![]() The prices are $30 for standard seats and $60 for VIP tickets. That evening at 7:30 in F&M’s Ann & Richard Barshinger Center for Musical Arts is “False Negative: An Evening with John Waters.” The semi-comedic performance features the filmmaker talking about his career, his early negative artistic influences and his fascination with true crime. Screenings are free, but tickets are required. 23, features films and contemporary shorts at the Weis and Laiks Cinema and Zoetropolis Cinema Stillhouse in downtown Lancaster. “Some of the artists have been featured in New York City’s MoMA. “We're going to have some video and sculpture installations happening in the Winter Visual Arts Center galleries,” Misra said. This is the 50th anniversary of the film, which the Library of Congress added to the National Film Registry last year for being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.”Īrt installations and a reception will follow the film. 22 at the Colleen Ross Weis ‘85 and Martin Laiks Cinema, located in the Susan and Benjamin Winter ‘67 Visual Arts Center. Moss anticipates the event to become annual, attracting filmmakers of Waters’ stature, as well as prominent and emerging national and international artists.Ī Criterion Collection-restored, high-definition version of “Pink Flamingos,” filmed in and around Waters’ hometown of Baltimore, will screen at 6:30 p.m. The Center for Sustained Engagement with Lancaster provided a grant to help with staging the festival. ![]() “I felt that by working on this, I’m getting back lost time and some sense that I’m getting an experience I wasn’t able to get before and I won’t necessarily get in the same way when I graduate,” Mansaray said. The students say the collaborative experience filled some of the experience gap COVID caused. “We’re learning that information now so hopefully in future years, they don’t really have to think about it.” “Since this is the first year they’re doing it, we’re like the foundation,” Taylor said. They have been doing publicity, putting up posters around town, and contacting festival sponsors. Taylor will operate all of the screening projectors, while Mansaray and Proffitt will work in hospitality. – also had various duties planning and running the festival. Lauren Proffitt, an art studio major from Lancaster Idris Mansaray, an English and film major from Laurel, Md. The seniors – Simon Taylor, a film and media studies major from New Holland, Pa. These portrait documentaries include features on one of the founders of the Common Wheel, a bicycle shop in Lancaster a local middle school teacher and professional wrestler and the founder of The Mix, a nonprofit youth enrichment program. The festival includes screening a three-chapter film produced in the newly developed New Gleaners workshop that involved three F&M seniors working with three McCaskey High School students.
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