New Moon premieres, featuring
Native actors; a new fashion and arts organization, Unreserved, is
launched; and Notah Begay hosts a successful golf tournament. Plus,
important news in arts, education, environment, business, politics,
sports, health and other realms of life in Indian Country. By Daniel
Gibson.
Alex Meraz as Paul, Chaske Spencer as Sam Uley, Bronson
Pelletier as Jared and Kiowa Gordon as Embry Call are the Quileute Wolf Pack in
Summit Entertainment's The Twighlight Saga: New Moon.
The careers of a handful of Native actors are being
catapulted forward by the phenomenal success of the Twilight film series, based on the books
by Stephenie Meyer. The initial film, Twilight, did $191 million in box office sales worldwide. On
Nov. 20, the second film in the saga, New Moon, hits the silver screen.
Among the Indian actors in New Moon are several young men
representing members of the Quileute Pack, including Kiowa Gordon (Hualapai), Alex Meraz (Purepecha), Chaske Spencer (Lakota) and Bronson Pelletier (Cree/Métis), who secured their roles following
auditions with hundreds of other actors. The 19-year-old Gordon, of Arizona,
plays Embry Call, who leads a double life as a member of a werewolf pack that protects
his tribe from vampires that live in the area. The pack's alpha male is the
34-year-old Spencer, of New York City, who plays Sam. Pelletier, 23, of British
Columbia, plays Jared; while 24 year-old Meraz, of Mesa, Arizona, plays Paul.
Meraz is also an accomplished painter, martial artist and contemporary dancer
(he's a founding member of the troupe Dancing Earth, led by Rulan Tangen).
One of the series' most prominent stars, Taylor Lautner, who plays tribal member Jacob Black and female
lead Bella Swan's close friend, is of French, Dutch, German and
Ottawa/Potawatomi heritage. The veteran actor Graham Greene (Oneida) also has a prominent role in the series,
as Harry Clearwater, a tribal elder; while Tinsel Korey (Anishinaabe) plays Emily, Sam's fiancée and a
friend of Bella's. Gil Birmingham
(Comanche) does a fine job as Billy Black. The third film in the saga, Eclipse,
will be released on June 30, 2010. Details: www.twilightthemovie.com
Alex Meraz as Paul, Chaske Spencer as Sam Uley, Bronson Pelletier as Jared and Kiowa Gordon as Embry Call are the Quileute Wolf Pack in Summit Entertainment's The Twighlight Saga: New Moon.
Off the Rez and Into the Spotlight
LaDonna Harris, Founder of Americans for Indian Opportunity
and UNRESERVED Co-Founder Michael Chapman.
The fashion runway will never be the same following the
creation of an organization titled Unreserved: American Indian Art and
Fashion Alliance designed to elevate the
stature, prominence and opportunities for Native apparel designers and artists.
The nonprofit group, launched with a $400,000 grant from the W.K. Kellogg
Foundation, held its first public reception at the August 2009 Santa Fe Indian
Market.
Co-founders of the group are Michael Chapman (Menominee) and Gail Bruce. Chapman, former chairman of the Menominee Tribe of
Wisconsin, is an authority on corporate and nonprofit fundraising. He has
served on the President's Commission on National and Community Service and as
Special Assistant to the Assistant Secretary of Indian Affairs. Bruce, a
serigraph artist, worked as a model for Diana Vreeland, Coco Chanel and
photographer Irving Penn, and was a founding board member of the American
Indian College Fund. "This enables us to dream big and deeply explore
opportunities (for Natives) in art and fashion," notes Chapman. "The
grant will help bring Native visions and voices to the forefront of these two
arenas."
The group has already established a mentoring relationship
between the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York and a group of students from
the Institute of American Indian Arts in Santa Fe. It will also play a role in
bringing designers Virgil Ortiz
(Cochiti Pueblo), Patricia Michaels
(Taos Pueblo) and other Native fashionistas to New York Fashion Week in
January. Details: 212/206-6580 or www.unreservedalliance.org
Teeing Off for Native Youth

Tiger Woods holds up his trophy, a piece of Pueblo pottery, at the Notah Begay III Foundation Challenge; Begay is on the far right.
On Aug. 24, professional golfer Notah Begay (Navajo/San Felipe/Isleta) teamed up with his
former Stanford University roommate and teammate, Tiger Woods, in a fundraising golf tournament at the Oneida
Indian Nation's Turning Stone Resort in
New York (see July/Aug. 2006 issue). The $750,000 raised will be channeled
through the Notah Begay III Foundation to promote physical fitness, wellness
and leadership development programs by and for Native youth, with a special
emphasis on reducing the childhood obesity and diabetes epidemics plaguing
Native youth.
Joining Begay and Woods were PGA Tour pros Camilo
Villegas and Mike Weir. Woods won the 18-hole skins-format tournament
after a spirited battle with Begay, the only full-blooded Indian on the PGA
Tour. "The whole thing was about bringing awareness to what Notah is
trying to do," said Woods following his win. "It's great to see what
he's doing. He's put his heart, soul and passion into it."
It was the second annual tournament, with the San Manuel
Band of Serrano Mission Indians providing
financial support. Concluded Begay, "It's through strong partnerships such
as these that we can empower all Native American youth to sustain active,
productive and healthy lives." Details, including tournament videos:
www.notah.com
Shards
A television series based on a book by Paul LaRoche (a.k.a. musician Brulé), Hidden Heritage: The Story of Paul LaRoche,
has begun airing on the cable channel RFD-TV, which reaches 69 million
subscribers in the United States, Canada and United Kingdom. Hidden Heritage is the powerful true story of LaRoche's discovery of
his Lakota heritage at age 38. Details: www.brulerecords.com or www.rfdtv.com
Award-winning artist Randall Blaze (Oglala Lakota) is opening an arts education center
and demonstration gallery in Cuny Table, South Dakota, on the Pine River Reservation.
The Oglala Art Center will include a ceramics kiln and will offer courses in
ceramics, painting, drawing, sculpture (all of which Blaze excels in) and other
media. Courses will be taught by Blaze and visiting guest artists. Classes are
expected to begin in summer 2010. Details: 605/441-9790 or e-mail
blazecat49@yahoo.com
In June, federal agents arrested nearly a dozen men and
women in and around the town of Blanding, Utah for their illegal removal of
prehistoric Indian artifacts from public
lands. Two of the "pothunters" subsequently committed suicide,
bringing national attention the ongoing theft of the nation's archaeological
resources. Investigations are ongoing.
The National Congress of American Indians has purchased a building and opened an Embassy of
Tribal Nations in Washington, D.C. It won't offer Indians a free place to sleep
in the nation's capital, but will serve as a focal point for political
campaigns. "It sends the message that tribal nations are serious about
working closely with members of Congress and federal agencies on issues
important to Indian Country," notes NCAI President Joe Garcia (Ohkay Owingeh Pueblo). It's located at 1514 P St.
NW. Details: www.ncai.org
The Wilton Miwok Rancheria of California has been recognized as an Indian tribe by the federal
government. It was stripped of this status in 1970. There are some 600 tribal
members.
A new music awards entity has been launched, the National
Academy of Native American Arts Society,
led by Native musician Red Hawk.
The group plans to host it first awards event in late 2010, which will also
cover short films and music videos. The group, which is accepting new members,
joins a crowded field that includes the longstanding Native American Music
Awards, the Indian Summer Music Awards, the Indigenous Image Awards, the First
Americans in the Arts Awards and two events in Canada: the Aboriginal Peoples
Choice Music Awards and the Juno Awards. Details: www.nanaas.com
Honoring
From left: Jewelry by Leah Shenandoah. Macklin Becenti
(Navajo). National Indian Education Association 40th-anniversary commemorative
blaket designed by Steve Premo (Mille Lacs Ojibwe).
The Heard Museum in
Phoenix has selected Dr. Letitia Chambers to serve as its new director. She follows Frank Goodyear, who is
retiring after a long and notable career in museum administration, including 10
years at the Heard helm. Among other roles, Chambers found and ran a
Washington, D.C.-based policy consulting group for 20 years, worked in higher
education administration, was a U.S. representative to the United Nations, and
a board member at the Institute of American Indian Arts. She begins her duties
at the Heard in January.
A design by painter Steve Premo (Mille Lacs Ojibwe) was selected by the National
Indian Education Association to serve as
the motif for the organization's 40th-anniversary commemorative blanket. The
blanket, woven by Pendleton Mills, was unveiled at the group's recent
convention in Milwaukee.
Musician Joanne Shenandoah is not the only artistic talent
in her family. The Rochester Institute of Technology selected a purse and necklace with hood by her
daughter, Leah Shenandoah (who
is a graduate student at the rigorous school), for donation to the National
Museum of the American Indian. The work
was bequeathed in a ceremony on Sept. 26 during the school's annual alumni
weekend. Leah graduated cum laude from Syracuse University with a bachelor of
science degree in textile design.
Actor Adam Beach
(Salteaux) has nabbed a role on the Emmy-nominated HBO series Big
Love, which is
entering its fourth season. He will play Tommy Flute, the son of an Indian
casino manager (played by Robert Beltran).
Macklin Becenti
(Navajo) of Houck, Arizona was selected as the first-ever high school
participant in the National Museum of the American Indian's Emerging Artist
Program. More than 600 students from 30 states entered the competition. He was
awarded a free trip to visit NMAI facilities, as well as art training,
grant-application assistance and other benefits. Details:
www.americanindian.si.edu/icap/leadership.html
The important Native community development and
asset-building organization Oweesta of
Rapid City, South Dakota has selected Tracey Fischer (Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe) as its new chief
executive officer. Fischer obtained a law degree from Yale Law School in 1999.
Rebecca and Darryl
Begay took the Best of Show award at the
August 2009 Santa Fe Indian Market
for a charming tufa cast silver concho belt portraying important historical
moments of the Navajo people. Best of class winners were as follows: Dominique
Toya in pottery; Jason Garcia in paintings, drawings, graphics and photography; Vincent
Kaydahzinne in sculpture; Barbara
Ornelas in textiles and basketry; Therese
Tohtsoni in diverse forms; Jamie
Okuma in beadwork and quillwork; and Danielle
Weahkee in the youth category. Taking the
prestigious Artists' Choice Award was Jackie Bread, while Wallace Nez took the award for miniatures.
The Bush Foundation
in St. Paul, Minnesota has chosen dancer, storyteller, theatrical producer and
flute player Kevin Locke
(Lakota/Anishinaabe) and storyteller and language educator Mary Louis
Defender Wilson (Dakota/Hidatsa) as
recipients of its Enduring Vision Awards. The awards come with a grant of
$100,000 to encourage the recipients' continued artistic efforts.
The Museum of Contemporary Native Arts (formerly known as the IAIA Museum) in Santa Fe has
brought on Ryan Rice (Mohawk) as
curator of exhibitions and programs. A practicing artist and writer, Rice has
held a number of museum positions in the past, including roles at the Canadian
Museum of Civilization and the Iroquois Indian Museum.
The docudrama Trail of Tears Cherokee Legacy, produced by Rich-Heape
Films, was picked as best documentary at
the 2009 Indie Fest USA International Film Festival. It was narrated by James
Earl Jones and hosted by Wes Studi.