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New Orleans Film Society

All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert

USA 78 min.

Monday, October 15, at 5:45 p.m.
Contemporary Arts Center
FILMMAKER IN ATTENDANCE
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Director
Vivian Ducat
Cinematographer
David Gaynes
Editor
Michael Culyba
Director Bio
All Me: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert is director Vivian Ducat’s first feature-length documentary. A native New Yorker, Ducat has directed, produced and written more than 20 long-format documentaries for broadcast. She spent the first part of her career in London, working for the BBC, directing films for series. After returning to New York, Ducat produced programs for WGBH and the ABC News series The Century.
Producers
Vivian Ducat, Ray Segal, Mark Urman

Synopsis

With his intensely autobiographical paintings depicting the day-to-day existence of African Americans in the segregated South, Winfred Rembert has preserved an important, if often disturbing, chapter of American history. His indelible images of toiling in the cotton fields, singing in church, dancing in juke joints, or working on a chain gang are especially powerful, not just because he lived every moment, but because he experienced so much of the injustice and bigotry they show as recently as the 1960s and 70s. Now in his sixties, Rembert has developed a growing following among collectors and connoisseurs, and enjoyed a number of tributes and exhibitions of his work. In “ALL ME: The Life and Times of Winfred Rembert,” the artist relives his turbulent life, abundantly visualized by his extensive paintings and, in a series of intimate reminiscences, shows us how even the most painful memories can be transformed into something meaningful and beautiful. A glowing portrait of how an artist—and his art—is made, “ALL ME” is also a triumphant saga of race in contemporary America.