[Upcoming Events]

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Playing to Win:
The Business and Social Frontier of Videogames
April 4-5, 2008

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kunkel
Thomas Kunkel

Dean of the Phillip Merril College of Journalism, University of Maryland
Tuesday, April 8, 2008

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[ Past Events
]

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Tony Buba
Tales of an Independent Filmmaker:
Capturing Racism on Film

Thursday, April 19, 2007
Carnegie Cinema
2:30 p.m.
Student Seminar

Film Screening
Tuesday, April 17, 2007
Struggles in Steel: A Story of African-American Steelworkers
and selections from Lightning Over Braddock and Braddock Chronicles
Carnegie Cinema
2:30 p.m.

Tony Buba discusses the making of Struggles in Steel in the context of his career as an independent documentary filmmaker.

Tony Buba is an active independent filmmaker and lifelong resident of Braddock, Pennsylvania.  Since 1974, Braddock Films (a.k.a. Tony Buba) has made over twenty films. First came the dozen black & white short documentaries that make up The Braddock Chronicles—portraits and vignettes of the stubborn signs of life in a dying mill town. Voices from a Steeltown (1983) expanded these small stories around the question “Who killed Braddock?”

Lightning Over Braddock: A Rustbowl Fantasy (1988), was Tony's first feature, and it established him as an innovator of the "exploded documentary." Lightning won numerous awards, including Best Film at the Birmingham International Film Festival in England and a nomination as best first feature film by the Independent Spirit Awards. It was shown at Sundance, Toronto, Berlin, and over a dozen other film festivals world-wide.
In 1994, Tony made an entirely fictional feature film No Pets, based on a short story by the writer Jim Daniels. While a departure in some ways from Braddock, No Pets continued Tony's exploration of the psychological realities of post-industrial working-class life. No Pets was enthusiastically received by audiences at the London and Portugal film festivals.

Tony and co-producer Raymond Henderson premiered Struggles In Steel: A Story of African-American Steelworkers at the 1996 Sundance Film Festival. A documentary of industrial racism, Struggles has as its heart interviews with over 70 African-American workers whose stories have never been told before.

Tony has had one-person exhibitions at more than 100 universities and museums including The Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, and The Carnegie Museum of Art. Tony and Braddock have also been featured on NPR. His awards include fellowships from the NEA, AFI, and the Rockefeller and Guggenheim Foundations and grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Pennsylvania Humanities Council.

Braddock Films has also produced music videos and award-winning, sponsored films including Small Differences for the Pittsburgh Task Force on Disabilities.

Suggested Sites:
Struggles in Steel: A Story of African-American Steelworkers|86 min., 1996

Tony's Website, braddockfilms.com

Filmography