The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Local people, issues dominate ‘NHdocs’

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Haven’s culinary scene.

Jennifer Abod’s “The Passionate Pursuits of Angela Bowen” celebrates the life of longtime New Haven resident Bowen, a classical dancer, teacher and black feminist activist who came out as a lesbian.

Other highlights include “High School 9-1-1,” about a year in the life of the only ambulance service in Darien that happens to be run by high school teenagers; festival co-director Gorman Bechard’s long-lost 1987 documentar­y experiment “Twenty Questions”; and “Elegy for the Time Being,” inspired by the life of Hu nh Sanh Thông — the first Vietnamese scholar to arrive at Yale University in the 1950s.

There are 20 documentar­y features and 40 shorts in the festival, this year focusing on cinematogr­aphy, guerilla filmmaking and funding through crowdsourc­ing.

• New Haven’s Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Karyl Evans has a 40-minute film running June 5 at 6:30 p.m. at Whitney Humanities Center. It’s the first documentar­y ever produced about nationally renowned landscape architect Beatrix Farrand, who is considered the most important female landscape architect in the first part of the 20th century.

“The Life and Gardens of Beatrix Farrand” is about a woman born into privilege but determined to make a name for herself in the maledomina­ted profession of landscape architectu­re, Evans says. Farrand went on to design some of the country’s most important landscapes, including Dumbarton Oaks in Washington, D.C.; the Peggy Rockefelle­r Rose Garden at the New York Botanical Garden; and the East Garden at the White House.

• Fred Cantor’s short film “The High School That Rocked!” will be screened at NHdocs on Saturday at 10 p.m.; it recently won the Jury Award for Best Regional Documentar­y at the SENE Film, Music & Arts Festival in Rhode Island.

“The High School That Rocked!,” narrated by former Register writer and editor Fran Fried, tells the story of how six legendary bands in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame all performed at Staples High School in Westport from 1966-68, creating indelible memories for local students.

The Doors, Cream, Sly & the Family Stone, the Rascals, the Animals and the Yardbirds (with Jeff Beck and Jimmy Page) all played at Staples in a two-year span. Cantor, a Staples and Yale graduate, previously co-created/produced the documentar­y about The Remains, “America’s Lost Band.” He once took a Yale film course with Standish Lawder, he said in an email, and attended numerous screenings held by the Yale Film Society and the Yale Law School Film Society.

• The film fest is partly under the banner of the Internatio­nal Festival of Arts and Ideas, particular­ly in closing out NHdocs with a three-day retrospect­ive of documentar­ies by award-winning D.A. Pennebaker and Chris Hegedus — who are credited with a crucial role in revitalizi­ng the cinema verité tradition in the digital era. The filmmakers will be present to discuss their films over the June 9-11 weekend.

For more informatio­n, and the full screening schedule, visit nhdocs.com.

• Almost concurrent with the New Haven film fest is the Connecticu­t LGBT Film Festival in Hartford June 2-10. “The Center of My World, a romantic drama about a gay German teen and his very unconventi­onal family, opens the festival on Friday. Most screenings will be at Cinestudio on the campus of Trinity College, except for a closing Saturday matinee at Real Art Ways, and closing Saturday night programs in downtown Hartford.

Also at the LGBT festival will be “The Lavender Scare,” a film about President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s presidency when, with the United States gripped in the panic of the Cold War, the president deemed homosexual­s to be “security risks” and ordered the immediate firing of any government employee discovered to be gay or lesbian.

 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D ?? The poster for “High School 9-1-1.”
CONTRIBUTE­D The poster for “High School 9-1-1.”

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