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Fri, Apr 28

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Seattle

Seattle Black Film Festival (Date and time TBA)

Exact day and time will be updated when the schedule is announced! Check back soon https://www.langstonseattle.org/home-black-arts-culture/sbff/

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Seattle Black Film Festival  (Date and time TBA)
Seattle Black Film Festival  (Date and time TBA)

Time & Location

Apr 28, 2023, 4:00 PM

Seattle, 104 17th Ave S, Seattle, WA 98144, USA

About the event

Established in 2003 by Artistic  Director Jacqueline Moscou, the first Langston Hughes African American  Film Festival was a production of the Langston Hughes Performing Arts  Center, later known as the Langston Hughes Performing Arts  Institute(LPHAI). From the start, the Langston Hughes African American  Film Festival (LHAAFF) sought to give audiences access to  underrepresented perspectives and emerging filmmakers from across the  African diaspora. Curator Zola Mumford researched and programmed films  from many different countries and genres and invited Karen Toering, a  media producer and a leader in nonprofit arts and funding organizations,  to join the festival in 2004. With Toering as Program Director, the  LHAAFF grew from three days of films and discussions to nine.

Over the years, guests and  participating filmmakers included Charles Burnett; Ava DuVernay; St.  Clair Bourne; Zeinabu Irene Davis; Katherine Cheairs; Danny Glover;  Brazilian director Joel Zito Araújo; Jayne Cortez; James Spooner  (Afropunk); Tionna McClodden; David Walker; and many others.  The festival has shown early films by Ava DuVernay, Barry Jenkins,  Tchaiko Omawale, and dozens of other filmmakers now working in film,  television, comics, and other creative forms.

Following changes to the  administrative structure of the Langston Hughes Performing Arts  Institute (LPHAI), the festival became a production of LANGSTON in 2016.  Filmmaker Andrea Stuart-Lehalle joined the LHAAFF team in 2015 and  assumed the role of director upon Karen Toering’s departure in 2019.  After careful consideration and community feedback, the name was changed  to the Seattle Black Film Festival (SBFF) and introduced publicly in  2020.

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