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RIGGS, MARLON
 Marlon Riggs Photo courtesy of Signifyin' Works/ Andy Stern MARLON
RIGGS. Born in Ft. Worth, Texas, U.S.A., 3 February 1957. Graduated
from Harvard University, magna cum laude, B.A. in history 1978;
University of California at Berkeley, M.A. in journalism 1981. Taught
documentary film, Graduate School of Journalism at the University
of California, Berkeley from 1987; produced numerous video documentaries,
from 1987. Honorary doctorate, California College of Arts and Crafts,
1993. Recipient: Emmy Awards, 1987 and 1991; George Foster Peabody
Award, 1989; Blue Ribbon, American Film and Video Festival, 1990;
Best Video, New York Documentary Film Festival, 1990; Erik Barnouw
Award, 1992. Died in Oakland, California, 5 April 1994.
TELEVISION
DOCUMENTARIES
1987 Ethnic Notions
1988 Tongues Untied
1989 Color Adjustment
1992 Non, Je Ne Regrette Rein (No Regret)
1994 Black Is...Black Ain't
PUBLICATIONS
(selection)
"Black
Macho Revisited: Reflections of a Snap! Queen." Black American
Literature Forum (Terre Haute, Indiana), Summer 1991.
"Notes
of a Signifying Snap! Queen." Art Journal (New York), Fall,
1991.
Grundmann,
R. "New Agendas in Black Filmmaking: An Interview with Marlon Riggs."
Cineaste (New York), 1992.
U.S. Filmmaker
Before his death
in 1994, African-American filmmaker, educator and poet Marlon Riggs
forged a position as one of the more controversial figures in the
recent history of public television. He won a number of awards for
his creative efforts as a writer and video producer. His theoretical-critical
writings appeared in numerous scholarly and literary journals and
professional and artistic periodicals. His video productions, which
explored various aspects of African-American life and culture, earned
him considerable recognition, including Emmy and Peabody awards.
Riggs will nonetheless, be remembered mostly for the debate and
contention that surrounded the airing of his highly charged video
productions on public television stations during the late 1980s
and early 1990s. Just as art-photographer Robert Mapplethorpe's
provocative homoerotic photographs of male nudes caused scrutiny
of government agencies and their funding of art, Marlon Riggs' video
productions similarly plunged public television into an acrimonious
debate, not only about funding, but censorship as well.
Riggs' early
works received little negative press. His production, Ethnic
Notions aired on public television stations throughout the United
States. This program sought to explore the various shades of mythology
surrounding the ethnic stereotyping of African Americans in various
forms of popular culture. The program was well-received and revolutionary
in its fresh assessment of such phenomenon as the mythology of the
Old South and its corresponding caricatures of Black life and culture.
The video Color
Adjustment, which aired on public television stations in the
early 1990s, was an interpretive look at the images of African-Americans
in fifty years of American television history. Using footage from
shows like Amos 'n' Andy, Julia, and Good Times, Riggs
compared the grossly stereotyped caricatures of Blacks contained
in early television programming to those of recent, and presumably
more enlightened, decades.
By far the most
polemical of Riggs' work was his production, Tongues Untied.
This fifty-five minute video, which "became the center of a controversy
over censorship" as reported The Independent in 1991, was
aired as part of a series entitled, P.O.V. (Point of View), which
aired on public television stations and featured independently produced
film and video documentaries on various subjects ranging from personal
reflections on the Nazi holocaust to urban street life in contemporary
America.
Tongues Untied,
is noteworthy on at least three accounts. First, Riggs chose as
his subject urban, African-American gay men. Moving beyond the stereotypes
of drag queens and comic-tragic stock caricatures, Riggs offered
to mainstream America an insightful and provocative portrait of
a distinct gay sub-culture--complete with sometimes explicit language
and evocative imagery. Along with private donations, Riggs' had
financed the production with a $5,000 grant from the National Endowment
for the Arts (NEA), a federal agency supporting visual, literary
and performing artists. News of the video's airing touched off a
tumult of debate about the government funding of artistic creations
that to some were considered obscene. While artists argued the basic
right of free speech, U.S. government policy makers, especially
those of conservative bent, engaged in hotly contentious debate
regarding the use of taxpayer money for the funding of such endeavors.
The second area
of consternation brought on by the Tongues Untied video concerned
the area of funding for public broadcasting. The P.O.V. series
also received funding from the Endowment, in the amount of $250,000,
for its production costs. Many leaders of conservative television
watch-dog organizations labeled the program as obscene (though many
had not seen it). Others ironically heralded the program's airing,
in the hope that American taxpayers would be able to watch in dismay
how their tax dollars were being spent.
Lastly, the
question of censorship loomed large throughout the debate over the
airing Tongues Untied. When a few frightened station executives
decided not to air the program, the fact of their self-censorship
was widely reported in the press. As mentioned, Tongues Untied
was not the first P.O.V. production to be pulled. Arthur
Kopp of People for the American Way noted in The Independent
"...the most insidious censorship is self-censorship...It's
a frightening sign when television executives begin to second guess
the far right and pull a long-planned program before it's even been
attacked."
Riggs defended
Tongues Untied by lambasting those who objected to the program's
language and imagery by stating in a 1992 Washington Post interview,
"People are far more sophisticated in their homophobia and racism
now...they say 'We object to the language, we have to protect the
community'...those statements are a ruse."
Tongues Untied
was awarded Best Documentary of the Berlin International Film Festival,
Best Independent Experimental Work by the Los Angeles Film Critics
and Best Video by the New York Documentary Film Festival. Marlon
Riggs succumbed to AIDS in April 1994.
Before his
death he began work on a production entitled Black Is, Black
Ain't. In this video presentation Riggs sought to explore what
it meant to be black in America, from the period when "being Black
wasn't always so beautiful" to the 1992 Los Angeles riots. This
visual reflection on gumbo, straightening combs, and Creole life
in New Orleans, was Riggs' own personal journey. It also unfortunately
served as a memorial to Riggs. Much of the footage was shot from
his hospital bed as he fought to survive the ravaging effects of
AIDS. The video was finished posthumously and was aired on public
televisions during the late 1990s.
-Pamela
S. Deane
FURTHER READING
Becquer, M. "Snap-Thology and other Discursive Practices in Tongues
Untied." Wide Angle--A Quarterly Journal of Film History, Theory
and Criticism (Athens, Ohio), 1991.
Berger,
M. "Too Shocking to Show." Art in America (New York), July
1992.
Creekmur,
Corey K., and Alexander Doty. Out in Culture: Gay, Lesbian, and
Queer Essays on Popular Culture. Durham, North Carolina: Duke
University Press, 1995.
Harper,
Phillip Brian. "Marlon Riggs: The Subjective Position of Documentary
Video." Art Journal (New York), Winter 1995.
Maslin,
Janet. "Under Scrutiny: TV Images of Blacks." The New York Times,
29 January 1992.
Mercer,
Kobina. "Dark and Lovely Too: Black Gay Men in Independent Film."
In, Gerver, Martha, with others, editors. Queer Looks: Perspectives
on Lesbian and Gay Film and Video. New York: Routledge, 1993.
Mills,
David. "The Director with Tongue Untied; Marlon Riggs, A Filmmaker
Who Lives Controversy." Washington (D.C.) Post, 15 June 1992.
Prial,
Frank J. "TV Film About Gay Blacks is Under Attack." The New
York Times, 25 June 1991.
Scott,
Darieck. "Jungle Fever? Black Gay Identity Politics, White Dick,
and the Utopian Bedroom." GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies
(Yverdon, Switzerland), 1994.
See also Public
Service Broadcasting; Racism,
Ethnicity, and Television
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