Michelle Parkerson (born November 1, 1953) is an American filmmaker and academic. She is an assistant professor in Film and Media Arts at Temple University and has been an independent film/video maker since the 1980s, focusing particularly on feminist, LGBT, and political activism and issues.
Early life
Michelle Parkerson was born and raised in Washington, DC.[1] In the early 1980s, Parkerson and Essex Hemphill, a poet, activist, and friend of Parkerson's, would often perform spoken word poetry in D.C. coffeehouses and theaters.[2] They received a grant from the Washington Project for the Arts in 1983 to produce an "experimental dramatization" of their poetry entitled Murder on Glass.[2]
Career
Parkerson majored in TV and film production and graduated in 1974 with a B.A. in Communications from Temple University with the short Sojourn, a collaboration with Jimi Lyons, a cinematographer; the film won a Junior Academy Award.[3][4] She is an alumna of the American Film Institute (AFI) Workshop for Women Directors, Class of 1989-91, where her classmates included Rita Mae Brown and Lyn Goldfarb.[5]
Parkerson currently heads her own DC-based production company, Eye of the Storm Productions.[6][7]
Gibson describes Parkerson as "a visionary risk taker".[11] Gibson describes Parkerson's films as being identity-related: "highlight[ing] the identities of black women as performers and social activists… serv[ing] as a major contributor to the development of a black documentary style that seeks a holistic approach to African-American life".[12]
Parkerson's "love note never sent" to Lorde in The Feminist Wire reflects the activist motivation of her own filmmaking:
The zen of Audre Lorde is in vogue. But the tangible impact of your activism will keep surfacing internationally and for generations to come as long as communities of color are still under siege, as long as a woman remains voiceless and abused, as long as the lesbian love that dared "speak its name" is threatened with sequester.[14]
^ abDuberman, Martin (2014). Hold Tight Gently: Michael Callen, Essex Hemphill and the Battlefield of AIDS. New York: The New Press. pp. 36-38. ISBN978-1-59558-945-3.
^Parkerson, Michelle; Gibson, Gloria J. (Winter 1988). "Michelle Parkerson Interview". Black Camera. 3 (1): 5–8. JSTOR27761407. ProQuest1309148948.
^Tate, Greg (1992). "Cinematic Sisterhood". Flyboy in the Buttermilk: Essays on Contemporary America. Simon and Schuster. pp. 252–61. ISBN9781501136979.
Gibson, Gloria J. (2013). "Michelle Parkerson: A Visionary Risk Taker". In Bobo, Jacqueline (ed.). Black Women Film and Video Artists. pp. 177–188. doi:10.4324/9780203698990. ISBN978-1-135-22542-1.