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Miss Lil's Camp

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About Me

'Miss Lil's Camp' is a documentary film about the director of an exclusive summer camp for girls from upper middle class Southern homes. Miss Lil, as Lillian Smith was known, taught Laurel Falls' campers that segregation was wrong. She expressed her thoughts and radical ideas at a time when Southern leadership was committed to a racially segregated society and Jim Crow laws permeated every aspect of social life. Some young campers were repulsed by her ideas while others embraced them. In short, Lillian Smith was no ordinary woman and Laurel Falls no ordinary camp.
Radical as the camp was, nothing prepared the parents of campers, or indeed the rest of the South, for Lillian Smith's first novel, Strange Fruit (1944). The story of a white Southern man's love for a black girl, the book was banned in Boston and distributed under wraps in the South. Public reaction was swift and harsh. Some campers were forbidden to return to camp; others returned despite opposition from home.
In the film, we meet three former campers and a former camp employee who return to Laurel Falls Camp, perched on Screamer Mountain in Clayton, Georgia. Weaving narratives of former campers, the commentary of historian Dr. Rose Gladney, and rare audio-visual footage of Lillian Smith, the film recreates camp life in the thirties and forties. The film juxtaposes the past and present to elicit dramatic differences but also similarities between the 1940's and life today.
www.misslilscamp.com

My Interests

Music:


Roger Hunt: Composer www.myspace.com/rogerhuntmusic

Books:

* Strange Fruit (1944). Set in the post World War I South of her youth, the love story between a black woman and a white man – banned for obscenity in Boston – was translated into fifteen languages and produced as a Broadway play

*Killers of the Dream (1949). The more conflicting aspects, “the hard lessons dealing with sin, sex, and segregation,” form the basis of her most perceptive critique of Southern culture

*The Journey (1954). “I went in search for an image of the human being I could be proud of.” Through this moving spiritual autobiography she found the true measure of the human spirit to be the individual's creative response to ordeal

*Now is the Time (1955). Calling the Supreme Court's ruling on school desegregation “every child's Magna Carta,” she urged compliance with both the letter and spirit of that law

*One Hour (1959). After two young white boys set fire to her home in November 1955, destroying her personal belongings, thousands of valuable letters, and unpublished manuscripts, Smith addresses her own questions about why her ideas about social change and human relationships were so strongly resisted

*Our Faces, Our Words (1964). One of the most insightful portrayals of the early 1960's civil rights movement, reveals her personal knowledge and experience with young civil rights activists

My Blog

SunScreen Film Festival Kicks Off Tomorrow!

SunScreen Film Festival officially kicks off tomorrow, Wednesday March 19th! Check out all of the wonderful events/screenings on the schedule at http://www.sunscreenfilmfestival.comBelow are three h...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Tue, 18 Mar 2008 08:54:00 PST

SunScreen Film Festival Wants Miss Lil!

The 3rd Annual SunScreen Film Festival in St. Petersburg, Florida from March 19th to March 22nd has invited "Miss Lil's Camp" to screen as part of its film line-up. John Travolta will be attending th...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Tue, 26 Feb 2008 05:06:00 PST

Mississippi Screenings February 2008

Miss Lil's Camp has been invited to screen at the Oxford Film Festival, 2 pm on Friday February 8th, 2008.The 5th Oxford Film Festival will be held February 7 - 10, 2008, in Oxford, Mississippi, with ...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Thu, 06 Dec 2007 09:28:00 PST

"Miss Lils Camp" Screens this Sunday in Baltimore

The award-winning short documentary "Miss Lil's Camp" is screening at the Baltimore Women's Film Festival during the Documentary Film Showcase.When: Documentary Film Showcase 11:00am-1:00pm Sunday, Oc...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Fri, 12 Oct 2007 01:00:00 PST

Baltimore Womens Film Festival!

AWARD-WINNING FILM SCREENS AT 21st FESTIVAL Jupiter, FL  The award-winning short documentary, Miss Lil's Camp, has been invited to screen at its 21st film festival, The Baltimore Women's Film Festiva...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Mon, 10 Sep 2007 08:50:00 PST

Opportunity Rocks Palm Beach; Producers Honored

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Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Wed, 16 May 2007 05:12:00 PST

Invitation to screen at Girls for Change Film Festival

Miss Lil's Camp and Suzanne Niedland have been invited to screen at the Girls for Change Film Festival at University of Memphis in Tennessee, as part of celebrations of Women's Month. The festival wil...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Sat, 17 Mar 2007 04:10:00 PST

There Are No Small Films, Only Small Ideas

Cinematl - Atlanta Based Regional Film & Video MagazineJune 16th, 2006 by Charles JudsonThe doc's at this year's AFF [Atlanta Film Festival] have been strong. They've been more consistent and entertai...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Tue, 13 Feb 2007 01:00:00 PST

Work Showcased at Clinton Opening

Associated Press November 3, 2004LITTLE ROCK, Ark. -- The work of two University of Florida documentary students beat out 150 other films to receive a coveted place in the opening of the Clinton Presi...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Tue, 13 Feb 2007 01:06:00 PST

Former Camper Stumbles on "Miss Lil's Camp" at Ashland Independent Film Festival in Oregon

"Last evening the showing of " Miss Lil's Camp " was truly one of the most exciting moments in my life. Your powerful artistry awakened many nostalgic memories in my past as the scenes drew back the c...
Posted by Miss Lil's Camp on Tue, 13 Feb 2007 01:04:00 PST