Title:
West Coast premiere How Yukong moved the mountains
Creator/Contributor:
Artist unknown, creator
Date:
undated
Subject:
Asian Americans and mass media
Chinese Americans--California--San Francisco--Social life and customs
Comments/Descriptions
The poster features a photographic image eight people, four figures are rendered in gray and the other four are rendered in
red. The gray figures are shown filming the red figures who are harvesting crops. The text states, "West Coast Premiere: How
Yukong Moved the Mountains", a 17-hour film exploration of the lives of ordinary people in China since the cultural revolution,
film makers Joris Ivens & Marceline Loridan in person at each showing, all films will have Chinese subtitles, Friday, April
14th 7:30 P.M., 400 Million, Letter From China, Impression of a City (Shanghai), Saturday, April 15th, 2:00 P.M., Traditional
Handcraft, The Football Incident: The High School, In a Woman a Family, Saturday, April 15th 7:30 P.M., Drug Store, Army Camp,
Friday, April 21st 7:30 P.M., Professor Tschien, The Generator Factory, Saturday, April 22nd 2:00 P.M., Behind the Scenes
at the Peking Circus, In Rehearsal at the Peking Opera, The Fishing Village, Saturday, April 22nd 7:30 P.M., Drug Store, Oilfield,
tickets: general, student: $2.50, group (15 or more), senior citizen: $2.00, ticket: $10 for complete program, advanced tickets
available at the World Theatre, 644 Broadway, San Francisco Chinatown, Tel: 982-6085 (after 6 p.m.), Ming Wah Company 725
Grant Ave. San Francisco Chinatown, Tel: 421-4114, Location: The World Theatre, presented by National Association of Chinese
Americans in Association with University Art Museum's Pacific Film Archive with the Support of US-China Peoples Friendship
Association, C.C.P.V.A., Chinese Cultural Foundation and Chinatown Community Groups." There is English and Chinese text written
in black.
Type:
Film posters
Graphic arts
General Physical Description note:
16 x 22 in.
Copyright Note:
The artist of any work retains all rights to that work. Copyright has not been assigned to the Regents of the University of
California. The copyright law of the United States (Title 17, United States Code) governs the making of photocopies or other
reproductions of copyrighted material. No further reproduction is permitted without prior written permission by the artist
or copyright holder. Any requests for permission to reproduce this piece must be directed to: Kearny Street Workshop c/o California
Ethnic and Multicultural Archives Library – CEMA University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106 Phone: (805) 893-8563 E-mail:
cema@library.ucsb.edu