Woods Hole Film Festival Celebrates Its 30th Year Both in Person & Online: July 31-August 7.

The Woods Hole Film Festival (WHFF) celebrates its 30th year from July 31-August 7, with 52 feature length and 98 short films from 22 countries, more than half directed by women. Some films will screen in person at the Simon Center for the Arts at Falmouth Academy and the Cotuit Center for the Arts; all films will also be available for streaming online. This year’s edition also includes the festival’s trademark events, including both in-person and virtual Q&A’s with filmmakers, workshops and master classes with Filmmaker-in-Residence Alexis Gambis, panel discussions, morning filmmaker chats, parties, and an awards ceremony.

“We are excited to celebrate our 30th year in person with the local community and online with our pandemic- acquired virtual one,” says founder and executive director Judy Laster. “In a challenging year for film production, we feel fortunate to be able to present a full slate of some of the best emerging independent films from around the world.”

The festival includes a mix of first-time and veteran filmmakers (many having participated in the festival several times previously) with a focus on films and filmmakers with ties to New England, science, music, and politics. There are 22 world, 7 North American, 3 US, and 65 New England premieres.

Nine feature films have New England connections. Of note is Lilly Topples The World, winner of the Grand Jury Prize for Documentary Feature at SXSW in 2021. It follows 20-year-old Lily Hevesh, a native of Sandown, NH (much of the film was shot in MA and NH), who is the world’s greatest domino toppler and the only woman in her field. It’s an unlikely American tale of a quiet Chinese adoptee who transforms herself into a global artistic force with over 1 billion YouTube views. Best Summer Ever, a hybrid narrative and documentary feature shot in Lincoln, VT at Zeno Mountain Farm, a retreat and camp for people with and without disabilities and other marginalized communities, takes on the teen musical genre by featuring eight original songs plus a fully integrated cast and crew of people with and without disabilities. It represents the feature directing debuts of Michael Parks Randa and Lauren Smitelli, with a cast that includes Maggie Gyllenhaal, Benjamin Bratt, and Peter Sarasgaard. Festival alum and Vermont resident Jay Craven’s Jack London’s Martin Eden, based on London’s 1909 novel about a poor and unschooled sailor who meets a magnetic young woman of means and education, was filmed entirely on Nantucket. Memoirs of a Black Girl, a coming-of-age story directed by Thato Rantao Mwosa, was filmed in the Boston neighborhood of Roxbury and features an entire cast of Boston actors. The Catch, about a young woman who returns to her hometown and her estranged family on the rural coast of Maine, was filmed in Gloucester and Rockport, MA. Director and MA native Matthew Balzer developed the plot based on true crime stories and anecdotes about real New England fishermen.

Notable short films with New England connections include: John Gray’s Extra Innings starring Peter Riegert, about an aggressive sports reporter who interviews the manager of the Boston Red Sox in an attempt to uncover secrets from his past; Discover Wonder: The Octopus Garden by John Dutton, about a research expedition that uses Alvin, the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution’s Human Occupied Submersible, to journey two miles deep into the abyss of NOAA’s Monterey Bay National Marine Sanctuary, where they discover one of the rarest and deepest octopus brooding colonies on the planet; and Fermín Rojas’s King Philip’s Belt: A Story of Wampum, which illustrates how the Mashpee and Aquinnah Native Wampanoag people on Cape Cod are weaving a new ceremonial wampum belt for the first time in almost 300 years in the hopes the belt will call out to the legendary belt once worn by Sachem King Philip (Metacom).

Two films that originally screened at the festival as shorts are now screening as feature length films by the original directors. Last Night in Rozzie, directed by Sean Gannet and shot in the Boston neighborhood of Roslindale, features a screenplay by Boston native Ryan McDonough. When a New York lawyer (Neil Brown Jr., Straight Outta Compton) returns home to Boston to reunite his dying friend (Jeremy Sisto, Six Feet Under, Suburgatory) with his young son, he is compelled to confront a childhood trauma. Soy Cubana by Jeremy Ungar and Ivaylo Getov depicts the Vocal Vidas, an all-female Cuban quartet that was invited to perform their first show in America in 2017, just as US-Cuba relations were closing. What began as a concert became a journey across physical and ideological borders and an affirmation of the connective power of music.

Other narrative features include: Peace by Chocolate, director Jonathan Keijser’s directing debut based on the true story of Tareq Hadhad, who fled war-torn Syria with his family, struggling to settle into his new Canadian small-town life and caught between following his dream to become a doctor and preserving his family’s chocolate-making legacy; the world premiere of What Are You Doing New Year’s?, a yuletide romantic comedy directed by and starring Christine Weatherup, as well as Marc Evan Jackson (The Good Place, Brooklyn Nine-Nine) andJanet Varney (Legend of Korra); and the New England premiere of Talia Lugacy’s This Is Not a War Story, starring Frances Fisher and executive produced by actress Rosaria Dawson. The latter is about a ragtag group of combat veterans in New York whose anti-war art, poetry, and papermaking keep them together, despite the ghost of their friend’s suicide and the fact that healing from war is sometimes an impossible mission.

Films about music are another festival hallmark. Besides the previously mentioned Best Summer Ever and Soy Cubana, there are three other feature length films and one short with musical themes. Festival alumnus David Henry Gerson’s The Story Won’t Die is a documentary about a Syrian rapper, tortured by Bashar Al-Assad for his lyrics, who uses his music to survive one of this century’s deadliest wars. Together with other creative personalities of the Syrian uprising, he tells the story of revolution and exile while reflecting on a global battle for peace, justice, and freedom of expression. Behind the Strings directed by Hal Rifken tells the story of the formation, rise, and success of the Shanghai String Quartet, four classically trained musicians who fled to the US when Mao’s Cultural Revolution ended and have since performed for 36 years around the world. The film covers their formation, rise, and success, the price they had to pay to stay on top, and their triumphant return to China to play the music they love. For the Left Hand by Gordon Quinn and Lesley Simmer tells the story of aspiring pianist Norman Malone who becomes paralyzed on his right side at age 10 after being attacked by his father. Over the next several decades he masters the left-hand repertoire in secret before a chance discovery of his talent leads him to making his concert debut. Kevin Smokler and Christopher Boone’s documentary Vinyl Nation digs into the resurgence of vinyl records, the diversification of vinyl fans, and the connective power of music in these divided times. The short documentary A Concerto Is a Conversation by Ben Proudfoot & Kris Bowers traces the lineage of a virtuoso jazz pianist and film composer from Jim Crow Florida to the Walt Disney Concert Hall through his 91-year-old grandfather.

Several feature length films are part of the festival’s Bringing Science to the Screen program. Annie Kaempfer’s The Falconer spotlights Rodney Stotts, one of the few African American falconers in the US. Growing up in Washington, DC during the crack epidemic, Rodney lost friends and family to drugs and street violence. He was destined for the same, until he joined Earth Conservation Corps, an organization that included inner city kids to clean-up local rivers and habitat to encourage wildlife restoration. The feature documentary To Which We Belong by Pamela Tanner Boll (co-executive producer of the Oscar-winning Born Into Brothels) and Lindsay Richardson highlights farmers and ranchers leaving behind conventional practices that are no longer profitable or sustainable. Observations at 65º South by Lillian Hess follows a team of nine “rogue” scientists who embark on a journey to Antarctica on a small sailboat in an effort to fundamentally change polar research practice.

Filmmaker-in-residence Alexis Gambis’s Son of Monarchs, a narrative feature about a Mexican biologist living in New York who returns to his hometown in the majestic monarch butterfly forests of Michoacán, will also screen in competition. The filmpremiered at Sundance in 2021 in the NEXT category and received the Sloan Feature Film Prize. Gambis, whose films combine documentary and fiction, often embracing animal perspectives and experiments with new forms of scientific storytellingwill conduct a virtual master class about science filmmaking on Monday, August 1, and participate in a virtual discussion on Thursday, August 5, about how filmmakers and scientists collaborate to make films about complex scientific concepts with Nipam Patel, director of Woods Hole’s Marine Biological Laboratory (MBL). Patel participated in the production of Son of Monarchs, andthe MBL also assisted Gambis with material for his prior feature film The Fly Room.

Two political films make for fascinating viewing. The Berrigans: Devout and Dangerous explores the legendary lives of two priests and a nun who took on the US government and features Bill Pullman, Liam Neeson, and Martin Sheen. American Gadfly by Skye Wallin profiles 89-year-old former senator Mike Gravel, who comes out of retirement when a group of teenagers convinces him to run for president one last time. It also features interviews with fellow candidates Bernie Sanders, Tulsi Gabbard, Rick Santorum, and Andrew Yang.

The festival is supported in part by presenting partner WBUR, UniCare, YouthInk, Autocamp and grants from the Mass Cultural Council, Mass Festivals, the Falmouth Fund of the Cape Cod Foundation in support of Bringing Science to the Screen, the Cape Cod 5 Foundation, the Martha’s Vineyard Savings Bank, the Woods Hole Community Association, and the Arts Foundation of Cape Cod.

Passes (available June 1) and individual tickets and ticket packages (available July 1) are available in advance and during the festival at www.woodsholefilmfestival.org. Passes range from $35-225 (various discounts for members) and provide access to films and events on the virtual platform. Ticket packages for in-person and virtual screenings range from $75-120. Individual film, workshop, and panel discussion tickets range from $14-20 (various discounts for members). For more information, call (508) 495-3456 or email info@woodsholefilmfestival.org.

Community Art Project: Face Masks!

The Woods Hole Public Library will be hosting a Community Art Project again this summer. In previous years, the Library has provided one specific material, such as catalogue cards, nautical charts, horseshoe crab sheds, and one year, even chairs! This year however, the Library will not provide the material, but rather, is designating the theme, which will be masks.

Mask Art by Karen Kabat

To be clear, masks do not have to be the material, but they must be the main theme of the piece. This seems to be the obvious choice for this year, featuring an item which has been so much a part of our lives for the past 15 months. Potential artists of all levels from the community are encouraged to think outside the box and create a piece for the show. The Library is convinced that people will surprise and delight us all with their creations.

As in previous years, this project will morph into a fund-raiser for the Library in that every piece will be included in an online auction to benefit the Library. All entries should be at the Library by Saturday, July 24. They will be on display till Saturday, August 7. During those two weeks the items will also be shown on the Library website while the online auction runs simultaneously. Details of the auction will be at the Library during the show as well as on the website www.woodsholepubliclibrary.org. Questions? Call the Library at 508-548-8961.

Book Events at Woods Hole Public Library

The Woods Hole Public Library will mark Juneteenth, the day when slavery was finally abolished in the United States by a reading of the book “All Different Now” by Angela Johnson, beautifully illustrated by E.B. Lewis. The reading will be held at 11 AM on June 19, matching the original date of the proclamation in 1865 in Texas, the last state in the Union to acknowledge the Emancipation Proclamation. Juneteenth is our newest national holiday, and this reading by volunteers Jarita Davis and Aminta Steinbach will mark its creation.

Later in the summer, as in previous years, Story Time for children will take place in the Courtyard beside the Library every Wednesday in July at 10:30. Volunteer readers from the public will read books to preschool children in a program which usually lasts about ½ hour. Anyone who would like to be a reader should contact the library. People with pre-school children are welcomed to the event.

Another on-going Library event celebrating kids’ books will take place at the ballpark on Bell Tower Lane over the course of the summer. It is a Story Walk, in which a picture book is taken apart and mounted, poster-style, for kids to walk by, reading and walking. During the winter of the pandemic, the Library did this several times with different books exhibited in the Courtyard, but for the summer, thanks to co-operation by Falmouth’s Recreation Department, the display will be on the fence around the tennis court behind Taft’s Playground. The first book, which will be displayed starting at the end of June, is “The Thing About Bees, A Love Letter” by Shabazz Larkin. It will remain up for about three weeks.

The Library will also encourage independent reading for both adults and children with a summer reading program. Participants will keep a record of what and for how long they read. After successfully completing a week of reading, a prize will be awarded. In order not to stress local restaurants (already stressed by closures during the pandemic)  which in previous years have donated prizes of cookies or ice cream, the Library will be awarding coupons for free books from the Library’s book sale, a prize that is sure to gladden the minds, if not the taste buds, of these avid readers.  The program begins on Monday, June 28, and continues until Saturday, August 7. Readers are encouraged to stop by the Library beginning on June 28 to sign up and take home a reading log to track their progress.

Of course all readers are welcome to come into the newly opened Library to borrow books from the whole collection. The hours for the summer are basically 10 AM – 2 PM every day except Sunday when the Library is closed, with the addition of Wednesday afternoons until 5:30 PM. For more information, visit the Library’s website www.woodsholepubliclibrary.org.

Falmouth Cultural Council Seeks Members

The Falmouth Cultural Council is looking for new council members. The role of the council is to distribute grant money allocated by the Massachusetts Cultural Council to support programs in the Arts, Humanities, and Interpretive Sciences.

The Falmouth Cultural Council calls for grant proposals, chooses the projects to grant, and supervises the distribution of the grants.

Most of this activity takes place in the fall, when grant applications are due (usually October 15), but the group meets monthly at Town Hall.

Email falmouthcultural@gmail.com if you’re interested in serving on this Town committee.

Mass MoCA Residency Fellowships for MA Artists


The application portal is now open for the Studios at MASS MoCA’s 2022 residency program. There are one-month fully funded residencies reserved specifically for Massachusetts artists in February 2022. More information below.

See the full residency programming announcement here.

There is still space in the summer line-up of free, artist-focused finance and business online workshops . Viewthe Summer 2021 Workshop Series here.

Molly Rideout
Fundraising & Marketing Manager
Assets for Artists | Studios at MASS MoCA
Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art
mrideout@massmoca.org 
413-664-4481 x8147
assetsforartists.org | massmoca.org | mollyrideout.com

Applications are now open for The Studios at MASS MoCA’s Winter/Spring 2022 residency season.

Join the 700+ artists who have enjoyed an artist residency of up to 8 weeks on MASS MoCA’s historic mill campus in the Berkshire Mountains. Run by Assets for Artists (the artist-development arm of MASS MoCA), residencies will be scheduled from January – April, 2022, for the Winter/Spring season.

Selected artists receive:

  • Private, furnished studio space at MASS MoCA, available 24/7
  • Housing in newly renovated apartments directly across the street from the museum.
  • One communal meal per day in the company of fellow artists-in-residence.
  • MASS MoCA member benefits for the duration of the residency, including free access to the museum’s galleries, The Clark, and discounts on performing arts events and museum store purchases.
  • Optional artist-focused financial and business coaching with the Assets for Artists staff.

Application deadline July 8, 2021

FUNDED RESIDENCY SESSION FOR MASSACHUSETTS CREATIVES (ALL DISCIPLINES)
FEBRUARY 2 – MARCH 1, 2022

Eligibility: Open to artists of any discipline who currently reside in the state of Massachusetts. Selection will be made based on financial need and readiness to participant in the community building components of the program.

A fully funded, 4-week residency focused on building a strong cohort of Massachusetts artists of all disciplines from across the Commonwealth. Residents will have opportunities to take part in group events, field trips, and other collectively determined activities. At least 12 fellowships will be awarded.

The residency will occur: February 2 – March 1, 2022. These dates are not flexible, so you must be available for most of the full 4-week residency to be awarded this fellowship. Partial residencies of the first two weeks or last two weeks may be awarded if requested. To apply, simply select the appropriate box on the fellowships question of the Winter/Spring 2022 residency application. There is no separate application for this opportunity. Be sure to also indicate whether you would like to be considered for a regular residency at the Studios at MASS MoCA, if you are not awarded this special fellowship residency. All applicants must first be accepted through the regular jurying process to receive this fellowship.

MORE INFORMATION & APPLICATION AT: massmoca.org/Studios

Plant Donations wanted for Woods Hole Library Spring Plant Sale

Woods Hole Library will hold its annual Spring Plant Sale on Saturday, May 15, from 9 AM to 12 noon.  The library will be observing all CDC practices:  masks must be worn, shoppers will be requested to keep a distance from each other, and shopper numbers will be limited if need be.

As always, all the plants come from community gardeners.  This year, due to the pandemic, the library board cannot send out their usual team of helpers to dig out donated plants. Instead, they ask that donors bring them, already potted and labeled, to the Woods Hole Library the week before the sale.  Pots and soil, as well as labels, are available at the library in the courtyard for people to use in potting up their plants.

They welcome all perennials, house plants, and seedlings, as well as tubers, corms, and bulbs.

Please get in touch with them by emailing WHPL.plantsale@gmail.org or calling the Woods Hole Library between 10 and 2 at (508) 548-8961.

Furthermore Spring Grants
Furthermore grants in publishing, a program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund is now accepting spring grant applications. 
Furthermore grants support nonfiction books having to do with art, architecture, and design; cultural history and the city; conservation and preservation; and related public issues. 
Spring applications should be submitted online through our website no later than midnight EST March 1.
Furthermore applicants must be 501(c)3 organizations. Fifty to sixty grants are given annually and the program has now assisted over 1300 publication projects and disbursed nearly $7 million. 
Grants are awarded to help meet such specific needs as writing, research, indexing, editing, translation, design, photography, illustration, and printing and binding. 
Book proposals to which a publisher is already committed and for which there is a feasible distribution plan are preferred. 

The portal to the online submission formcan be found on the Furthermore page at Furthermore.org

Ann BirckmayerAdministrator, Furthermore grants in publishingA program of the J. M. Kaplan Fund

Woods Hole Film Festival 2021 Writers Symposium

The Woods Hole Film Festival will present a very special workshop for anyone interested in learning how to write for a film or television comedy. Veteran comedy writer Steve Young helms the three day virtual workshop, FUNNY BUSINESS: FINDING YOUR COMEDIC VOICE ON THE PAGE & IN THE ROOM, Friday, February 19 through Sunday, February 21, 2021. Woods Hole Film Festival Writers Symposium presents three days of comedy writing, observations, and war stories.

ABOUT THE SYMPOSIUM
So, you’re funny. Now what? Could writing and creating comedy be your hobby, or even your career? In this multi-day workshop with former Letterman and Simpsons writer Steve Young, you’ll get an insider’s glimpse of what it’s like to be a professional television comedy writer, and a chance to help develop your own comedy writing chops via exercises and discussion. You’ll team up with fellow participants as a taste of a collaborative writers room and learn about the skills needed to work in that environment. Don’t miss this chance to up your comedy game!

ABOUT THE INSTRUCTOR:

For 25 years, Steve Young wrote for David Letterman’s Late Night and Late Show programs. He also wrote for The Simpsons and wrote the Matt Groening-produced animated Christmas special, Olive the Other Reindeer. Most recent credits: NBC’s Maya & Marty variety show, Harry Connick Jr.’s show Harry, and HBO’s Night of Too Many Stars. A Harvard graduate, Steve teaches television history at New York University. He is the co-author of “Everything’s Coming Up Profits: The Golden Age of Industrial Musicals,” and is the main subject of the acclaimed comedy music documentary Bathtubs Over Broadway

Fee: $150, $125 Members. Limited to 24 participants. Prior experience not required. Register via www.woodsholefilmfestival.org. For more information email info@woodsholefilmfestival.org or call (508) 495-3456.

The Festival is supported in part by a grant from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, the Woods Hole Foundation, the Falmouth Fund of the Cape Cod Foundation, the Arts Foundation of Cape Cod and the Cape Cod 5 Charitable Foundation Trust. The WHFF Writers Symposium is part of the Woods Hole Film Festival’s year-round program.

Woods Hole Public Library Community Events

The Woods Hole Public Library is continually thinking of new ways to engage community members, especially during this time of COVID. Most of the ideas involve people working on their own, either at home or outside, and “coming together” in online ways. The Library is calling attention to the natural world and pairing it with human creativity in many of the projects.

 Just last week the Library instituted a “Question of the Week” aimed particularly at children, who can come to the Library lower level porch, find the question on a chalk board, figure out the answer, write it on the piece of paper provided, and place it into the adjacent Answer Box. Each week a new animal-themed riddle will be posted by the book drop.

Most recently, the Library has started a Scavenger Hunt, aimed at all ages. People will find the list on the lower door and may  take a copy and go forth in search of all items on the list. Most but not all the items on the list are in the natural world. To answer the search, people must either draw or photograph the object as proof that they have found them. The Library is hoping to encourage people to explore, look carefully, and create a beautiful compendium of drawings or photographs. When people have completed their list they should share it with the Librarians either by stopping by at the pick-up window or emailing it to whpl_mail@clamsnet.org. Those who find everything on the list will be entered into a drawing for a Woods Hole Public Library T-shirt. Each month, January through March, there will be a new list of items to find both indoors and outdoors. People should know that  if they have a question about something they find, or just want to learn more about animals, nature, crafts, or anything else that comes to mind, the librarians are happy to help find the perfect book!

In a move to encourage communication in another way than online, the Woods Hole Public Library is also embarking on a new community-building project this winter: “Woods Hole Words.” The Librarians have created community journals on a variety of topics for patrons to check out from the library, add their words or artwork, and then return to the Library, where the journal will sit in quarantine, then  return to the library collection  to be checked out by someone else.  Topics include books, movies, TV shows, recipes and kitchen lore, nature, and life stories. During this time when we cannot safely gather to share our stories, thoughts, and questions, these journals will not only give people a chance to collaborate and share, but they will also serve to mark this unique moment in time. Once the journals are filled, the Library will add them to the permanent collection for all to read and enjoy.

Community members of all ages are encouraged to stop by the Library and check out a journal. As Kellie Porter assistant librarian says, “You never know, you just might discover your new favorite book, poem, or recipe after reading the words of your neighbors!” While each journal is organized around a topic, the librarians encourage journal writers to be as creative as they want to be. For example, the journal about books does not just need to include a review of a recently read book. The reader can choose to share a story about a book which was read 20 years ago, or draw a picture of a favorite character or scene. In the journal about life stories, people may choose to share an anecdote about a recent small act of kindness, or even an epic tale about an adventure of the past.

The Library hopes this project will help bring our community together in one small way.