Trending Topics
Christmas Carols 
Villagers all, this frosty tide, Let your doors swing open wide, Though wind may follow, and snow beside, Yet draw us in by your fire to bide; Joy shall be yours in the morning! —Kenneth Grahame, The Wind in...
Local Authors/Local Interest 
Every fall TNT showcases some of the newest books that are written by local authors, or of local interest. This year presented challenges for everyone in our community. Authors everywhere have been hit hard by rising costs, declines in...
Family Photos 
Almost every secondhand shop has a box of old photos for sale. Ladies and gentlemen in their Sunday best; laborers pausing at their work; children, stiff and unnatural in a studio portrait, or candid and full of life on...
Halloween History 
For many years, the Malibu Feed Bin heralded the arrival of Halloween with a display of pumpkins for sale. This year, the corner of Topanga Canyon Boulevard and Pacific Coast Highway hosts only a utilitarian assortment of trailers used...
Special Screening at the Theatricum
ArtBeat

Special Screening at the Theatricum 

Will Geer Theatricum Botanicum presents a 70th anniversary screening of Salt of the Earth, the controversial pro-labor, pro-Latino, feminist 1954 film written by Michael Wilson, directed by Herbert J. Biberman, and produced by Paul Jarrico. A story of resilience, solidarity and the courageous fight for dignity in the face of adversity, Salt of the Earth was attacked and censored because the International Union of Mine, Mill and Smelter Workers (which had been expelled from the CIO in 1950 over the alleged domination of its leadership by communists) sponsored it, and because many blacklisted Hollywood professionals helped make it.

The showing of this historic indie movie will be introduced by a panel discussion moderated by film historian Ed Rampell and featuring the children of the artists who created the film: Becca Wilson, daughter of screenwriter Michael Wilson; Bill Jarrico, son of producer Paul Jarrico; Arthur Revuletas, nephew of star Rosaura Revueltas; Ellen Geer, an extra in the movie alongside her father, Will Geer, as the sheriff; and Heather Wood, granddaughter of real-life labor organizers Clint and Virginia Jencks, who appeared in the film as supporters of the miners’ strike. A Q&A will follow the screening.

Join Theatricum for the screening on Sunday, Oct. 27 at 5:30 p.m.

  • 5:30 pm: Panel Discussion and re-enactment of HUAC Testimony
  • 6:10 pm: Intermission
  • 6:30 pm: Film Screening
  • 8 pm: Q&A

TICKETS

Lower Tier (reserved seating): $50

Upper Tier (general admission): $35

(student and senior discounts available)

Related posts

Leave a Reply

Required fields are marked *