
Lamont Pearley
Bronx, New York
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About Me
Member Since 2011 | Views: 175
Entrepreneurial podcaster, journalist, and filmmaker. Screened work at Cannes and Sundance. Directed ASBPE award-winning podcast The Business Week. Over a decade of experience recording, editing, directing, broadcasting, and mentoring. Ask me about the blues!
OBJECTIVE:
I utilize my broadcast journalism, and radio/podcasting production experience to present engaging newsworthy & exploratory narratives that highlight subject-specific features.
I have been in the industry since 2006.
Zora Neale Hurston - Episode 3 African American Folklorists, Writers and the Blues
Added on 11/28/2016
Talking Bout The Blues Video series African American Folklorist, Writers and the Blues. This series highlights African American writers, folklorists, ethnologist, composers and playwriters, that documented, described and flat out canvased the Black experience through their works, connecting the dots between the Blues, Spirituals, Work songs, Prison songs and the social and economic climate of Blacks in America.
This Episode Highlights the life and works of Writer, Ethnologist and Folklorist Zora Neale Hurston. A stable of the South, a friend and colleague of Langston Hughes, Ethel Waters, Sterling Brown and many more. She was a dominant voice of the Harlem Renaissance , and the African American Legacy as a whole.
Zora Neale Hurston is considered one of the pre-eminent writers of twentieth-century African-American literature. Hurston was closely associated with the Harlem Renaissance and has influenced such writers as Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, Gayle Jones, Alice Walker, and Toni Cade Bambara.
In 1975, Ms. Magazine published Alice Walker's essay, "In Search of Zora Neale Hurston" reviving interest in the author. Hurston's four novels and two books of folklore resulted from extensive anthropological research and have proven invaluable sources on the oral cultures of African America.
Through her writings, Robert Hemenway wrote in The Harlem Renaissance Remembered, Hurston "helped to remind the Renaissance--especially its more bourgeois members--of the richness in the racial heritage."
http://zoranealehurston.com/index.html
RACE + FILM + MUSIC PRODUCTIONS
All rights Reserved to Talking Bout The Blues 2016 (c)
Producer/Creator Lamont Jack Pearley
Race+Film+Music Production
All Rights Reserved Talking Bout The Blues 2015 (c)
Photo Gallery
Credits
Video Editor – Roxë15
Short Film – Celia C. Peters
Writer/Producer/Editor – Talking Bout The Blues With
Online – Jack Dappa Blues
Talent(Actor) – Crash 2: Still Crashing
Feature – Brandon Bassham
Writer/Actor – The Damned Truth
Television – L.A. Abbott
Writer/Director/Singer, Songwroter – Native New Yorker
Short Film – Pearley Conglomerate
Featured Talent – Mr. Handy's Blues
Feature – Labor of love Productions