Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film and Media
Arts
ANNOUNCES
NEW OVERSEAS DOCUMENTARY PROGRAM FOCUSING ON
HUMAN RIGHTS
Renowned Documentary Filmmaker Professor Jeff Swimmer and
Chapman Law School Professor Dr. John Hall Lead Students to Cambodia to Work with Local Organizations
ORANGE, Calif. (May 12, 2008) — Chapman
University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts announces an extraordinary new scholarship program for Dodge students and faculty to develop
documentaries overseas and build awareness and visibility for worthwhile Non-Governmental Organizations (NGOs) in different
countries. Focusing on the issue of human rights, the first year’s team will travel to Cambodia.
This unique initiative, funded by a $1 million private grant, is presented in conjunction with Chapman Law School and Chapman’s
Wilkinson College of Letters & Sciences.
For this inaugural endeavor, veteran documentary filmmaker
Professor Jeff Swimmer and Chapman Law School Professor Dr. John Hall lead five students – three Dodge students, one law school student and one
student from Wilkinson College – to Southeast Asia to develop documentaries for Khmer Arts Academy and Tiny Toones, two arts focused
NGO’s in need of assistance to create more public awareness for their work. The two week trip commences on May 28,
2008. Prior to the trip, the selected students spend spring semester researching the area and organizations from not only a film
perspective, but also explore legal and cultural implications of the human rights issues as well. Students complete the project
with a course in Fall 2008, where they edit, complete post-production and also discuss marketing and distribution of their final work.
“This unique program reinforces Dodge’s commitment to
provide our students with unparalleled opportunities in the field of filmmaking. This project illustrates the power of the
documentarian’s craft to help bring awareness and attention to important issues shaping our global culture. We are excited
about this project and we look forward to working with the different schools on campus in this unusual collaboration,” says Dean Bob
Bassett.
Having traveled and conducted extensive research in Southeast Asia
for more than a decade, Professor Dr. John Hall immediately identified Cambodia as the appropriate destination for this program, “Our main goal
is to help draw attention to important human rights issues taking place throughout the world. Since my initial trip to Cambodia in
1993, I have learned a great deal about the human rights situation in that country. I realize that Cambodia offers enormous
potential as the initial focus of this exciting new interdisciplinary project.”
Professor Jeff Swimmer, producer and director of numerous
documentaries which have aired on PBS, BBC, National Geographic, CNN and the Discovery Channel, believes this course is crucial to a young
filmmaker’s education. “What is truly different about this program is the multidisciplinary approach.
This is not just about film students traveling to an exotic place and making a documentary. This is an opportunity for
students from different areas of studies to learn from each other and work together to produce a work that will help two very deserving
organizations.”
The two NGO’s central to this project have Southern
California ties and focus on dance as a medium for change and a source of hope. The first, Khmer Arts Academy, is led by Sophiline
Cheam Shapiro, who founded the dance troupe when she immigrated to the United States from Cambodia in 1991. Growing up in the
mid-1970’s, Shapiro witnessed firsthand the tragic consequences of her country’s civil war, as many of her family and friends were
killed by the Khmer Rouge. At the conclusion of the war, Shapiro enrolled herself in the School of Fine Arts and rigorously trained
in traditional Khmer dancing. Internationally recognized for her incredible talent, Shapiro and her husband, John, work tirelessly
to preserve and continue this fascinating art form and have established locations of their academies throughout Cambodia and in Long
Beach.
The second organization participating also utilizes dance as a way
to initiate change. Tiny Toones is the passion project of Sobil (KK) Tuy. KK immigrated to Long Beach from
Cambodia with his family when he was very young and as a teenager, became a member of the infamous Crips street gang and also struggled with
drugs. His illegal activity led to his deportation back to Cambodia, where he witnessed other young kids also facing the perils of
drugs, crime and gang life. Determined to help others avoid his troubled path, Tuy reached out to these youth through breakdancing,
an art form he had excelled at in the United States. Tiny Toones currently serves hundreds of street kids in Cambodia and has
received international recognition from UNICEF and other relief organizations.
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ABOUT DODGE COLLEGE OF FILM
Chapman University’s Dodge College of Film and Media Arts, home to 1,100
students, is comprised of the Sodaro-Pankey Undergraduate School of Media, offering undergraduate degrees in film production, screenwriting, public
relations and advertising, film studies, digital arts, and television and broadcast journalism; the Conservatory of Motion Pictures, offering graduate
degrees in film production, film and television producing, screenwriting, production design and film studies. Marion Knott Studios, the new
$42-million, 76,000-square-foot home of the Dodge College, opened in fall 2006.