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  • BlackStar Announces 2023 Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab Fellows, Expands Program to Include Both Directors and Producers

    BlackStar Announces 2023 Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab Fellows, Expands Program to Include Both Directors and Producers

    BlackStar Projects––the premier organization celebrating visionary Black, Brown, and Indigenous film and media artists––today announced the second class of the Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab, presented by Comcast’s Black Experience on Xfinity. Founded in 2021, the year-long fellowship supports and uplifts Black, Brown and Indigenous emerging and mid-career filmmakers in the Greater Philadelphia area by providing funding as well as access to mentorship, critical feedback, equipment, crews, and space.

    Following the success of its first year, the Lab has expanded to include both directors and producers, emphasizing the collaborative nature of the filmmaking process. The newly-announced cohort is twice the size of last year’s, featuring four filmmakers paired with four producers––eight individual fellows who will create four short films.

    The 2023 Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab fellows are Zardosht Afshari (Director) and Aaron Brokenbough Jr. (Producer); David Gaines (Director) and Elizah Turner (Producer); Simone Holland (Director) and Stephanie Malson (Producer); and ashley ijoema omoma (Director) and Samiyah Wardlaw (Producer). 

    As with the inaugural class, BlackStar will act as an executive producer of the short films created through the Lab, and they will premiere during the next edition of the BlackStar Film Festival in August 2023 with opportunity for distribution on the Black Experience on Xfinity channel. 

    “In this second year of the Lab, we are excited to add a producing track, offering support for producers of color, who often receive fewer opportunities for mentorship in our region,” said Maori Karmael Holmes, BlackStar’s Chief Executive & Artistic Officer. “Both directors and producers play a vital role in telling our communities’ stories, and we’re thrilled to honor their work and nurture their creativity through the Lab.”

    “Discovery and support of diverse emerging content creators, like the filmmakers in this lab, is a top priority for our Black Experience on Xfinity channel,” said Keesha Boyd, Executive Director, Multicultural Entertainment, Comcast. “We couldn’t be more thrilled to continue our support of the BlackStar team to further our company-wide mission of investing in and showcasing authentic culture driven stories.”

    The 2023 Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab Films include:  

    An Endoscopy

    In director Zardosht Afshari and producer Aaron Brokenbough Jr.’s forthcoming project, a film student accompanies a newcomer Iraqi student for a medical procedure, with the agreement that he will be her subject in a documentary.

    The Freedom to Fall Apart

    Directed by David Gaines and produced by Elizah Turner, the short will comprise an anthology of four disparate vignettes together questioning the function of shame within the Black American body politic.

    All That’s Left

    Through their film, director Simone Holland and producer Stephanie Malson will tell the story of Mercedes, who struggles to differentiate reality from her imagination as she embarks upon a journey of self-exploration and relationships.

    Now That We’ve Killed Me

    Director ashley ijoema omoma and producer Samiyah Wardlaw will together realize the story of a mother, Ezienne, as she discovers the truth of her daughter’s life on the eve of her daughter’s funeral.

    The Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab is open to emerging and mid-career filmmakers seeking to create short narrative, experimental, or hybrid projects in any genre. The inaugural cohort of fellows (2021-2022) included Bettina Escauriza, Jasmine Lynea, Xenia Matthews, and Julian Turner. Xenia Matthews was subsequently named one of the 25 New Faces of Independent Film by Filmmaker Magazine and Julian Turner’s Lab-produced The Big Three was selected for the 58th Chicago International Film Festival. 

    Applications for next year’s Lab will open in August 2023.

    About Zardosht Afshari

    Zardosht Afshari is an Iranian filmmaker whose work has screened in international film festivals in the U.S., Iran, Poland, Croatia, India, and Italy. He received his MA in Dramatic Literature from the University of Tehran in Iran and his MFA in Media Arts from Temple University after moving to the United States in 2019. He currently teaches film courses at Temple University while working on various film projects.

    About Aaron Brokenbough Jr.

    Aaron Brokenbough is a Philadelphia-based filmmaker with over 12 years of production experience. Aaron has worked with multiple award-winning directors, writers, artists, and multimedia creatives. Getting his start in community-based media, he started producing for the YouTube channel Entertainment Buffet before producing art installations. He is the co-founder and producer for SlyTree Creative, a content-focused brand-building experience.

    About David Gaines

    David A. Gaines (he/they) is a Black writer, filmmaker and performer born and raised in the greater Philadelphia area. His work examines Blackness, masculinity, Christianity and mental health through an intersectional lens, and seeks to strengthen community through vulnerable self-expression. He is an award-winning, nationally touring poet and fellow of The Watering Hole who holds several slam poetry championship titles, including 2017 College Unions Poetry Slam Invitational Champion and 4th rank in the 2018 Individual World Poetry Slam. In 2020, he was inaugurated as the Poet Laureate of Pennsylvania’s Montgomery County. In 2021, David published his first collection of poems, “soft boy.”, and his directorial debut poetry short film, “”fine china.””, received international acclaim and won the 5th Weimar Poetry Film Award. His work has also been featured in the National Black Arts Festival, Button Poetry, Write About Now, VICE Media, among many others. When not writing, performing or fiddling with cameras, you can find David teaching poetry to Philly youth, playing video games on his PC and searching for the best homemade pickle recipe.

    About Elizah Turner

    Elizah Turner began her journey as a unit still photographer on non-union film sets during the off season from the music touring industry.  Fascinated with the overlap of the two worlds, she has since worked in various roles providing both creative and technical production for nonprofits, production companies, musical artists and political campaigns. Her career paths have varied but all have one thing in common: supporting creatives to create systems & processes in the midst of chaos. Elizah’s focus in the film world is centered around highlighting stories told by writers and directors through a Black feminist lens.  Her north star is equally invested in work that restructures the entertainment industry to empower and earnestly engage with artists of the global majority and the power of culture.

    About Simone Holland

    With their storytelling grounded in reality, Simone uses subtle surrealism as her lens. They’ve worked as director and cinematographer on projects for Red Bull, Jazmine Sullivan, Bustle, Tone Stith, and Jamila Woods, and was a part of the creative direction team for the 2021 BET AWARDS; Simone focuses on amplifying the voices of those who do not have the space. As a 2021 Emmy Award winning camera operator and a 2019 Mural Arts Philadelphia Black Artists fellow, Simone continues to push boundaries. Cross-pollinating her creative versatility, Simone applies her multi-disciplinary technical experience to her directorial and creative work as a current resident of the 2022 ROTATE program at YouTube and Wieden + Kennedy.

    About Stephanie Malson

    Stephanie Malson is a multi-hyphenate filmmaker and producer who is drawn to telling ancestral stories. Her recent short film, SLOW BURN, was an official selection of the Gary International Black Film Festival and the Baltimore International Black Film Festival. She produced the festival gem, OURIKA!, which premiered at BlackStar Film Festival. She is a co-producer on the upcoming feature documentary, ULRICK, which chronicles the life of Haitian master painter Ulrick Jean-Pierre. Her cinematography is featured in the short experimental film We Are Free Because of Harriet Tubman, which was also an official BlackStar Film Festival selection. Among many work-for-hire projects, she has produced work for Intercultural Journeys, The Debbie Allen Dance Academy, and ARRAY. She also teaches script writing part-time at Temple University. Stephanie holds an M.F.A. in Creative Writing from Rosemont College.

    About ashley ijoema omoma

    ashley ijoema omoma is a filmmaker, writer, mover and interdisciplinary artist creating documentary & narrative films, experimental videos and visual installations. A daughter of Nigerian immigrants, much of her work is influenced by her nomadic upbringing which challenges ideals of a singular Black experience. Personal and communal liberation, Black interiority, Black femalehood and the complexities of migration & diaspora are recurring themes of her work often explored through music, memory, intimate findings in personal archives, love, intergenerational familial ties, definitions of home, self perception, juju and time travel.

    About Samiyah Wardlaw

    Samiyah Wardlaw is an independent filmmaker passionate about producing diverse, innovative and unique projects. A Philadelphia native, she graduated from Drexel University with a B.S. in Film and Television. With experience on both indie and commercial sets, Samiyah has ample experience as a producer, assistant director and production coordinator. She has produced several short films, and recently directed and produced her debut feature film Burn Out which is currently in post-production. Samiyah is extremely excited to work with Ashley Omoma and bring Now That We’ve Killed Me to life!

    The BlackStar Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab is presented by Xfinity with additional support from the William Penn Foundation, All Ages Productions, Independence Public Media Foundation, Seven Knots Productions, Mellon Foundation, Wyncote Foundation, Gucci Changemakers Fund, and Expressway Cinema Rentals.

    For more information about the Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab, please visit https://www.blackstarfest.org/lab/.

    About BlackStar Projects

    BlackStar Projects is the producer of the BlackStar Film Festival, an annual celebration of the visual and storytelling traditions of the African diaspora and global communities of color — showcasing films by Black, Brown, and Indigenous people from around the world. In addition to the acclaimed festival, BlackStar presents an array of programming across film and visual culture year-round, including the twice-annual journal Seen, the podcast Many Lumens, the William and Louise Greaves Filmmaker Seminar, and the Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab, among other initiatives. 

    Press Contacts

    Ed Winstead

    Senior Director, Cultural Counsel

    ed@culturalcounsel.com

    Sam Riehl 

    Senior Account Executive, Cultural Counsel

    sam@culturalcounsel.com 

    Emma Frohardt

    Account Executive, Cultural Counsel

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    Devon Ma

    Account Coordinator, Cultural Counsel

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  • BlackStar and Xfinity Launch First-Ever Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab Cohort

    BlackStar and Xfinity Launch First-Ever Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab Cohort

    (Philadelphia, PA — October 26, 2021) — BlackStar Projects, the premier organization celebrating visionary Black, Brown, and Indigenous film and media artists, and Xfinity, home of the Black Experience Channel and the most comprehensive library of diverse entertainment available to customers via its X1 and Flex 4k Streaming devices, today announced the inaugural class of their new Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab.

    The year-long fellowship supports and uplifts Black, Brown and Indigenous emerging and mid-career artists and filmmakers in the Greater Philadelphia area by providing access to equipment, funding, and mentorship, over the course of a year. BlackStar will act as an executive producer on the short films created during the Lab, providing feedback on works in progress and advice for working with crew, while Xfinity provided a major portion of the funding for production. The films will premiere at the next BlackStar Film Festival in August 2022 and will be featured on the Black Experience on Xfinity Channel. Additionally, shortlisted candidates who did not receive a fellowship this cycle will receive one-on-one consultation from industry representatives courtesy of Kickstarter.

    The 2021 Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab fellows are Bettina Escauriza, Jasmine Lynea, Julian Turner, and Xenia Matthews. 

    Bettina Escauriza’s project, Tonight, We Eat Flowers, will center on a person who sells hold music to companies, employing magical realism and the absurd to disrupt expectations. Jasmine Lynea’s hybrid film, The Love Machine, will be set in 2036 North Philadelphia in a dominantly Black neighborhood, and will focus on cultivating a new perspective on love. Julian Turner’s short The Big Three, will engage a conversation surrounding Black representation and artistic ownership through a musical setting. Xenia Matthew’s film Ourika! will utilize surrealism, animation and multimedia elements to further the ongoing conversation on the colonization of Black women’s bodies in art and material culture.

    “I am really impressed by the sheer diversity and boldness of this year’s applications.” said Maori Karmael Holmes, Artistic Director and CEO of BlackStar, “Our finalists represent just a fraction of the incredible talent in our city and we are thrilled to be able to support their vision for new work in this way.”

    The program is open to both emerging and mid-career filmmakers seeking to create short-format projects. Applications for next year’s Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab will open in August 2022.

    “At Xfinity, we strive to facilitate the discovery of emerging Black content creators like the filmmakers in this lab and provide a platform for them to showcase their talent,” said Keesha Boyd, Executive Director, Multicultural Video & Entertainment, Xfinity Consumer Services. “We’re thrilled to work with the BlackStar team to further our company-wide mission of investing in and showcasing authentic Black stories and culture.”

    After they premiere at the BlackStar Film Festival, the films will be featured prominently on Black Experience on Xfinity, a first-of-its-kind destination of Black entertainment, movies, TV shows, news and more. It features high-quality content from many of Xfinity’s existing network partners, while investing millions of dollars in fostering and showcasing emerging Black content creators like the filmmaker lab participants. The channel is the only one of its kind endorsed by the African American Film Critics Association (AAFCA), the world’s largest group of Black film critics that gives annual awards for excellence in film and television.

    About Bettina Escauriza

    From Asunción, Paraguay, Bettina Escauriza is a filmmaker, writer, artist, and actor living in Philadelphia. She is a natural storyteller from a family of frustrated mystics, spectacular liars, ill-fated thieves, and awful politicians. Her work deals with Indigenous knowledge, colonization, immigration, and exile. Her aim as a filmmaker is to tell stories about Indigenous people and people of color that are lush, sensual, thrilling, and complex. Her desire is to tell the truth about the communities she comes from by centering narratives of joy, defiance, and resistance in the face of oppression.

    About Jasmine Lynea

    Jasmine Lynea is an artist and educator focused on composing avant-garde short films as a director, editor, and cinematographer. In an effort to preserve Black history through cinema, Lynea’s work explores ways in which Black people “safely” maneuver through this world by capturing fictional stories with a layer of realism, often rooted in Jasmine’s own experiences as a Black queer womxn. Raw, colorful, and politically weighted, Jasmine’s catalog and future works aim to design worlds centering on Black queer people’s practices of self-love, family relationships, and how we construct and create our existence. Jasmine hopes to design worlds of the future where Black folks and people of color can re-command spaces to transform our realities.

    About Julian Turner

    Julian has been developing his style in hybrid fiction and documentary cinema for the better part of a decade. His 2015 student short Tahirih, a coming-of-age tale about a young girl’s encounter with feminism, won Best Narrative at the Tri-co Film Festival and his 2019 fiction short May premiered at SXSW and played at Mill Valley Film Festival before being named a Vimeo Staff Pick. His follow-up short, Viewing Room, was the recipient of the Knight Foundation’s 2019 Artist Alumni Fund and premiered at the Maryland Film Festival in 2020. He also workshopped his feature screenplay, Cousin Sarah,at the Sundance Institute’s 2017 Screenwriters Intensive in Philadelphia. A native of Tennessee, Julian draws inspiration from the region’s complex cultural imagery and is interested in crafting narratives exploring interweaving themes of youth, race and community. A graduate of Swarthmore College with concentrations in History, Black Studies, and Film & Media Studies, Julian lives in Philadelphia and works as a freelance film editor while constantly expanding his portfolio.

    About Xenia Matthews

    Xenia Matthews is an innovative film and visual artist. She makes highly saturated hybrid films that stimulate the senses. She has a BFA in Film & Video from University of the Arts and creates films as a way to understand her own personal experiences. Black queer womanhood, and all that it encompasses – the joys, the struggles, the misunderstood – is a common topic of her work. Her film, A Few Things I’m Beginning to Understand has been programmed at Indie Memphis Film Festival, Black Femme Supremacy Film Festival, and Houston Cinema Arts Festival. In the future, Xenia plans on installing her films, using physical space to enhance the immersive experience. 

    DJ lil’dave

    BlackStar Projects also announced today the recipient of the inaugural Music in Cinema Fellowship, supported by Pop Culture Collaborative. The one year fellowship embeds one musician in BlackStar’s year-round work to design activities intended to bring more Black, Brown, and Indigenous musicians into the world of filmmaking. The inaugural fellow is David “lil’dave” Adams, who will serve as the composer of this year’s Filmmaker Lab projects.

    About David “lil’dave” Adams

    DJ lil’dave is a Philadelphia-based producer, composer, radio host, and member of the DJ crew Illvibe Collective who has made a name for himself by exposing people to soulful music in all its forms. He produces and hosts a music-focused podcast called “Excellent Reception.” He has been broadcasting for over two decades on WKDU 91.7FM, where he currently hosts the internationally-known “Eavesdrop Radio” along with DJ Junior. As a recording artist, he has released original music and remixes under various aliases for record labels around the world, such as BBE Records, Tru Thoughts, and Bastard Jazz.

    The BlackStar Philadelphia Filmmaker Lab is presented by Xfinity with additional support from All Ages Productions, Independence Public Media Foundation, Kickstarter, Vimeo, and Wyncote Foundation.

    About BlackStar Projects

    BlackStar Projects is home of the BlackStar Film Festival, an annual celebration of the visual and storytelling traditions of the African diaspora and global communities of color — showcasing films by Black, Brown, and Indigenous people from around the world. In addition to the acclaimed festival, BlackStar presents an array of programming across film and visual culture year-round, and produces the twice-annual journal Seen.

    The 10th Annual BlackStar Film Festival’s lineup included approximately 80 films, including 19 world premieres, representing 27 countries. In addition to presenting an array of live programs, panels, and select in-person events and screenings, 2021 also marked BlackStar’s selection by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as a qualifying festival for both short documentary and short narrative films, making BlackStar’s Best Narrative Short and Best Documentary Short winners eligible for entrance at the Academy Awards. The festival featured several in-person screenings, including the world premiere of feature documentary Eyes on the Prize: Hallowed Ground (directed by Sophia Nahli Allison).

    About Comcast Corporation

    Comcast Corporation (Nasdaq: CMCSA) is a global media and technology company that connects people to moments that matter. We are principally focused on broadband, aggregation, and streaming with 57 million customer relationships across the United States and Europe. We deliver broadband, wireless, and video through our Xfinity, Comcast Business, and Sky brands; create, distribute, and stream leading entertainment, sports, and news through Universal Filmed Entertainment Group, Universal Studio Group, Sky Studios, the NBC and Telemundo broadcast networks, multiple cable networks, Peacock, NBCUniversal News Group, NBC Sports, Sky News, and Sky Sports; and provide memorable experiences at Universal Parks and Resorts in the United States and Asia. Visit www.comcastcorporation.com for more information.

    Press Contacts

    Ed Winstead
    Director, Cultural Counsel
    ed@culturalcounsel.com