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Clarewood Documentary Viewing: “The Homeless Chorus Speaks”

When:
Sunday, January 19, 2020, 2:00 PM until 4:00 PM
Where:
Home of Mary Goldstein
Berkeley, CA  
Additional Info:
Event Contact(s):
Mary Goldstein
Category:
Neighborhood Group
Registration is not available online - contact the event coordinator
Payment In Full In Advance Only
Please refrain from using perfumed personal or laundry scents for this event.
We welcome snack contributions but please no popcorn (because of allergies).
Capacity:
18
No Fee

 

RSVP: Mary Goldstein (mmarigold100@aol.com)

When: Sunday, January 19, 2-4 PM

Where: Home of Mary Goldstein (RSVP for address) 

Open to:
 Members & volunteers

Accessibility: Not wheelchair accessible*


The Homeless Chorus Speaks (in English, no subtitles) (57 minutes long)


Film Description: (from the L. A. Times, March 8, 2018)

 

The Homeless Chorus Speaks.

By Sheri Linden 

 

As its title suggests, “The Homeless Chorus Speaks” gives voice to a group of people who sing together. Their repertoire includes “Amazing Grace,” James Taylor and Sister Sledge, and they’re members of the Voices of Our City Choir, an outreach project begun in 2016 by San Diego musicians Steph Johnson and Nina Leilani, turning their compassion into heroic action.

 

For her brief but potent documentary (airing on PBS this spring), director Susan Polis Schutz spent time with 14 choir regulars. They’re poets, veterans, former businesspeople, survivors of hate crimes and sexual assault. For a range of reasons as varied as any random sampling of life stories, they’re struggling to survive on the streets.

 

One man is working on a graduate degree while sleeping on a bench. One woman lost her vision to glaucoma and can’t afford an apartment on her monthly disability pay of $900. Some struggle with addiction or other mental health issues, but what the film makes affectingly clear is that there’s no one-size-fits-all narrative to explain a crisis that’s worsening, according to government figures, with more than half a million Americans shelterless.

 

How do you reverse the downward spiral when you’re vulnerable and frequently subject to arrest? Together, the choir members find a new sense of family. Schutz’s no-frills chronicle captures the joyful embrace of their voices intertwining. Her film is a lesson in empathy, demonstrating how ground-shifting the simple act of listening can be.


 

Please do not try to register on this website. Instead, please RSVP to mmarigold100@aol.com for location and to reserve or cancel a comfortable seat.
(Seating limited to 18). Since there is limited seating, people MUST email Mary Goldstein to reserve a space and also to cancel if they find they can’t attend.

*Please email Mary for address information and any questions about access.

 

When you come please avoid fragrances in personal care products as well as in laundry products.

 

Feel free to bring snacks to share (except popcorn - some folks are allergic).

 





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