Summer in Mississippi
Summer in Mississippi is a 1965 Canadian documentary short from Beryl Fox, produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and first shown on This Hour Has Seven Days.
Summer in Mississippi | |
---|---|
Directed by | Beryl Fox |
Produced by | Beryl Fox |
Written by | Beryl Fox |
Cinematography | Richard Leiterman John Foster Grahame Woods |
Edited by | Don Haig |
Distributed by | Canadian Broadcasting Corporation |
Release date | 1965 (Canada) |
Running time | 27 minutes |
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Synopsis
Director/producer Beryl Fox traveled to Mississippi after the bodies of the three civil rights workers working for the Freedom Summer project were found in August 1964. This cinéma-vérité documentary was made for the popular television news magazine program This Hour Has Seven Days.[1]
Awards
Canadian Film Award – TV Information
gollark: I assume you could do something more evil in that jar.
gollark: No. I checked, and my not very good virus fits in 2KB unminified.
gollark: I am not running your random jarfiles.
gollark: Where it won't decompile properly?
gollark: This is some kind of trick, isn't it?
References
- Fox, Beryl (October 1964). "Summer in Mississippi". CBC Times (15): 17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.