Thursday, December 16, 2010




Yadhira De Leon
323.667.2000, ext. 327
ydeleon@theAutry.org
Autry National Center
4700 Western Heritage Way, Los Angeles , CA 90027
323.667.2000, www.theAutry.org
The Autry’s Fifth-Anniversary Screening of Brokeback Mountain
and Staged Reading of Audience Reactions to the Film from the Book Beyond Brokeback
Filled with Praise for Film and Heartfelt Stories



As part of the successful series Out West at the Autry, the “Beyond Brokeback”
event included the movie presentation and staged reading of excerpts of the book
Beyond Brokeback: The Impact of a Film included music inspired by the film


Los Angeles (December 16, 2010) — On Saturday, December 11, 2010, the Autry National Center, in association with Focus Features, celebrated the fifth anniversary of the screen debut of Brokeback Mountain with a film screening, a staged reading of excerpts from the book Beyond Brokeback: The Impact of a Film, and a special appearance by Diana Ossana, producer and Oscar-winning screenwriter of the film. The event was part of the acclaimed program Out West at the Autry, a series of public events focusing on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) history and culture in the West with gallery talks, film screenings, lectures, performances, and other cultural events. Also announced was the continuation of Out West at the Autry in Griffith Park and Bozeman , Montana , with more national dates to be announced.



The moving event featured a welcome and presentation presided over by Daniel Finley , Autry President and CEO, in the Autry’s Imagination Gallery, where the Brokeback Mountain shirts are currently on display. David Bohnett, philanthropist and technology entrepreneur, provided the keynote speech and spoke of his partner, Tom Gregory, owner of the shirts, who generously loaned them for display at the Autry. “Tom's passion for collecting and preserving our history comes from a belief that those that have come before us have left an important legacy through their work and creativity. We would do well as a society to learn from those contributions and foster a culture of respect for our heritage,” he said. Out West at the Autry creator and producer Gregory Hinton also noted, “Greater national attention needs to be paid to the LGBT Western rural communities, who steadfastly maintain visibility with far less assurances and protection than we take for granted in the city. Brokeback Mountain very movingly portrayed the problem, but offered little in the way of a solution. We achieve visibility and normalcy by telling our stories, sharing our culture, and staking our claim in the lodestone of Western American history. This is the mission of Out West at the Autry.”
Diana Ossana recounts fond memories of working on the film Brokeback Mountain to fans of the film.
Photo by Abel Gutierrez.

As the film screening ended and the house lights brightened, guests were greeted by Diana Ossana, producer and Oscar-winning screenwriter of Brokeback Mountain . She thanked the audience for their support of the film and invited them to view the Brokeback Mountain shirts with her in the Autry’s Imagination Gallery (this would be the first time she would see the shirts since working on the film). The emotion-filled gallery was quiet as Ossana stood in a private moment. Moving back to the center of the gallery, she began to speak to the crowd, leading to nearly an hour’s worth of conversation about the film—particularly its leading stars, Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal. “There are so many memories associated [with the Brokeback Mountain shirts] because I was there,” said Ossana as she contemplated the display. When asked about her passion for creating the film she said, “I’m a woman. I’m not gay, but lightning struck with this film, and it was amazing. I could not let it go. Every time I read the script I would cry again—and I wrote it!” she laughed. “Everyone has a different take on the film. It is a universal love story but the reason it affects people is because it’s specific about two men and it cuts to our hearts. The way people responded, it created dialogue, and I love that.”





After an awe-inspiring in-person conversation with Ossana, the audience filed back into the theatre for the Beyond Brokeback staged reading, adapted by Gregory Hinton and featuring Carolyn Campbell, Tom Gregory, William Handley, Ryan Harrison, Marlene Head, Michael Butler Murray, Lydia Nibley, and Jeffrey Richardson.  Each read various excerpts of poignant and humorous messages, essays, and poetry—by writers young and old, male and female, gay and straight—from the book Beyond Brokeback: The Impact of a Film. The book was written by members of an online community, the Ultimate Brokeback Forum, many of whom attended the celebration from as far away as San Francisco , Virginia , New York , and London . Harrison sang the Brokeback-inspired song “Meet Me on the Mountain” from the CD of the same name, written by composer Shawn Kirchner, with Murray on acoustic guitar and Head, Murray, and Nibley adding background vocals. Head also performed “Up All Night,” another song from the same CD, with Harrison, Murray, and Nibley on background.





Brokeback Mountain was produced and released by Focus Features in December 2005. Hinton worked with James Schamus, CEO of Focus Features, to create this fifth-anniversary commemoration—the only Brokeback Mountain anniversary screening of its kind.



Future Out West at the Autry programs include a book event with Heather Hole, Boston Museum of Fine Art curator and author of Marsden Hartley and the American West; a survey of the “Two Spirit” Native American tradition, which honors individuals perceived as having blended male and female spirits; an in-gallery program, Pride in the Saddle: Gay and Lesbian Rodeo; and a book event with Patricia Nell Warren who will discuss her new book My West. In addition, the Bozeman Library Foundation and Montana Pride will present Out West at the Bozeman Library during annual Montana Pride festivities on June 18, 2011, where oral histories will be collected and offered to the Montana Historical Society.
Out West at the Autry continues the dialogue started by the Autry's installation of the iconic shirts worn by stars Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in the film, as well as the permanent inclusion of the International Gay Rodeo Association's (IGRA) archives into the Autry Library, both facilitated by Gregory Hinton.
High resolution images available upon request.
About Out West at the Autry
Out West at the Autry is a series of public programs that explores the contributions of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community to Western American history by bringing together scholars, authors, artists, politicians, musicians, and others for gallery discussions, performances, and screenings. Conceived by independent curator Gregory Hinton in 2009, Out West at the Autry was inspired by the Autry’s installation of the iconic shirts worn by Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in the film Brokeback Mountain, on loan from collector Tom Gregory, as well as the permanent inclusion of the International Gay Rodeo Association (IGRA) archives into the Autry library, both facilitated by Hinton. Beginning in 2011, the Autry will present four public Out West at Autry events and the series will travel to other Western institutions.

Out West at the Autry is made possible through the generous support of Tom Gregory, HBO, the Gill Foundation, and the Small Change Foundation, in association with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), and the Courage Campaign.

Autry National Center
The Autry National Center , formed in 2003 by the merger of the Autry Museum of Western Heritage with the Southwest Museum of the American Indian and the Women of the West Museum , is an intercultural history center dedicated to exploring and sharing the stories, experiences, and perceptions of the diverse peoples of the American West. Located in Griffith Park , the Autry’s collection of over 500,000 pieces of art and artifacts, which includes the collection of the Southwest Museum of the American Indian, is one of the largest and most significant in the United States . The Autry Institute includes two research libraries: the Braun Research Library and the Autry Library. Exhibitions, public programs, K–12 educational services, and publications are designed to examine critical issues of society, offering insights into solutions and the contemporary human condition through the Western historical experience.

Weekday hours of operation for the Autry in Griffith Park location are Tuesday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Autry Store’s weekday hours are Tuesday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and the Golden Spur Cafe is open Tuesday through Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday hours for the museum and the Autry Store are 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The museum, the Autry Store, and the cafe are closed on Mondays. The libraries are open to researchers by appointment.

Museum admission is $9 for adults, $5 for students and seniors 60+, $3 for children 3–12, and free for Autry members, veterans, and children 2 and under. Admission is free on the second Tuesday of every month. For more information, visit www.TheAutry.org.

Tuesday, November 9, 2010

The Autry National Center to Present 5th Anniversary
Screening of Landmark Film Brokeback Mountain
Saturday, December 11th, 2010
SCREENING AT 11: 30 AM

As part of the successful series Out West at the
Autry, the movie presentation will be followed by a staged reading of excerpts of the book Beyond Brokeback: The Impact of a Film as well as music inspired by the film.
STAGED READING AT 3:00 PM

LOS ANGELES, CA – On Saturday, December 11th, 2010 the Autry National Center will present, in association with Focus Features, a 5th anniversary screening of the award-winning landmark film Brokeback Mountain followed by a staged reading of messages, essays, poetry, and music inspired by the film. The event is part of the acclaimed program Out West at the Autry, a series of public events focusing on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) history and culture in the West with gallery talks, film screenings, lectures, performances and other cultural events.

“Brokeback Mountain helped to bring wide attention to important conversations about LGBT issues in modern Western communities,” said Autry President and CEO Dan Finley. “This powerful film resonates deeply with the Autry’s own strong connection to the history of Western films as well as our mission to share and explore the inspiring stories of all the peoples of the American West.”

Independent curator and Out West at the Autry creator Gregory Hinton adapted for the stage selections of the 2007 book Beyond Brokeback: The Impact of a Film, which comprises compelling writing contributed to the website The Ultimate Brokeback Forum. Excerpts of poignant and humorous messages, essays, and poetry by writers young and old, male and female, gay and straight—will be read after the Brokeback Mountain screening.

Accompanying the reading is the Brokeback-inspired song Meet Me on the Mountain written by composer Shawn Kirchner. Jeffrey Richardson, the Autry’s associate curator of Film and Popular Culture will present the film and introduce the reading by himself reading a passage from Beyond Brokeback. Six additional readers include Autry staffers and friends and supporters of Out West at the Autry from its inception.

Brokeback Mountain was produced and released by Focus Features in December 2005. Hinton worked with James Schamus, CEO of Focus Features to create this 5th anniversary commemoration—the only Brokeback Mountain anniversary screening of its kind.

“2010 has been a tough year for members of the gay, lesbian and transgender community with an epidemic of teen suicides, bullying, and disappointing setbacks in such highly charged issues as Don’t Ask Don’t Tell and equality marriage,” said Hinton. “After five years, Brokeback Mountain remains our most eloquent and cathartic outlet. I applaud Focus Features and the Autry for the hospitality they have demonstrated by screening the film and the wisdom the museum has shown by its ongoing support for Out West at the Autry.”

Inspired by the success of the program at the Autry, other institutions throughout the West will be working with Hinton to present Out West events. Details about future Out West programs at the Autry, as well as other institutions, will be announced on December 11th before the screening of Brokeback Mountain.

Out West at the Autry connects to the success of the Autry's recent
installation of the iconic shirts worn by stars Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in the film, as well as the permanent inclusion of the International Gay Rodeo Association's (IGRA) archives into the Autry Library.(Both facilitated by Gregory Hinton.)

This event is free with admission to the Autry and is expected to sell out. Advance reservations are recommended. For more information the public may call 323-667-2000, x252or visit TheAutry.org


About Out West at the Autry

Out West at the Autry is a series of public programs that explores the
contributions of the lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community to Western American history by bringing together scholars, authors, artists, politicians, musicians, and others for gallery discussions, performances and screenings.

Conceived by independent curator Gregory Hinton in 2009,Out West at the Autry was inspired by the Autry’s installation of the iconic shirts worn by Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in the film Brokeback Mountain, on loan from collector Tom Gregory, as well as the permanent inclusion of the International Gay Rodeo Association(IGRA) archives into the Autry Library (both facilitated by Hinton). Beginning in 2011, the Autry will present four public Out West at Autry events and the series will travel to other western institutions.

Out West at the Autry is made possible through the generous support of Tom Gregory, HBO, the Gill Foundation, and the Small Change Foundation, in
association with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), and the Courage Campaign.

 Autry National Center

The Autry National Center, formed in 2003 by the merger of the Autry Museum of Western Heritage with the Southwest Museum of the American Indian and the Women of the West Museum, is an intercultural history center dedicated to exploring and sharing the stories, experiences, and perceptions of the diverse peoples of the American West. Located in Griffith Park, the Autry’s collection of over 500,000 pieces of art and artifacts, which includes the collection of the Southwest Museum of the American Indian, is one of the largest and most significant in the United States. The Autry Institute includes two research libraries: the Braun Research Library and the Autry Library. Exhibitions, public programs, K–12 educational services, and publications are designed to examine critical issues of society, offering insights into solutions and the contemporary human condition through the Western historical experience.

Weekday hours of operation for the Autry in Griffith Park location are
Tuesday through Friday,10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Autry Store’s weekday hours are Tuesday through Friday, 10:00a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and the Golden Spur Cafe is open Tuesday through Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday hours for the museum and the Autry Store are 11:00 a.m. to5:00 p.m. The museum, the Autry Store, and the cafe are closed on Mondays. The libraries are open to researchers
by appointment.

Museum admission is $9 for adults, $5 for students and seniors 60+, $3 for children 3–12, and free for Autry members, veterans, and children 2 and under.
Admission is free on the second Tuesday of every month.

Saturday, October 16, 2010

“Out West” Producer Gregory Hinton on Gay Teen Suicides

It was an unforgettable bit of impromptu television. In a setting we’re you’d more likely hear a discussion of the finer points of trash pickup, curb easements and property values, here was a city elder pleading for teenaged lives.

Joel Burns, an openly gay Fort Worth City Council member, used his alloted time for comments at a Tuesday evening meeting to beg despondent gay, lesbian and questioning teens not to take their lives.
“This story is for the young people who might be holding that gun tonight, or the rope, or the pill bottle,” said Burns, whose tearful speech has now gone viral. “Give yourself a chance to see how much better life will get.”
Burns’ is the latest high-profile response to a string of suicides of teens bullied because they were or were perceived to be gay. But writer Gregory Hinton, producer of the Out West at the Autry series, also has been affected by the news.

“What these kids don’t know is that there are other people who feel the exact same way,” he said. “We all know these feelings.”



 more...

http://blog.theautry.org/2010/10/15/out-west-producer-gregory-hinton-on-gay-teen-suicides/

Tuesday, September 21, 2010

Spent the day in L.A. this past Sunday. George Takei spoke at the Autry Museum about his experience as a Japanese-American during WWII when he and his family were forced into an internment camp, as well as his reasons for coming out as a gay man. He spoke without notes for nearly an hour and then engaged in a Q&A with the audience for about 45 minutes. A very enjoyable afternoon.





“If you look at the history of the United States, we have been making progress,” he said. “When the nation was founded, there was no role for women in the institutions of American society. Or for blacks. Or for Latinos. Now we have three women in the Supreme Court. Three women have become U.S. Secretaries of State. We have a Latino mayor. New Mexico has a Latino governor. And there’s a Latina in the Supreme Court. We have now an African American as the President of the United States. When you look at it in the larger historical context we have made incredible progress. With much grief, much pain, enormous suffering, but we’ve come to where we are.” 

Monday, September 20, 2010

Please tune in to Brian Kahn's in-depth interview with Bowen Greenwood, Executive Director of the Montana Republican party, regarding the 2010 Montana Republican Platform calling for the recriminalization of homosexuals on Yellowstone Public Radio's Home Ground this Tuesday, September 21st at 6:30PM. MT


If you miss it, you can hear on podcast at:

http://www.yellowstonepublicradio.org/programs/local/home_ground.html


If you blog, please alert your readers and friends. The Montana AP has gone nationwide with this story.

http://missoulian.com/news/local/article_0dd25d3e-c344-11df-95b2-001cc4c03286.html

Brian's interview of Greg Hinton about the mission of Out West and his personal coming out story will be aired later in October.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Kiran Rao | Features | Screen

Mumbai-based filmmaker Kiran Rao talks about her directorial debut, Dhobi Ghat, which is receiving its world premiere in Toronto.

The film’s music was composed by Argentinean musician Gustavo Santaolalla who won Oscars for Babel and Brokeback Mountain.


Kiran Rao | Features | Screen

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Beyond Brokeback | Autry National Center

The Autry will commemorate the fifth anniversary of the iconic film Brokeback Mountain on December 11th with a full day of programs and reflection. At 3:00 p.m. we will present a staged reading, scripted by Gregory Hinton, based on the book Beyond Brokeback, a powerful collection of stories about the film’s impact on the lives of so many.

Beyond Brokeback | Autry National Center

Brokeback Mountain | Autry National Center

The Autry will commemorate the fifth anniversary of the iconic film Brokeback Mountain with a full day of programs and reflection. Attend a screening of this iconic film at 11:30 a.m., view the Brokeback Mountain shirts in the Autry’s Imagination Gallery and meet Jeffrey Richardson, the Autry’s Associate Curator of Film and Popular Culture.

Brokeback Mountain | Autry National Center

Friday, May 14, 2010

5th Anniversary of Brokeback Mountain

Posted by Lyle on the Ultimate Brokeback Forum:

Monday, May 10, gave us a pure blue sky, white wispy clouds and mild temperatures in the hills of Griffith Park where members John (BayCityJohn) and Lyle had been invited as representatives of the forum to attend the first ever reading of the stage script of our very own forum book, Beyond Brokeback.

Greg Hinton is the supervising producer of the Out West series at the Autry Museum and is the one who adapted the script. He mentioned that he initially approached Annie Proulx about the topic of doing this same type of program with the letters and notes she must have received from the people this story and film touched but she expressed concern over matters of privacy.
Subsequently, he came across our book and discovered it contained the exact thing he was looking for.

The script was culled from the pages of the book and was conceived as a production somewhat like the play Love Letters where actors are seated behind small podiums and read the letters and thoughts of the people who wrote them. It was designed to be read by six persons, who were each given a name, although I don’t know if they are actual names from the book or not, and a narrator/announcer.

Greg greeted John and me as we arrived and we were there as his producing partner and the seven people, whom he described as "some friends and Autry employees," gathered at the Wells Fargo Theater. The seven included Tom Gregory, owner of the iconic shirts from the film, and William Handley, an associate professor of English at the University of Southern California, who was a panelist at last December’s Whatever Happened to Ennis del Mar? event and author of "The Brokeback Book," coming out next March.

From my perspective, having often read Beyond Brokeback, knowing many of the authors and as a participant of the forum, I didn’t think the reading was really going to affect me, but there I was listening to the stories, the poetry, the humor--listening to it read by voices of real people, and one couldn’t help but feeling it again; the true power of how the film has affected so many, in all its human variations.

The first reading clocked in at about 50 minutes. Many things were discussed that afternoon, like the possibility of getting some name actors to participate. Graham Beckel was mentioned. William Handley posited why not Jake Gyllenhaal? (Why not indeed!) Questions and suggestions were bandied about as one might expect in the initial stages of a project like this. The possibility of recording it for further airing was mentioned. (Like a PBS program or as a dvd extra.) Greg Hinton asked John & me if we thought a longer version might be warranted. Or both, a longer and shorter version. (Yes, both.)

The 5th Anniversary of Brokeback Mountain is surely going to be celebrated in fine form at the Autry Center this December, not only with a film screening, but with this event that will carry on the legacy of the film far beyond the Anniversary itself, and something of which the entire forum can certainly be proud.

It was a successful afternoon filled with the anticipatory promise of good things to come!


Monday, April 26, 2010

Art review: Dorothy Iannone at Peres Projects

Since the mid-1960s, Dorothy Iannone has depicted female sexuality as a force to be reckoned with. Her frank, colorful explorations of sex, love and desire are painted in a naive, graphic style, often accompanied by decorative patterns and handwritten narratives. Although laced with undercurrents of pain and tension that inevitably accompany such subject matter, they are for the most part ecstatic, delightfully direct celebrations of women’s sexual power.


l



Art review: Dorothy Iannone at Peres Projects

Posted using ShareThis

“Hidden Histories” Discovers Untold Stories of the Western LGBT Community

The Autry

4700 Western Heritage Way , Los Angeles , CA 90027

323.667.2000, www.theAutry.org



“Hidden Histories” Discovers Untold Stories

of the Western LGBT Community

The second program in the Out West series at the Autry



Thursday, May 13, 2010

7:00-9:00 p.m. Free with museum admission





Los Angeles, CA (April 23, 2010)—Discover the untold stories of the Western LGBT community on this progressive gallery tour as scholars and Autry curators tell the hidden stories behind some of the objects on display. The Autry’s second program in its Out West series delves into uncharted territory highlighting accounts of individuals who lived gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender lives from the 1800s to modern times in the American West. With this step, the Autry boldly adds the overlooked stories of the western LGBT community as yet another dimension of multicultural convergence in the scholarship of Western American history.



Objects on the gallery tour include Elizabeth Bacon Custer’s day dress from the 1870s, the Concord mail stagecoach from 1855, a post office letter box, cowboy gear, and other objects bearing stories related to the LGBT experience in the American West.



“With Hidden Histories, the Autry National Center weaves the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community into the rich tapestry of the American West,” said GLAAD President Jarrett Barrios. “It is so important for Americans to hear stories that reflect the diversity of the LGBT community and our presence throughout our nation’s great history. GLAAD is proud to endorse Out West.”



The Out West series is under the direction of Stephen Aron , professor of history at UCLA and executive director of the Institute for the Study of the American West at the Autry. Blake Allmendinger, a professor in the English Department at UCLA who specializes in teaching the literature of the American West, will provide the context for the evening in a keynote address. Leading the tour groups will be Jim Wilke, independent scholar and curator; Patricia Nell Warren, renowned Western historian and author of eight books, including The Front Runner; Carolyn Brucken , the Autry’s Associate Curator of Western Women’s History; and Jeffrey Richardson , the Autry’s Assistant Curator of Film and Popular Culture.



“The words ‘homosexuality’ and ‘heterosexuality’ did not commonly exist a hundred years ago, and we must take great care to be judicious as we consider the Autry artifacts from their own historical context. Scholarship on the contributions of the LGBT community to the history and culture of the American West is relatively new. Nevertheless, we were there, and with Out West—here we are. It’s our history, too,” noted Gregory Hinton, creator and producer of the Out West series.





Hidden Histories

Thursday, May 13, 2010

7:00–9:00 p.m. Doors open at 6:30 p.m.

Complimentary refreshments to be served, with dinner available for purchase. Cash bar.

Admission: Free with museum admission. Tickets now available at the Museum’s Visitor Services Desk or by contacting Patty Carmack at 323.667.2000, ext. 389, or pcarmack@theAutry.org.





Upcoming Out West Events



One Man’s Journey: A Conversation With George Takei

September 19, 2010



Beyond Brokeback

December 11, 2010





About the Out West Series

Having marked the first formal public recognition of the contributions of the LGBT community to Western American history by a major American museum with the installation of the iconic Brokeback Mountain shirts in its Imagination Gallery, the Autry delves deeper into the subject matter by hosting Out West, a series of four programs over a 12-month period. Assembled at each event will be Western scholars, authors, artists, politicians, musicians, and friends of Western LGBT people. The first event, a panel discussion titled “What Ever Happened to Ennis del Mar?” took place on December 13, 2009.



Conceived by Gregory Hinton, consulting producer for the series, Out West was inspired not only by the Autry’s recent installation of the iconic shirts worn by Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal in Brokeback Mountain but also by the permanent inclusion of the International Gay Rodeo Association’s (IGRA) archives into the Autry Library (both facilitated by Hinton). Mrs. Gene Autry presided over a launch event on August 11, 2009, celebrating the loan of the shirts from collector Tom Gregory, who purchased them at a charity auction and shared Hinton’s vision for using them toward a greater good. At the installation of the iconic shirts, the Autry National Center ’s President and CEO John Gray said, “The American West is a place for all of us, and all of us have a place in the West.”



The Out West series at the Autry National Center is made possible through the generous support of Tom Gregory, HBO, the Gill Foundation, and the Small Change Foundation, in association with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), and the Courage Campaign.





About the Presenters



Blake Allmendinger

Blake Allmendinger is a full professor in the English Department at UCLA, where he specializes in teaching the literature of the American West. He grew up on a cattle ranch in Colorado and was educated at Harvard, Oxford , and the University of Pennsylvania . He has authored four books, including The Cowboy (1992), Ten Most Wanted: The New Western Literature (1998), Over the Edge: Remapping the American West (1998), and Imagining the African American West (2005). He is currently writing a book that is part childhood memoir and part history of small towns in the American West.



Carolyn Brucken

Carolyn Brucken joined the Autry National Center in 2003 and is Associate Curator of Western Women’s History. Brucken received her PhD in American Civilization from George Washington University and her MA from the University of Delaware , Winterthur Program. She has developed exhibitions for the Museum of Tolerance in Los Angeles (1999–2003) and the National Archives in Washington DC (1994–1996). Brucken has also taught at Miami University and California State University–Fullerton. Her current and recent exhibition projects include Home Lands: How Women Made the West, the reinterpretation of the Autry’s historical galleries, and California Style: Art and Fashion From the California Historical Society.



Jeffrey Richardson

Jeffrey Richardson came to the Autry National Center as the Autry/UNLV Fellow. He now is the Assistant Curator of Film and Popular Culture. He is currently working on his doctoral studies at the University of Nevada–Las Vegas . Richardson ’s areas of specialization are 20th-century American culture and intellectual history, with a special emphasis on the history of the motion picture industry. Since joining the Autry, he has been working on the exhibitions Cowboys and Presidents and The New West, as well as lobby exhibits on Gene Autry and Monte Hale, and redoing cases in the Autry’s permanent galleries.



Patricia Nell Warren

The author of eight books, including The Front Runner, the most famous gay novel ever written, Patricia Nell Warren is also a renowned Western historian. Born in 1936 on the Grant-Kohrs Ranch in Deer Lodge, Montana , Warren has written and lectured extensively about her Montana roots, including in her novels One Is the Sun and The Fancy Dancer. A publisher of her own imprint, Wildcat Press, she is the recipient of the 1982 Western Heritage Award (magazine writing) from the National Cowboy Hall of Fame, as well as the 2003 Barry Goldwater Human Rights Award. Warren is currently preparing an anthology titled My West, a collection of commentaries and essays that reflects half a century of writing about her native region, to be published in October 2010.



Jim Wilke

Independent scholar and curator Jim Wilke is a recognized authority on the American West, with a special emphasis on gay, lesbian, and transgender Western history and culture. He is also an established expert on the history of the American railroad. Born in Santa Monica , California , and a graduate of the University of Southern California , Wilke worked at the Autry National Center from 1989 to 1994 as an assistant curator. Formerly a rodeo competitor, Wilke was also a member of the Los Angeles Gay Rodeo Association from 1987 to 1993.





About Creator and Producer Gregory Hinton

Gregory Hinton is the creator and producer of Out West: LGBT Stories of the American West. The son of a country newspaper editor, Hinton was born in Wolf Point, Montana, on the Fort Peck Reservation and reared in Cody , Wyoming . A graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder , he moved to Los Angeles to pursue a writing and film career. Hinton is currently working on his fifth novel, Night Rodeo He holds a 2009 artist’s residency at Wyoming ’s Ucross Foundation and a 2009 research honorarium from the Cody Institute for Western American Studies at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center . Hinton has published four critically acclaimed novels: Cathedral City (2001), Desperate Hearts (2002), The Way Things Ought to Be (2003), and Santa Monica Canyon (2007). For its diverse social themes, Cathedral City is taught at the university level. All of Hinton’s books are endorsed by the American Library Association’s Booklist and other national reviews. Hinton’s films include It’s My Party (1996), which premiered at the Sundance Film Festival, and the edgy, acclaimed Circuit (2003), which received international theatrical distribution and is a DVD bestseller.





About the Autry National Center

The Autry National Center is an intercultural history center dedicated to exploring and sharing the stories, experiences, and perceptions of the diverse peoples of the American West. Located in Griffith Park , the Autry includes the collections of the Museum of the American West, the Southwest Museum of the American Indian, and the Autry Institute’s two research libraries: the Braun Research Library and the Autry Library. Exhibitions, public programs, K–12 educational services, and publications are designed to examine critical issues of society, offering insights into solutions and the contemporary human condition through the Western historical experience.

Weekday hours of operation for the Autry National Center ’s museum at its Griffith Park location are Tuesday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. The Autry Store’s weekday hours are Tuesday through Friday, 10:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., and the Golden Spur Cafe is open Tuesday through Sunday, 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday hours for the museum and the Autry Store are 11:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The museum, the Autry Store, and the cafe are closed on Mondays. The libraries are open to researchers by appointment.

Museum admission is $9 for adults, $5 for students and seniors 60+, $3 for children 3–12, and free for Autry members, active military personnel, veterans, and children 2 and under. Admission is free on the second Tuesday of every month.



###

For press inquiries only, contact:

Yadhira De Leon

Sr. Manager, Public Relations

Autry National Center

323.667.2000, ext. 327

ydeleon@theAutry.org

www.theAutry.org

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Brokeback Mountain - Fifth Anniversary Screening



Brokeback Mountain

Fifth Anniversary Screening

December 11, 2010




Followed by a staged reading of selections from our book
"Beyond Brokeback: The Impact of a Film"




The Autry

4700 Western Heritage Way , Los Angeles , CA 90027

323.667.2000, www.theAutry.org



THIS PROGRAM IS SPONSORED BY:

The Out West series at the Autry National Center is made possible through the generous support of Tom Gregory, HBO, the Gill Foundation, and The Small Change Foundation, in association with the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), and the Courage Campaign.

Focus Features is providing the film, and according to Gregory Hinton " they are very pleased about the Autry program. Brokeback Mountain remains their top grossing film and they are very proud of their relationship with Ang Lee."

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