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ALL ON A
MARDI GRAS DAY
Premiered on WYES-TV Wednesday,
February 26, 2003
Congratulations!
ALL ON A MARDI GRAS
DAY is being honored with the Louisiana Filmmaker Award
by the 2003 New
Orleans Film and Video Festival.
The one hour program, which aired nationally on PBS stations, will be screened
at the Prytania Theatre on October 12 at 5 p.m. Producer Royce Osborn
and consultants Charles Siler and Mardi Gras Indian Chief Tootie Montana will
take part in a discussion following the screening.

Indian Tribe
Photo: John Ferrara
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6th Ward Kazoo
Photo: Jerry Brock |

Louis
Armstrong (left) as King Zulu 1949 |
Mardi Gras
-- “the greatest free show on earth” -- has been part of New
Orleans culture for more than 200 years, and has attracted
millions of visitors from around the world. But few tourists
– and even natives have witnessed the culmination of the Carnival
celebration that is part of the city’s black culture.
ALL
ON A MARDI GRAS DAY , a one-hour documentary, celebrates
black Carnival in New Orleans in all its riotous, colorful
and spiritual glory. Incorporating classic New Orleans music,
previously-unseen photographs and film footage, and interviews
with major Carnival players, the program will explore African-Creole
Carnival traditions. These celebrations date from colonial
times, through Reconstruction and Jim Crow – and into the
21st century.
The
men and women who make Mardi Gras happen in the black community
include: the Indians and the Skeletons, the Baby Dolls and
the Second Liners, the marching bands and flambeaux carriers,
and the Kings and Queens of Zulu. Songs, stories, costumes
and dance reveal a living, unique folk art culture.
Historian
Gwendolyn Midlo Hall refers to New Orleans as the “most African
of cities in the United States.” These Carnival traditions
clearly are rooted in an African-Caribbean-Creole culture that
is unique to the Crescent City, and have had an enormous impact
on the music and culture of New Orleans – and beyond.
ALL
ON A MARDI GRAS DAY is produced by Royce Osborn and
Jerry Brock. The program is made possible by grants from
the Louisiana Endowment for the Humanities and the Arts
Council of New Orleans.
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