Noted Native American Filmmaker Keynotes Symposium
Seattle-based Sandra Sunrising Osawa will speak at the fourth-annual Contemporary Native American Issues in Higher Education.
Sandra Sunrising Osawa's films and television productions tell the stories of contemporary Native Americans.
She will deliver the keynote speech at the Contemporary Native American Issues in Higher Education symposium.The symposium is slated for Oct. 14, 2017, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., in William W. Philip Hall on the University of Washington Tacoma campus.
The purpose of the annual symposium, now in its fourth year, is to encourage Native American youths to consider going to college. The event brings Native students, their teachers and families together for workshops on going to college, demonstrations of university classes, a campus tour and an inspirational speaker.
Osawa is known for producing and directing independent films, videos and television programs about modern Indian life. Her award-winning documentaries, broadcast on commercial and public television networks, and her many films show Native Americans in real life, not in the stereotypes prevalent in mainstream productions.
Maria Tallchief depicts the world-renowned American prima ballerina from an Osage Indian community. She was a member of the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo and the New York City Ballet, and later founded the Chicago City Ballet.
Among the many films Osawa has produced/directed, On and Off the Res' with Charlie Hill, about Oneida-Mohawk-Cree stand-up comic Charlie Hill, and Pepper's Pow Wow, about Creek/Kaw jazz saxophonist Jim Pepper, tell the stories of Native American artists.
Osawa produced the award-winning Native American, a 10-part television series for NBC, as well as the first Native American programs on P.O.V. (Point of View), for national public television.
Osawa earned a bachelor's degree at Lewis and Clark College in Portland. She and her husband, Yasu Osawa, met at a UCLA graduate film program. They founded a production company in Seattle called Upstream Productions in 1980. Yasu does the camera work and editing on their productions; Sandra does all the writing and directing. She has taught script writing and video production at The Evergreen State College and Seattle Community College and actively works for Native American rights.