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You are here: Home / News

L.A. Times: “Anita Hill’s still standing 22 years later”

March 18, 2014 by Lamb L.

We’re proud to open the “enthralling and revealing” documentary ANITA, about feminist heroine Anita Hill, this Friday at the Royal, Playhouse and Town Center. (Click here for details about Q&A’s with the filmmaker.) The L.A. Times published a piece about the film on Sunday which will give you an idea of how much more there is to Ms. Hill’s story:

THE TAKEAWAY

Anita Hills’s still standing 22 years later

The law professor who testified that Supreme court nominee Clarence Thomas had sexually harassed her in the subject of a new documentary.

By Robin Abcarian

March 16, 2014

The new documentary about Anita Hill opens with a close-up of a telephone and a bizarre voice mail message:

“Good morning, Anita Hill. It’s Ginni Thomas, and I just wanted to reach across the air waves, and the years and ask you to consider something. I would love you to consider an apology sometime, and some full explanation of why you did what you did with my husband. So give it some thought, I certainly pray about this and hope one day you will help us understand why you did what you did. OK! Have a good day.”

That obnoxious request, left on Hill’s office voice mail in October 2010, is the last we hear from Ginni Thomas in “Anita: Speaking Truth to Power” by Oscar-winning director Freida Mock. The film, which opened in Los Angeles and New York on Friday, is a perfect jumping-off point for Hill’s story, as it so perfectly distills the right-wing’s fervent desire to rewrite the history of the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court hearings.

It’s been more than 22 years since the Senate Judiciary Committee heard a soft-spoken 35-year-old University of Oklahoma law professor recount graphic instances of sexual harassment at the hands of her former boss. Despite Ginni Thomas’ prayers, Hill has never backed down from her allegations.

Why would she, since she was so obviously telling the truth?

The documentary is an unabashed love letter to Hill, guaranteed to open old wounds. It examines Hill’s life in the aftermath of a spotlight she did not seek, and the positive legacy of her testimony.

At 57, Hill seems serene and happy. She teaches law at Brandeis University and is in a long-term relationship with a restaurateur named Chuck Malone, who seems crazy about her.

It’s painful to be dragged back into the past via old clips as senators try to embarrass Hill by forcing her to repeat porn names like “Long Dong Silver,” descriptions of pubic hair on Coke cans and discussions of penis size that she says she was forced to endure as Thomas’ employee at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

At a long table by herself, in a blue turquoise suit, she sits calmly, without erupting or crying. When pressed about why she hadn’t come forward sooner, she seems as perplexed as some of the senators. But 20 years ago, that wasn’t exactly unusual behavior for women whose bosses made unwanted sexual advances. It still isn’t. Hiring a sexual harassment attorney is now one of the best paths to take, whereas all those years ago it wasn’t seen as normal, because it was swept under the rug as much as possible to protect the ‘reputations’ of these harassers.

No question, what the Senate hearings unleashed was dreadful for Hill (and certainly it was no picnic for Clarence Thomas, either). But it was also a watershed moment in American politics. American women looked at how the Senate treated Hill and said: This is not right.

The all-male Senate Judiciary Committee, chaired by then-Sen. Joe Biden, grilled her, impugned her honesty and forced her to repeat the most graphic insults.

“They were humiliating her by making her go over these things again and again and again,” said New Yorker reporter Jane Mayer, who appears in the film along with Jill Abramson, now the New York Times executive editor, with whom she wrote the 1994 book “Strange Justice.” (The book will leave you with no doubts about Thomas’ proclivities.)

Hill was hung out to dry by the committee’s Democrats, who really did not want to have a conversation about a black Supreme Court nominee and leader of the EEOC allegedly sexually harassing an employee. (Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the documentary points out, was so compromised that he was played in a”Saturday Night Live” skit about the hearings by an actor with a bag over his head.)

And she was brutalized by the committee’s Republicans. The documentary shows a clip of Alan Simpson of Wyoming saying he’d gotten letters, phone calls and faxes warning him to “watch out for this woman” about “this sexual harassment crap.”

I’m glad that Mock included the powerful clip of Thomas responding to Hill’s accusations, his only meaningful appearance in the film. It is a tour de force of indignation as he tells senators he is the victim of a “high-tech lynching for uppity blacks.”

That phrase still resonates today for John Carr, an African American attorney and friend of Hill’s who testified on her behalf in the Senate. “I hate the term ‘race card,'” Carr says now. “But that’s what he did.”

Charles Ogletree, a Harvard University law professor who stepped forward to support Hill when he saw that no other high-profile black men had, also took exception to Thomas’ phrase.

“They didn’t say, ‘Hey, wait a minute. What about the legal lynching of a black woman?” Ogletree says. “They didn’t want to be appearing to go after a black man who said ‘I didn’t do it.’ And for them, the case was closed.”

A few days after Hill testified, Thomas was confirmed by the Senate, 52 to 48.

Without a trace of rancor, Hill says that when she returned to Oklahoma afterward, “Republicans tried to get the school to fire me, even though I was tenured. My dean – they tried to get him fired. They tried to close the law school. I was threatened with just about everything – death, sexual violence.”

Click here to read the rest of the piece at the L.A. Times website.

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Filed Under: Films, News, Playhouse 7, Royal, Town Center 5

Climate Ride Contest Winners!

March 12, 2014 by Lamb L.

We received a lot of great entry essays to our Climate Ride contest and from among them have chosen one first place winner, two second place winners and two third prize winners who will ride with Greg Laemmle from San Francisco through wine country to Sacramento this May to raise awareness about climate change and money to help combat it. In conjunction with the tree planting movement, this has helped raise so much awareness for the problems regarding climate change and helped convinced many more people that we need to act now to save our planet! I’m thrilled with the turn out for the Climate Ride and feel honoured to inform you of the winners. Here’s who won and their fabulous prizes!

Grand Prize, an Unlimited Laemmle Movie Pass for the rest of 2014, Free Registration for
Climate Ride, and a $2500 contribution toward their Climate Ride
fundraising goal, goes to David Rindlaub.

Second Prize, an Unlimited Laemmle Movie Pass for the rest of 2014, Free Registration for
Climate Ride, and a $1250 contribution toward their Climate Ride
fundraising goal, goes to Eddie Beres and Dalila Mendez.

Third Prize, an Unlimited Laemmle Movie Pass for the rest of 2014 plus Free Registration for Climate Ride, goes to Aaron Ratliff and Alan Bair.

Congratulations to all five of them! Please consider supporting their efforts because they have a long way to go before reaching their fund-raising goals. Click on the above links to learn how and why they have made such a big commitment to raise money for climate change-related causes.

Greg Laemmle

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Filed Under: Contests, News

Laemmle Oscar Contest: Results!

March 4, 2014 by Lamb L.

Well, the 2014 Oscars are in the books and though the results were predictable the show was entertaining — I, personally, think it was a good idea to include full performances of all the nominated songs — and the winners deserving.

And the passes go to:

First place: Alex A. of Hollywood, who gets 20 passes;

Second place: Andre C. of Los Angeles, who gets 16 passes;

Third place: Kenneth O. of West Hollywood, who gets 12 passes.

Congratulations, guys, and happy moviegoing!

This year we had double the usual number  of entries. No one guessed all 24 categories correctly but four missed only one category: one missed the Best Documentary Feature category and picked “The Act of Killing” instead of “20 Feet to Stardom.” The other three missed Best Animated Short and chose “Get a Horse!” instead of winner “Mr. Hublot.” The shorts categories are tricky!

Since there were four first place ties, the tie-breaking question decided the ultimate winner. The winner guessed 210 minutes — only four minutes off the actual Oscar Telecast running time!

There were only two major troublesome categories for patrons this year. Best Original Score winner Steven Price (“Gravity”) only received 30% of the vote while the other nominees equally split the rest. Best Animated Short was the other. Winner “Mr. Hublot” received only 20% of the vote. “Get a Horse!” was the favorite chosen by our patrons. The average number of correct answers was 13.  Thanks to all who played.

Lupita Amondi Nyong'o accepts her Oscar

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Filed Under: Contests, News

The Beginning of Art in the Arthouse: You’re Invited

February 13, 2014 by Lamb L.

Outside of your home or office walls, how often do you really get the chance to get to know a work of art in person? Gallery openings and museum visits are often “drive by” affairs that typically limit your engagement. And, even assuming you still have an independent brewing house nearby, coffee house art is unpredictable in quality.

Enter Laemmle’s new Art in the Arthouse program. It promises to deliver a unique and alternative art-viewing experience. By reclaiming wall space throughout its theaters for the display of fine art, Laemmle will give its patrons a chance to bond with notable and emerging L.A. based visual artists and their work. Exhibits will last three to four months, affording regular movie-goers ample time to get to know a piece through repeat visits and exposure. Curatorial standards will be high, in keeping with the approach that has distinguished Laemmle as a film exhibitor over the years.

Art in the Arthouse is the brainchild of Laemmle president, Greg Laemmle. “Switching to digital poster frames conserves both paper and wall space,” says Laemmle. “This opened up the opportunity to extend the cultural scope of our theaters to include the visual fine arts.”

Our first two events feature artists Dave Lefner at the Royal and Bea Husman at the NoHo. The Lefner exhibit opening is February 19 — RSVP here — and the Husman exhibit opening is February 26 — RSVP here. Proceeds from the sale of art benefit the Laemmle Charitable Foundation.

Learn more!

Art in the Arthouse: Dave Lefner “Marquee”

 

 

 

 

 

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Filed Under: Around Town, Art in the Arthouse, News, NoHo 7, Royal

Laemmle Theatres’ Umpteenth Annual Oscar Contest

February 5, 2014 by Lamb L.

Laemmle Theatres will bestow fabulous prizes (movie passes) upon the people who most accurately predict the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Science’s choices in all 24 categories, from the shorts to the Big Kahuna, Best Motion Picture. (Why INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS is not the tenth nominee in the latter category, we do not know.) We’ve got some smart cookies for customers so we have a tie-breaker question: you also have to guess the show’s running time. Take a crack at it! FABULOUS PRIZES (movie passes) to the those who can best predict the winners. First place wins ten pairs of passes, second place wins eight pairs and third place wins six pairs. Good luck!

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Filed Under: Contests, News

Pete Seeger!

January 30, 2014 by Lamb L.

We lost a great one this week when folk singer-musician Pete Seeger died. What a brave, talented man. There are a wealth of Pete videos on YouTube and a quick search turned up this gem, Pete’s March 4, 1970 appearance on The Johnny Cash Show. Among other things, it’s a great example of Pete’s musicianship and aversion to singing alone: watch him get the audience singing along.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ADtAU43MM14

For a complete portrait of Pete, there’s a great 2007 documentary called PETE SEEGER: THE POWER OF SONG, available on DVD and streaming, and, for those who want to dig a little deeper, THE WEAVERS: WASN’T THAT A TIME, available on DVD.

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Filed Under: News

Manohla Dargis/N.Y. Times Dispatch from Sundance

January 24, 2014 by Lamb L.

We greatly admire the film writing of Manohla Dargis, first of the Village Voice, then the L.A. Weekly, then the L.A. Times and now the New York Times. Her reviews and reporting from important film festivals like Sundance are required reading in our little corner of the film industry. She posted this yesterday and as always it’s exciting to hear what we have to look forward to, including Boyhood, We Come as Friends and Land Ho! The latter, Ms. Dargis writes, features “the breakout star of this year’s festival,” Earl Lynn Nelson, which is refreshing because the actor is neither a comely ingenue nor a chiseled hunk but rather an elderly man.

Earl Lynn Nelson, left, and Paul Eenhoorn in Martha Stephens and Aaron Katz's "Land Ho!"

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Filed Under: Films, News, Q&A's

Climate Ride with Greg Laemmle and Win a 2014 Movie Pass

January 23, 2014 by Lamb L.

Last year’s Ride with Greg Laemmle Climate Ride Contest was so successful we’re doing it again!

Tell us why you want to ride with Greg and you could win an Unlimited Laemmle Movie Pass for the remainder of 2014, free registration for Climate Ride California, and a $2500 contribution toward your Climate Ride fundraising goal from the Laemmle Charitable Foundation.  See the second and third prize packages, eligibility requirements, and all contest details over on the contest entry page.

An outside panel of judges will select the winners based on the quality of their entry statement so take the time to craft something that’ll really knock their cycling socks off! But don’t wait too long, the deadline for entry is Monday, February 17!

Climate Ride Wine Country 2014 is a fully-supported, four-day group ride covering 250 miles of stellar Northern California scenery starting in San Francisco and winding through the famous wine growing regions of Napa Valley and the Russian River Valley.  It culminates at the iconic state capitol building in Sacramento.  Bike fitness is recommended, but the ride caters to all levels of ability.

You can listen to Greg Laemmle talk about Climate Ride on KPFK’s Bike Talk here. He was joined by past Climate Riders, Ride Director Blake Holiday, and LA County Bicycle Coalition Executive Director Jennifer Klausner.

ENTER HERE

 

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Filed Under: Claremont 5, Contests, Music Hall 3, News, NoHo 7, Playhouse 7, Royal, Santa Monica, Theater Buzz, Town Center 5

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