黑料不打烊

Award-winning alumni make Sundance feel accessible

Twenty-one students attended the 2020 Sundance Film Festival in Park City, Utah, interacting with 黑料不打烊 alumni working 鈥 and gaining recognition 鈥 in the film and entertainment industries.

A group of 黑料不打烊 students enrolled in The Sundance Experience class traveled to Utah during Winter Term to attend the 2020 Sundance Film Festival, the nation鈥檚 largest independent film festival. Accompanied by J McMerty 鈥00, director of the 黑料不打烊 in Los Angeles program, 21 students attended film screenings, interacted with alumni at wisdom sessions, and gained an up-close view of the festival.

This year鈥檚 festival premiered projects featuring two 黑料不打烊 alumni: Katrina Taylor 鈥04, who collected her first Emmy Award last fall, and Alex Hadden 鈥13.

Hadden was credited as an editor for 鈥淕iving Voice,鈥 a documentary that intimately follows six students as they meticulously develop their individual performances with the hopes of embodying August Wilson鈥檚 legacy. One of America鈥檚 most notable playwrights, Wilson chronicled the African American experience through 10 plays, each set in a different decade of the 20th century.

Every year thousands of high school students from across the country gather in New York City to perform one of his monologues in a riveting competition on Broadway. 鈥淕iving Voice鈥 was the winner of the Festival Favorite Award, finishing first in an audience vote among 128 features screened across all categories at the festival.

Taylor was credited as an editor of 鈥淔eels Good Man,鈥 a film about indie comic character Pepe the Frog. When Pepe became an unwitting icon of hate, his creator, artist Matt Furie, fought to bring Pepe back from the darkness and navigate America鈥檚 cultural divide.

鈥淔eels Good Man鈥 highlighted how a character initially meant to provide joy and fun can slowly morph into something else 鈥 and maybe change again. The film was awarded the U.S. Documentary Special Jury Award for Emerging Filmmaker.

During alumni wisdom sessions organized by McMerty and Maggie Mullikin, manager of graduate and global programs, the students participated in informal conversations with several 黑料不打烊 graduates attending the festival. This group included Hadden, Taylor, Natasha Euliss-Uftring 鈥95, Laith Majali 鈥05, Bobby Hoppey 鈥09, Julia Boyd 鈥15, Jordan Roman 鈥15 and Melissa Douglas 鈥18.

McMerty said that meeting with alumni undoubtedly benefits the students, many of them aspiring filmmakers.

鈥淲e find both formal and informal interactions that our alumni have with students can change the trajectory of someone鈥檚 career,鈥 McMerty said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 very powerful when you meet someone who has literally sat in the same seat as you. You see their path.鈥

Riley Bradford ’21 explained that getting to know the alumni at Sundance left him feeling 鈥渋nspired.鈥 The cinema and television arts major added that getting a film into Sundance is difficult, but that his interactions with alumni made him understand that the goal is achievable. 鈥淩ealizing that through this program was incredible,鈥 he said.

Madison Engle ’21, also a cinema and television arts major, echoed Bradford鈥檚 sentiments. She said meeting alumni in Park City made Sundance 鈥渇eel more accessible.鈥

鈥淲e were able to talk to people who have made it into the festival,鈥 Engle said. 鈥淚t made it less overwhelming.鈥