follows an ailing Black trans matriarch who is struggling to inculcate the values of education and survival in her community before she runs out of time. They are also producing a documentary that follows a revolutionary artist from Yonkers who is leading the charge to create a healthier future for generations of Black community members affected by redlining. Te Shima was the 2022-23 recipient of a Magic Grant from the Brown Institute for Media Innovation for their pilot project, “TRANSforming Journalism.” They were also a 2022 Reuters Institute Fellow at the University of Oxford, where they researched how journalists can build trust in trans communities as a gateway to telling nuanced stories about them. Te Shima completed their Masters of Science in Journalism with a documentary specialization at Columbia University’s School of Journalism, and is currently a reporting fellow at the Pulitzer Center. Their work has been featured at numerous festivals, domestically and abroad, including NewFest, the Pan African Film Festival, BFI Flare: London LGBTQIA+ Film Festival, Roze Filmdagen, and the Inside Out Film Festival.

Harris Doran (He/Him)is the director and writer of F**k Em Right Back, which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in 2022 and received a nomination for the Grand Jury Prize. The film won many awards including “Best Comedy” at Aspen Shortsfest, qualifying the film for Oscar consideration. Doran also produced D. Smith’s feature documentary Kokomo City, executive produced by Lena Waithe, which premiered in the 2023 Sundance Film Festival, where it won both the NEXT Innovator Award and the Audience Award. Kokomo City had its international premiere at the Berlin International Film Festival, where it won the Panorama Audience Award. The film was bought by Magnolia Pictures to be released in theaters Summer 2023. Harris was shortlisted for the Film Independent Spirit Awards’ “Someone to Watch Award” for his feature film Beauty Mark, which earned the “Breakout Performance” Jury Prize for lead actress at its LA Film Festival premiere, the “Best Ultra lndie” film award at the Woodstock Film Festival, and the “Audience Award” for Best Feature Film at the Austin Film Festival.

Sekiya Dorsett (She/Her, MFA ’18), director of Ice Cold, is a GLAAD award-winning filmmaker who centers a multidimensional Black experience in her work. Bringing into sharper focus the lives of Black women, queer folks, the working class, and their intersections, Dorsett’s body of work is notable for its intimate storytelling. Her first feature, 2017’s The Revival: Women and the Word, was screened across the country on tour with Black lesbian poets and is distributed by Women Make Movies. In 2019, she directed a four-episode documentary series, Stonewall 50: The Revolution, for NBC News and NBCOut. The series’ deep dive into the historic uprising won a GLAAD Media Award and the award for Excellence in Digital Journalism from NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ Journalists. Recently, she was one of the cinematographers who brought In Our Mother’s Gardens (Netflix), a work of intergenerational Black woman confessional storytelling, to critical and audience acclaim. Her films have screened at Tribeca Film Festival, Urbanworld Film Festival, the Brooklyn Museum, Frameline Film Fest, and Outfest Film Festival, and have been written about in publications including HuffPost, MIC, BuzzFeed, and Essence. She holds a Master of Fine Arts from Hunter College. Her next project, I LOVE BED-STUY, is a docu-fiction feature-length love story and love letter to the iconic Brooklyn neighborhood.

Justice Jamal Jones (She/He/They), director of How to Raise a Black Boy, is a filmmaker, actor, and writer based in New York City. As a Black Queer Alchemist, they integrate Black feminist queer theory and Black diasporic spirituality, such as Vodou (Voodoo), into their work. Their debut film, How to Raise a Black Boy, is a reimagining of Jones’s childhood, linking their boyhood to their identity as a non-binary artist. The film was screened internationally at more than 30 film festivals, earning 10 awards. Justice was also a 2021 Sundance Ignite Fellow, and in 2022 they were commissioned to direct for MTV and Calvin Klein. Jones was also a guest on Good Morning America’s Hulu special A Conversation Between Black Men, in which Jones advocated for Black trans and non-binary individuals. A contributor to the new film anthology A Pill for Promiscuity, which explores queer sex in the age of pharmaceuticals, Jones’ next film Crossroads Blues is in pre-production.

Carmen LoBue (They/Them) is a non binary Black Filipinix filmmaker, playwright, and actor. As a writer, LoBue was chosen as a semi-finalist for the 2018 Sundance New Voices lab for their queer comedy drama seriesKoi. As a filmmaker, LoBue was a Black Public Media fund finalist in 2020. They have been featured in Paper Magazine’s PAPER Predictions: 100 People Taking Over 2019 and they were also named a 2018 New Legacy Maker Honoree (in collaboration with the Disruptor Foundation) for their commitment to dismantling societal injustice while inspiring community participation through creative platforms. Recognized as one of Inc.’s next generation leaders in 2020, their recent projects include MTA Radio Play Will you…Hold my hair back? (Rattlestick playwrights theater); Hulu’s Your Attention Please: Initiative 29 Tao Leigh Goffe; and Pink & Blue on Tubi. Their upcoming projects as a director include Miss Peppermint’s Girl Like Me, airing this summer on OUTtv. Represented by the Gersh Agency & Echo Lake Entertainment, they are a member of Alliance of Women Directors. LoBue was recently selected as a shadowing director in Ryan Murphy’s The Half Initiative program, which aims to make Hollywood more inclusive by creating equal opportunities for women and minorities behind the camera. Currently, LoBue stars as DRE on The L Word: Generation Q. 

This event is co-sponsored by the CUNY LGBTQ Advisory Council and it is made possible by the generous support of the New York City Council and the CUNY LGBTQ Consortium.

 


We Are Here: An LGBTQ+ Short Film Showcase | Posted on June 6th, 2023 | Film Screenings, LGBTQ Center Program, Public Programs