Rising Up a documentary on the civil rights era Produced by William G. Thomas, Bill Reifenberger, and the University of Virginia (50 minutes)
Rising Up is a documentary film of the African American experience in the civil rights era. The film broadly covers the South, but concentrates on Virginia and follows major events with close, personal stories, including: Samuel W. Tucker's 1939 library sit-in, Irene Morgan's 1946 busing case before the Supreme Court, the school desegregation crisis in 1958-59, the 1960 sit-ins, the violence of Danville and Birmingham in 1963, and the resurgence of black voting and politics in 1965.
What made everyday people decide to take a stand in a time of transition and cultural conflict? This is the question at the heart of Rising Up. In asking it and answering it, the film hopes to bring a fresh perspective to the civil rights struggle.
These images from Rising Up are for press materials and use in print publications about the film. The images feature the confrontation on the court house steps in Danville, Virginia in the summer of 1963 between civil rights demonstrators and Danville police. All images courtesy of the Library of Virginia. | What makes this documentary fresh is that it includes recently uncovered local television news coverage of the events combined with interviews of participants seen in these old films. Rare footage from WDBJ and WSLS in Roanoke, Virginia, feature not only local participants but also such regional and national figures as Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth, John F. Kennedy, James J. Kilpatrick, Oliver Hill, Robert Zellner, and Roy Wilkins. It includes a rarely seen and remarkable NBC News debate between James J. Kilpatrick, Jr., a leading news editor in the South, and Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., on whether the sit-ins were justified. |
It features, as well, a rarely seen speech from Rev. Dr. King on the violence at Danville in 1963. This film is also different because it is created from the perspectives of young people today. Rising Up is written, directed, narrated, filmed, and edited by a talented group of undergraduate students at the University of Virginia. Their remarkable approach to this history is evident in the visual storytelling and powerful images they assembled. The score includes original works by University of Virginia students and music from Sweet Honey and the Rock™. Rising Up takes viewers through a series of stories about how everyday Americans were moved to take a stand. | These images from Rising Up are for press materials and use in print publications about the film. The images feature the confrontation on the court house steps in Danville, Virginia in the summer of 1963 between civil rights demonstrators and Danville police. All images courtesy of the Library of Virginia. |
Rising Up:
- Virginia’s Civil Rights Movement - the African American experience in the civil rights era.
- Television News of the Civil Rights Era 1950-1970 - aims to collect, digitize, and present in streaming video format over the World Wide Web television news footage from the period.
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