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From the “If you Ask Me Column” in the Afro American Newspaper, July 1, 2006 – July 7, 2006 edition. Soror Frankie Lou says that “I WENT TO NEW YORK on Friday, June 23 to the premier showing of the documentary “The Black Sorority Project – The Exodus. The History of Delta Sigma Theta.” "Let me tell you as I sat in that jammed packed theater I was proud to be a member of Delta, an organization of over 200,000 college educated women founded in 1913. The film emphasizes that Delta is a service oriented organization. It traces the history of the sorority from the time many of its 22 founders (including my mother Vashti Turley Murphy) were members of the AKA Club at Howard University, up through their fight for women’s suffrage, their campaign for a Black president of Howard University and for a dean of women at this mostly male bastion. The historical facts are sound as a result of over a year of research by two producers – Derek Fordjour and Jamar White. These two young Black men are graduates of Morehouse and Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity brothers. They also did a film on their Alpha fraternity. The acting is good and the narrative is outstanding. Go see it for yourself. The film will be shown again in Philadelphia at the Bridge Cinema on July 27, the day the 48th annual convention of Delta Sigma Theta opens in Philly. For free tickets for the 9 p.m. show (the 8 p.m. screening is full) sign up at www. RSVP.blacksororityproject.com.) P.S. This is a film our children need to see in order to better understand the struggles we women have gone through to make things better for them today. ALSO While We – my friend Bobby Diggs and I – were in New York, we also saw that fantastic show The Color Purple as the guest of the Tony Award-winning star LaChanze. She is the wife of Derek Fordjour, the co-producer of the Delta documentary who invited us to New York in the first place. Derek took us backstage after the show where we got a hug from LaChanze and she signed our program “With Love.” In all it was a mind boggling weekend." |
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The people who the retelling is based on often opt out of endorsing the movie and even go so far as to voice their opposition to the movie. It doesn't stop the movie from happening but it usually just prevents the movie from being the OFFICIAL story of ____. |
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Soror you will find his explanation of the painting interesting. I am still not feeling the painting.
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LOL!!! I just hope that we are not in part-two of this documentary. It seems that he is using ISOS as his roadmap for this documentary. Derek and Jamar should not have untaken this project without the necessary approvals from our Headquarters.
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Wow, for some reason I am just now seeing that Frankie Lou's article was posted here. :eek: :mad: that is was posted.
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Philly Inquirer story about movie showing around convention
I was actually looking for a story about convention when I ran across this. It does give more info than I've previously heard. I still don't agree with it. No sireee Bob.:mad:
Sorority film seeks to educate, not expose By Elizabeth Wellington Inquirer Staff Writer With more than 200,000 members, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Inc. is the largest sorority for black women in the world. Sorors are active well after graduation, and famous Deltas include educator and civil rights activist Mary McLeod Bethune, actress Sheryl Lee Ralph, and singer Aretha Franklin. Today, close to 16,000 Deltas will be in town for the sorority's 48th annual convention, which will feature workshops on leadership, economic development and political awareness. Like all black fraternities and sororities, Delta Sigma Theta's social network extends beyond its membership to include the black middle class in nearly every American city. And like other Greek organizations, the group's inner workings tend to be shrouded in secrecy. Which is why Black Sorority Project: The Exodus, a 45-minute documentary by New York filmmakers Derek Fordjour and Jamar White, is getting much buzz on Greek chat forums and through word of mouth. There will be two showings tonight at The Bridge in University City, at 8 and 9:05, followed by a question-and-answer session. Close to 600 people are expected to attend; there are a few seats available on a first-come, first-serve basis. (For more information, go to www.blacksororityproject.com). The film is largely an educational work and does not deal with controversial topics associated with black Greek organizations such as hazing and skin-color issues. Yet in spite of positive reviews posted on chat rooms after the film's premiere before more than 500 people - including some Deltas - in New York last month, the sorority says it does not support it. In a note on its Web site (www.deltasigmatheta.org.), national president Louise A. Rice writes: "Please be advised that the executive board has taken action not to in any way endorse, support, sponsor, approve of, or (become) involved in this project or any project marketed under a slightly different name." "The first thing I thought was hazing," said Dawn Jones, a national spokeswoman for the sorority who has not seen the movie. "And we do not approve of hazing." But Jones added that the decision had more to do with the timing of the film than its content. "It was just the fact that we didn't have any creative input in the movie," she said. "It just didn't fit into our time line, and this is something that the sorority would want to do in the future." The film could easily be shown in classrooms to college-bound high school seniors interested in joining the sorority. "There are no surprises," Fordjour said. "We want it to be a tool possibly played during Black History Month or maybe on the Oxygen network as part of a discussion on women and civic education," White added. Black Sorority Project: The Exodus is an adaptation of the first 60 pages of Paula Giddings' 1988 book, In Search of Sisterhood: Delta Sigma Theta and the Challenge of the Black Sorority Movement. Delta Sigma Theta was founded at Howard University in 1913 by 22 members of Alpha Kappa Alpha sorority (the first black sorority, founded at the university in 1908), who elected to leave it because of a shift in ideology. The first Deltas were more interested in aligning themselves with the ideals of turn-of-the-20th-century social activists W.E.B. Dubois and Booker T. Washington than with the AKAs' social elitism. "These women weren't interested in whose parents had the most money," White said. "They wanted to see social change." The movie opens with a montage of black-and-white photos of college students, while the Howard University marching band plays a brassy version of "I'm So Glad." Fordjour and White depict a Howard University where black students of all skin tones - not just those with skin lighter than a brown paper bag - are focused on academics and progress. Actress Tamara Tunie (Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, As the World Turns) narrates. The 22 founding members are introduced through a rich oil painting by Fordjour. Scholars Richard J. Reddick of Harvard University, A'Lelia Bundles (great-great-great-granddaughter of pioneering hair-care entrepreneur Madam C.J. Walker), and Beverly Guy-Sheftal of Spelman College provide historical context. It all leads to the movie's climax: the sorority's participation in a woman's suffrage march in spring 1913. "No one ever thinks about a black women's club [in connection] with women's suffrage," Fordjour said. "We wanted to tell the story of Delta Sigma Theta in the context of the women's history movement." As active members of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity Inc., the first black fraternity, Fordjour and White, both 31, say they are sensitive to the secrecy in Greek life. They would never do an expose, they said; they were interested in writing about what they knew and using mixed media to advance the language of documentary filmmaking. Fordjour has a fine-arts degree from Morehouse College, and White has a fine-arts degree from Pratt Institute in New York. The duo is known in Greek circles for An Experiment in Brotherhood, their 35-minute documentary about Alpha Phi Alpha. (Its annual convention in Washington begins today also.) Their Derek & Jamar production company is in pre-production for Black Sorority Project: The Genesis, the story of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc.:eek: :eek: |
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What prompted the Exodus to be made before the Genesis? Is the Genesis supposed to be the "prequel" to the Exodus or does he plan to recreate facts for this cinematic work also? Too much time on their hands... |
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