Spurred by MBU Research, Documentary Film to Premiere in December

Three and a half years after faculty and students set out to shine a light on a hidden part of Staunton’s black community, a documentary film chronicling the lives and stories of those city residents will debut at 5:30 p.m. December 6 at the Visulite Theater.img_1234

Threads of History: Conversations with a Community visually records the recollections of Booker T. Washington High School alumni, their teachers, and past and present residents of the adjacent Johnson Street neighborhood.

The project began as an interdisciplinary Mary Baldwin University May Term class in 2013 with Artist-in-Residence Claudia Bernardi and instructors from her School of Art in Perquin, El Salvador. It involved students with many different majors and interests and drew on the talents and knowledge of Associate Professor of Art Marlena Hobson, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Film Allan Moyé, and Associate Professor of History Amy Tillerson-Brown. Students and faculty members gathered stories and created drawings and eventually three murals.

btw-mural-cropped-1While two of the murals from the original project remain at the Booker T. Washington Community Center in Staunton, the other is a traveling painting and will be exhibited at the premiere.

After the initial MBU effort was largely publicized, Booker T. Washington alumni from all over the country said they wanted to be a part of the project. The undertaking gained traction and students collected more stories, which are now the basis of the documentary.

“It’s an oral history,” said Associate Professor Emerita of Art History Marlena Hobson, one of the faculty members instrumental in the Threads of History project. “They talked about how [their community] was before integration and how it fell apart after integration.”img_1578

Developed and produced by Adjunct Faculty Member and Director of Communication Studios Allan Moyé, with help from his students, the film focuses on intersections, relationships, and the school as a prevailing thread that links all aspects of life during segregation. In the film, participants tell of a supportive educational atmosphere and a neighborhood that nurtured its own.

The MBU team was able to earn the trust of skeptical residents, who eventually opened up and told their stories, thanks in large part to support from community members such as the late city councilwoman Rita Wilson ’82 and Booker T. Washington High School alumni Larry Vickers and Lalaura Wayland.

The film premiere — free and open to the public — was made possible by grants from the Carroll and Grace “Patsy” Guynn Memorial Fund (a donor-advised fund at the Community Foundation of the Central Blue Ridge), the Virginia Foundation for the Humanities, and Mary Baldwin University.

The Visulite Theater is located at 12 N. Augusta St., Staunton.