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- Tells the story of four unassuming heroes who ensure no student is deprived of the joy of music. It is also a reminder of how music can be the best medicine, stress reliever and even an escape from poverty.
- A theatre director's latest project takes on a life of its own when her young star takes her performance too seriously.
- The story of songwriter Howard Ashman who penned the lyrics for Little Shop of Horrors, The Little Mermaid, Aladdin, and Beauty and the Beast before he died of AIDS at the height of the AIDS crisis in 1991.
- A story of survival about a woman's first night in a Soviet prison camp.
- A director's dream job quickly descends into a nightmare when he is forced to film a real-life murder.
- Fred Beckey is the legendary American "Dirtbag" mountaineer whose name is spoken in hushed tones around campfires. This rebel climber's pioneering ascents and lifestyle form an iconic legacy that continues to inspire generations.
- Queen of Basketball is an electrifying portrait of Lucy Harris, who scored the first basket in women's Olympic history and was the first and only woman officially drafted into the N.B.A. Harris has remained largely unknown - until now.
- This web series explores the origins of the troubles that took place before the events in the series "Haven".
- A virtuoso jazz pianist and film composer tracks his family's lineage through his 91-year-old grandfather from Jim Crow Florida to the Walt Disney Concert Hall.
- The French Laundry, run by legendary chef Thomas Keller, has often been recognized as the best restaurant in the world, but few know the story of its original founder, Sally Schmitt. In an emotional final interview before her passing in March 2022, Sally tells her own story as a pioneering chef of California cuisine and sets the table for another way to look at life: where balance, rather than recognition, is the ultimate prize.
- South of Beirut, Lebanon is a 68 year old refugee camp housing refugees from Palestine, Syria and Iraq. Many have lived in this camp their entire lives-- Mariam AlShaar is one of them. Now, Mariam has pulled the women of this camp together to do what has never been done before. They started with a small kitchen from a micro-loan. With nearly insurmountable political odds against them-- they look to start the first refugee food truck. Their journey is one of many ups and downs but it is the community that is built, their sense of hope and how they see themselves that makes this a moving, touching film about their journey. Mariam has been known as 'the crazy lady' and now she will show just how crazy she is.
- Told by her daughter Wendy, MINK. chronicles the remarkable Patsy Takemoto Mink, a Japanese American from Hawaii who became the first woman of color elected to the U.S. Congress, on her harrowing mission to co-author and defend Title IX, the law that transformed athletics for generations in America for girls and women.
- Behind-the-scenes documentary of The Green Mile (1999).
- "Did you ever hear the story of how the chickens saved my life?" Inspired by the extraordinary true story of a brilliant young poultry scientist in WWII Canada, Dinner with Fred stars Adam John Harrington in the title role in this visually lush, ambitious and sweepingly hopeful short film. At the cusp of the Invasion of Normandy, devoted artillery lieutenant Fred Conrad's train comes to a screeching halt when he is ripped from the sides of his brothers and sent home to lead the Canadian push to cope with a massive wartime food shortage. Though devastated at first, Fred, with the help of his loving but no-nonsense wife Hilda (Austin Highsmith), turns a misfortunate change-of-plans into a career in humane poultry science that proves to hold meaning and purpose beyond his wildest dreams. With sparkling supporting performances by Scott Lowell, Ron Orbach and Scott Laufer, Dinner with Fred is a captivating tale of what it means to serve one's country, even in unexpected ways.
- An Albanian boy accidentally releases a turkey and must get it back in time for New Year's Eve dinner.
- RWANDA & JULIET is a feature-length documentary that follows ivy league professor emeritus Andrew Garrod to Kigali, Rwanda, where he mounts Shakespeares Romeo and Juliet with Rwandan college students from both Hutu and Tutsi backgrounds. Twenty years have passed since the 1994 Genocide that left 1,000,000 Tutsis dead. Predominantly orphans, the cast of young Rwandans, led by a stunning, strong headed Juliet, tackle their country's past and their own future as hopes, expectations, pasts, personalities and cultures collide as opening night approaches.
- Memories of the first World War told by an elderly man who remembers moments from the past while he wanders around his Nova Scotia farm.
- An honest and moving look at one family's journey with mental illness as a father and son walk across Missouri in an attempt to shatter mental health stigmas.
- Six legendary film composers each write an original piece for a classic pianist to perform.
- A portrait of master woodworker and Vietnam veteran Eric Hollenbeck.
- A cynical, washed-out police Sergeant leaving the force is faced with a dilemma when his rookie partner is killed and he has to tell the rookie's abusive father about his son's demise.
- In 1992, at the height of the AIDS pandemic, activist Terence Alan Smith made a historic bid for president of the United States as his drag queen persona Joan Jett Blakk. Today, Smith reflects back on his seminal civil rights campaign and its place in American history.
- STONE is a portrait of master stone carver Heather Lawson.
- We've lost a million people with two things in common: They were Americans, and the Coronavirus ended their lives. For these short documentaries, the filmmaker Ben Proudfoot asked five people to tell the story of individuals they lost to the pandemic - not to dwell on their deaths but to celebrate how they lived. Together they form a portrait of America. A dance-crazy nurse who returned from retirement to fight the virus is remembered by her twin sister. The story of a postmaster who laid the bricks of the building he managed is told by his daughter. A grandfather is eulogized by the Olympian granddaughter he helped raise after a tragic loss. Here are their lives: complicated, imperfect, extraordinary.
- Documentary following the strange tale of Haddon Salt -- forgotten legend, the British Colonel Sanders -- who founded a fish and chips empire that once dotted America from coast to coast.
- A love letter to Lisbon, Portugal.
- Boxing gym owner Joe Buckner recalls his troubling history and how that's shaped him into the man he is today.
- Side-by-side letterpress and paper shops in Los Angeles struggle to survive in the modern world.
- A world-renowned pastry chef, reflects on his relationship with his deceased father Milton Abel Sr., famed Kansas City jazz musician.
- TURNS is a portrait of master woodturner Steven Kennard.
- A Black security guard is still troubled by his role in the police killings of three Black men during the 1967 race riots in Detroit, in which he was falsely accused in the killings though acquitted.
- Kim Hill was a rising singer. She met a young rapper named will.i.am. The rest is history - or is it?
- In the mid-1960s, four teenagers from Liverpool were changing the face of pop music. Their names were Mary, Sylvia, Pam and Val.
- In 1963, Ed Dwight Jr. was poised to be NASA's first African-American astronaut. Until suddenly he wasn't.
- 2011– 17m8.4 (14)TV EpisodeIn a galaxy far, far away, he was almost Anakin Skywalker. Devon Michael was a rising child actor in the 1990s. Until he auditioned for Star Wars.