Digital project preserves memories of Civil Right movement


Her memory is creaky, Dwania Kyles insisted, and most of the photographs that help unlock it are stored in her computer. But recently, sitting in a warren of rooms in Harlem as the light outside faded, she had a rush of recollections about her family and the night that the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. did not come to dinner.

Kyles and Thomas Allen Harris, a documentary filmmaker, had donned white gloves to thumb through photographs of her parents in high school.

“My parents left the promised land to jump into the lion’s den,” she said of their move from Chicago to Memphis, Tenn., to join the civil rights movement.

On the evening in 1968 that King was expected at their home for soul food, her father, the Rev. Samuel B. Kyles, ended up with him on the balcony of the Lorraine Motel, where King was felled by an assassin.

Harris and Kyles, a 55-year-old wellness consultant and songwriter who lives in Harlem, were in his office ferreting out information for the filmmaker’s Digital Diaspora Family Reunion project. Since 2009, Harris has collected photographs and stories from families, putting those and filmed interviews onto his website.

Now, Harris is taking his show onto the stage, presenting the stories he’s collected to a live audience using interactive media and old-fashioned storytelling. On Sunday afternoon, after dry runs around the country, the show will have its debut at the Harlem Stage Gatehouse. (The event will be streamed live to the website.) At Harlem Stage and in future reunion cities, the enlarged photographs and accompanying stories will be presented to audiences who will be invited to trade family histories, ask questions and even identify people and locations. The project will also work as community history, with its glances at the places and people that define neighbourhoods.

“It’s survivors and ‘firsts,”’ Harris said of the people he is documenting, few of them celebrities. “It’s the stories in history books and films about civil rights.”

As a kind of curator/master of ceremonies, Harris, who has made two acclaimed documentaries, “The 12 Disciples of Nelson Mandela,” about South African exiles who were part of the African National Congress and the anti-apartheid movement, and “E Minha Cara/That’s My Face,” about spirituality, looks to figure out which stories enlarge and provide context for many aspects of black life, from immigration to education to military service.

“We are living with gold – one person in Atlanta came with a truckload of images dating back to the 1850s,” he said.

Photographs and stories can also be directly uploaded to the website, which features interviews with scholars, news about family reunions and images by black photographers.

A Harvard graduate who is in his ‘40s, grew up in the Bronx and spent time in East Africa, Harris had long encouraged fans of his work to collect their own family stories, as he has done in his deeply personal films. It struck him that social media could be used to archive and share the results. His younger brother, Lyle Ashton Harris, is a prominent photographer and artist known for work that fuses aesthetic considerations and sociopolitical observation.

“All of my work is about identity, about how we represent ourselves to ourselves,” Thomas Allen Harris said. “We take grandma for granted. We need to understand that instead of looking outside ourselves for value, we can look inside.”

On Wednesday through Friday, Harris will set up shop at the Gatehouse so people can bring him their family photographs and other documents. The photographs that Harris selects will be digitized and put onto a DVD for their owner. All will be shown as part of a slide show at Harlem Stage, and some will be expanded into an interactive film for the website.

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A tip for clueless investors

The best of the Web on money, markets and all things financial, as chosen daily by Globe and Mail personal finance columnist Rob Carrick.

A Tip for Clueless Investors

Avoid stocks - that’s the argument in this post on a blog called Canadian Dream: Free at 45.

One of the foremost voices in the avoid stocks school of retirement saving is David Trahair, author of Enough Bull: How to Retire Well without the Stock Market, Mutual Funds, or Even an Investment Advisor.

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Jennifer Beals: Bringing it all back home

After nearly three decades in film and television, Jennifer Beals has come home.

The striking actress has finally shed all vestiges of her Flashdance days with her new TV role as a tough lady cop on The Chicago Code, which, as the title suggests, films in her hometown of Chicago.

Born in the windy city to working-class parents, Beals was a model in her teens but also expanded her mind at Yale University, where she received her Bachelor's degree in American literature. She took on a small role in the 1980 filmed-in-Chicago feature My Bodyguard, but three years later she was the main attraction in Flashdance.

As the film's lead character, Alex, she played a feisty young woman who was a welder by day and exotic dancer by night. Flashdance was a global hit and thereafter Beals took on a steady succession of intriguing film roles, playing an undead beauty in The Bride (1985), a hot-blooded bloodsucker in Vampire's Kiss (1989) and a temptress in Devil in a Blue Dress (1995).

In 2004, Beals made the transition to TV playing the strong-willed Bette Porter on Showtime's The L Word, which ran six seasons. In recent years, she has done cameo turns in TV series including Frasier and Lie To Me. On Chicago Code, however, she's back home, back in the spotlight and loving every minute of it. She sat down for an interview last week in Toronto.

Who was the role model for playing the female police superintendent on The Chicago Code?

There was no template, really. I mean, you look at women like Hillary Clinton. You look at her presidential campaign. How she was characterized if she was emotional, or if she wasn't emotional. Those criticisms wouldn't have come up had she been a man. It makes you realize that when a woman is powerful and in a position of leadership, the rules are very different.

How important is it for your character to keep up her tough outer veneer?

Well, she is tough, so that isn't so much a veneer.

Are you the type of person who pays attention to weekly Nielsen ratings?

It doesn't affect me. I know some people pay close attention to ratings, but it doesn't affect how I play the character. At the end of the day I have no control over it, so it's silly to give myself something else to worry about.

Is it a personal bonus to shoot in your hometown of Chicago?

Of course, but remember I haven't been back in 20-odd years. The city has changed a great deal. All the neighbourhoods have changed. But I still feel a protectiveness of Chicago. I feel a great love for the city that I don't have to feign, so that makes my job easier.

Is the show partly an homage to the city itself? Without a doubt Chicago is a character on the show. The amazing architecture and the discrepancy between the affluent neighbourhoods and the neighbourhoods that have nothing. And then there's the constant movement--the L train is in the background all the time. There's helicopters, buses and cars. All these characters are trying to stay ahead in this city that is in constant flux, not only physically, but politically.

Can you recall the moment or event that pushed you toward acting?

I remember doing Fiddler on the Roof in high school and I was playing Hodel. During my solo I had one little moment where reality was kind of muted. It was one tiny millisecond of being transcended. And I thought, ‘Wow, that was amazing.' I also remember volunteer-ushering at the Steppenwolf Theatre and seeing Balm in Gilead with Joan Allen. It was so visceral and so present. It actually shifted the paradigm for me of what acting and theatre could be.

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Province to table bill on making TTC an essential service

Transit workers in Canada’s largest city face losing the right to strike as the province moves decisively toward declaring their work an essential service.

The McGuinty government will introduce legislation on Tuesday, banning Toronto Transit Commission workers from walking off the job.

The proposed bill, which will receive first reading in the legislature on Tuesday afternoon, follows a request by Toronto Mayor Rob Ford to ban transit workers from striking. In December, city council voted 28-17 in favour of making future strike action by transit union members illegal.

“We have received a proposal from Toronto city council. We have listened to them. We have talked to representatives of the workers as well and of course we have heard from many Torontonians,” Premier Dalton McGuinty told reporters on Tuesday morning, shortly before the legislature begins its spring session. “Whatever we do, it’s all about helping the people of Toronto, ensuring that their needs are being met.”

More than 100,000 Torontonians rely on public transit to get around the city every day, so when workers walk off the job, as they did briefly in 2008, commuters are left stranded and the economy loses an estimated $50-million a day.

Time is of the essence in introducing the legislation. The first of three collective agreements with unionized transit workers expires on March 31. Union leaders have promised not to strike during the upcoming round of talks for a new agreement.

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Libyan forces continue with crackdown on dissent

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Libyan forces continue with crackdown on dissentAP VideoPublished Tuesday, Feb. 22, 2011 11:06AM ESTLibyan forces were reportedly cracking down on anti-government protesters in the capital overnight, while elsewhere in the Middle East demonstrations were continuing in Bahrain and Yemen.0 commentsEmailPrintDecrease text sizeIncrease text size
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Must-watch TV: The revolution, starring Libya, Bahrain . . . and Wisconsin

The most gripping, intoxicating drama on TV right now is the revolution.

Yes, the general revolution, not just the events in the Arab world. Thing is, watching TV you get to see and feel how everything might fit together, loosely and unfiltered. What television news does is illuminate the principle of the instability of meaning. When events are fluid, attunement to everything is necessary. What is bewildering is bewitching because television allows us to derive our own meaningful iconography from the images and events. The shape of the meaning shifts endlessly.

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Study finds many graphic YouTube self-harm videos

YouTube videos on cutting and other self-injury methods are an alarming new trend, attract millions of hits and could serve as a how-to for troubled viewers, a study warns.

Many videos show bloody live enactments or graphic photos of people cutting their arms or legs with razors or other sharp objects, the study found. Many also glamorize self-injury and few videos discourage it, the study authors said.

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Facebook broadens relationship status

This time last year Facebook measured the overall happiness of its users. Based on your relationship status and positive posts, the social networking site determined that people who shared that they were dating, married, or engaged were the most content. Those users who didn't disclose their relationship status appeared to be the most unhappy.

While this speaks volumes for hooking up, due to the narrow nature of options within Facebook's relationship status menu they were likely ignoring a large number of members who didn't fall neatly into one of these groups. This week, the company has added 'civil unions' and 'domestic partnerships' to its list of options.

As GLADD (Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) President Jarrett Barrios said on the organization's blog, “By acknowledging the relationships of countless loving and committed same-sex couples in the U.S. and abroad, Facebook has set a new standard of inclusion for social media.” This move also makes it easier for the increasingly number of couples who have lived together for years, but are not engaged or married.

However, all this love doesn't help those people out there who are perpetually Facebook single. For them, the relationship status of their online crush can be like a dagger in the heart. Well, unless a break-up is in the works. That's where the brand new Breakup Notifier can help. This app makes it easy to follow friends in relationships and find out when they broadcast that it's over, so you can “strike when the iron's hot.”

If you love Facebook but find all this relationship status stuff a little high school-ish, do what many do and opt out of digital PDA altogether. Simply go into your Account's Privacy Settings and don't share your relationship status with anyone but yourself.

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Four Americans killed by pirates off Somalia’s coast

Four Americans taken hostage by Somali pirates off East Africa were shot and killed by their captors Monday, the U.S. military said, marking the first time U.S. citizens have been killed in a wave of pirate attacks plaguing the Gulf of Aden and the Indian Ocean for years.

The U.S. Central Command says negotiations had been under way to try to win release of the two couples on the pirated vessel Quest.

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Radiohead’s new album: Not easy, but rewarding

The King of Limbs
Radiohead (Self-released)

For most people, the phrase “headphone music” suggests a throwback to the sort of trippy, effects-laden productions that became popular once rock bands discovered both hallucinogens and stereo panning. Tell someone today that a new release is ideal for headphone listening, and the response you’re most likely to get is a sarcastic, “Wow, man, that’s really heavy.”

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Elderly woman’s daily pizza habit may have saved her life: police

Authorities say a pizza delivery driver who was concerned about a regular customer may have saved the elderly woman's life.

Domino's delivery driver Susan Guy told WMC-TV that Jean Wilson has ordered pizza every day for the past three years.

On Monday, Ms. Guy said her boss told her Ms. Wilson hadn't called in three days. Ms. Guy insisted on going to check on the woman. When no one came to the door, Ms. Guy asked a neighbour whether he'd seen Ms. Wilson and then called police.

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The House in recess, Tories fan out with cheques in hand

Eighteen Conservative MPs and cabinet ministers, including Prime Minister Stephen Harper, are out Tuesday showering money on communities across the country as they announce funding for programs that will keep kids away from a life of crime, help the homeless and even supportthe arts.

Can an election far off? Or is it just standard break-week fare?

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Social media put new spin on NFL contract talks

A few hours after NFL owners filed a complaint against the players union last week alleging that it was not bargaining in good faith, Houston Texans right tackle Eric Winston took to his keyboard to react.

“The NFL has reached that point where the kitchen sink is getting opened and every ridic claim will be tossed out,” Winston wrote on Twitter. “Enjoy the comedy people.”

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