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Events @ ARRAY | Free Film Screening
Liberated Lit: Film Adaptations for Banned Books Week | BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN (2005)
DOORS OPEN: 1:30 PM
SHOWTIME: 2:30 PM
Events @ ARRAY | Free Film Screening
Liberated Lit: Film Adaptations for Banned Books Week | BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN (2005)
September 28, 2024
DOORS OPEN: 1:30 PM
SHOWTIME: 2:30 PM
ARRAY Creative Campus
2005
Drama
134
R

Do something for Banned Books Week and join ARRAY at our Liberated Lit screening series. This day-long screening series celebrates the work of authors whose banned or contested literature has been adapted for the screen. Originally published in The New Yorker as a short story written by Annie Proulx, BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN, chronicles the romance of two cowboys who fall in love against the backdrop of the American West and stars Heath Ledger and Jake Gyllenhaal.

Learn more about the American Library Association’s Banned Books Week initiative at www.ala.org/bbooks.

EVENT SCHEDULE

1:30 PM| Guest Check-in Begins for BROKEBACK MOUNTAIN
2:30 PM | Feature film presentation begins (Run Time: 2h, 14m)
4:45 PM | Screening Ends

Screenings of THE OUTSIDERS and MALCOLM X are also included in the day’s program. Please note: Each film screening will have a separate ticketed entry. Guests must RSVP and possess a ticket for each film in order to attend any of the three film screenings.

MPAA Rating:
R | For language, violence, sex & nudity, drugs, alcohol, smoking

About the Author

Words from Annie Proulx: “It is my feeling that a story is not finished until it is read, and that the reader finishes it through his or her life experience, prejudices, worldview and thoughts.”

Annie Proulx was born in Connecticut in 1935 and attended Colby College and the University of Vermont. She graduated cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa from the University of Vermont in 1969, earning a bachelor’s degree in History. After graduation, Proulx continued her studies, completing a master’s degree and beginning a doctorate at Concordia University. As a graduate student, she published a number of fiction stories in Seventeen. Proulx left academia before completing her doctorate, turning instead to nonfiction writing. Proulx’s first published books were practical manuals on how to grow fruits and vegetables, make cider, and build fences. During this time, Proulx also founded, wrote, and edited The Vershire Behind The Times, a local newspaper for her small town in Vermont.

In 1988, Proulx made her literary debut with her first short story collection, Heart Songs and Other Stories, which explores the lives of rural, small town America, a topic she frequently returns to. Proulx quickly followed up her short story collection with her debut novel, Postcards. In 1992, Postcards won the 13th Annual PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, making Proulx the first woman to receive the prestigious award. One year later, Proulx’s second novel, The Shipping News, earned the Pulitzer Prize, the National Book Award, and The Irish Times International Fiction Prize. With her short story collections, Close Range: Wyoming Stories; Bad Dirt:Wyoming Stories 2; and Fine Just the Way It Is: Wyoming Stories 3, Proulx has dedicated herself to presenting readers with a powerful, introspective glimpse at life in the rural west. In 1997, Proulx’s short story, “Brokeback Mountain,” centered around two cowboys who develop a secret, powerful, life-long bond, was published in The New Yorker, earning her a National Magazine Award and the first of two O. Henry Awards. In 2005, “Brokeback Mountain” was adapted into an Academy Award winning film that Rolling Stone named one of the top 10 films of the decade.

In 2011, Proulx published her memoir, Birdcloud: A Memoir of Place, which provided readers with an astonishing window to Proulx’s remarkable connection with the American west. Best known for her evocative fiction about rural America, Proulx’s writing has an impressive lyricism and wit that captivates readers of all ages. Proulx has received honorary doctorate degrees from Concordia University and the Universities of Maine, Toronto, Vermont, and Montreal. (Source: National Book Foundation)

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