The Maui News - Weekender

Garrison, author, filmmaker, dies at 78

-

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Christian Garrison, an author and filmmaker who displayed an unfiltered slice of 1960s Mississipp­i hill country life in a short film about influentia­l blues guitarist Fred McDowell, has died. He was 78.

Garrison’s sister, Gail McNeill, said her brother died Thursday at his home in Winston-Salem, N.C. Garrison had been fighting cancer for several months.

Garrison was working as a filmmaker for the University of Mississipp­i when he made “Blues Maker,” a black-andwhite film released in 1969. Featuring just a small amount of dialogue, the short film used McDowell and his mesmerizin­g slide guitar as a backdrop for the gritty existence of residents near Como, Miss. McDowell was an inspiratio­n for artists like Bonnie Raitt and The Rolling Stones.

Garrison also penned three children’s books, “The Dream Eater,” “Flim and Flam and the Big Cheese,” and “Little Pieces of the West Wind.” The books were illustrate­d by Diane Goode, who later became a Caldecott Honor Book winner.

“Christian’s children’s stories had a deceptive simplicity, they had charm and humor and his voice was true,” Goode said in an email.

Garrison wrote two crime novels, “Snake Doctor” and “Paragon Man.” Garrison also co-founded the Panola Playhouse in Sardis, Miss. The decades-old playhouse remains in operation.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States