Welcome NEA Panelists

It is our pleasure to submit a grant application to the NEA Grants for Arts Projects: Media Arts track in support of the 34th annual Virginia Film Festival to be held in October 2021. As described in our project narrative, the NEA’s funding would specifically support visiting guest artists’ stipends, travel, and accommodations as well as screening venue rental and associated costs. We describe the impact this funding will have on visiting guest artists’ involvement in the Festival and engagement with community members in our grant application. And below you will find a visual compilation of highlights and feedback that we hope will illuminate what makes our Festival and our guests’ experience so unique.

Thank you for your consideration,
Jody Kielbasa
Festival Director and Vice Provost for the Arts at UVA

Man in blazer smiles confidently. Brick building in background. NEA 2021.

Recent Educational and Public Programming

Man in blazer speaking to a group in brick-walled room. NEA 2021 event.

Ethan Hawke meets with Festival Scholars, VAFF 2019


UVA Student Engagement

Each year, the VAFF offers all full-time UVA students free access to our screenings and events through the University of Virginia’s Arts$ Program.  In 2020, over 470 UVA undergraduate and graduate students received a free Student Passes, giving them unlimited access to the films and discussions included in our 2020 Virtual Program.

The VAFF hosts an annual Festival Scholars Program, giving 12 UVA undergraduate students the opportunity to participate in a six-day immersive, educational, and networking experience thematically centered on filmmaking, the film industry, and film criticism led by NYU professor of film Harry Chotiner. While our 2020 Festival Scholars program was put on hold due to the COVID-19 pandemic, in 2019, the Festival Scholars cohort attended nine films and met with Festival Programmers Iana DontchevaChandler Ferrebee, and Jody Kielbasa; guest artists Shelly Chopra DharWanuri KahiuThom Zimny, and Ethan Hawke; and VAFF Advisory Board members Scot Safon and Ron Hohauser during the program.


Teen boy at Texas Boys State event looking thoughtful

Still from Boys State, School Screening Film, VAFF 2020


School Screening

The Festival shares the power of film annually through school screenings and discussions for local K-12 students and educators. In 2020, five area middle and high schools signed up to participate in a virtual presentation and screening of the film Boys State. The presentation included an introduction by U.S. Senator Tim Scott, a discussion with former VA Governor Terry McAuliffe, and a discussion with filmmakers Jesse Moss and Amanda McBaine, and subject Steven Garza, moderated by Sabato. UVA Center for Politics Youth Leadership Initiative Director of Instruction Meg Heubeck introduced the film. The program also included a discussion guide covering themes in the film like democracy; civil engagement; civil discourse; race & politics; and gender, masculinity, and identity.

In 2019, 400 middle and high school students from throughout the region attended a special opening day School Screening of True Justice: Bryan Stevenson’s Fight for Equality at The Paramount Theater. The screening was followed by a panel discussion moderated by UVA Vice Provost for Academic Outreach Louis Nelson, and featuring the film’s editor, Maya Mumma; social activist and organizer and UVA student Zyahna Bryant; and Legal Aid Justice Center Community Organizer Harold Folley. And in 2018, approximately 300 students attended VAFF’s School Screening of Science Fair, a documentary that follows the journey of nine high school students as they compete in the International Science and Engineering Fair. The screening was followed by a discussion moderated by Charlottesville High School teacher Matt Shields, founder of the internationally renowned science club Best All-Around Club of Nerds (BACON).


Woman speaking, gesturing with hands, man in background. NEA 2022.

Director Wanuri Kahiu, featured speaker at the UVA Carter G. Woodson Institute’s African Colloquium Series, VAFF 2019


Classroom Visits & Student Engagement

We regularly and thoughtfully connected our visiting guest artists directly with UVA and local students to share their expertise in intimate discussion and master class settings.

A few recent examples of our classroom engagement efforts include:

  • Actor Michael Shenefelt discussing his craft with Drama students
  • Two-time Tony Award winner Kelli O’Hara teaching a master class with undergraduate and graduate acting students
  • Cinematography students meeting with filmmakers Jacqueline Olive, Allen Hughes, and Marion Mauran
  • Media studies students meeting with filmmaker Michelle Jackson

Examples of our longer and more in-depth guest artist residencies include:

  • Kenyan filmmaker Wanuri Kahiu‘s participation in a 5-day guest artist residency during the Festival that included a public screening and discussion of her 2018 film Rafiki as well as classroom conversations with cinematography and french students and a featured speaker role at The Carter G. Woodson Institute’s African Colloquium Series
  • Filmmaker and artist Werner Herzog‘s cross-disciplinary residency which included two public film screenings, an on-stage conversation about his career, and classroom discussions with studio art and film faculty and students.

Man in mustard sweater leans against wall. NEA 2022 blog image.

Actor Leslie Odom, Jr., Featured Guest, VAFF 2020


Free Public Programming

In 2020, the Virginia Film Festival presented three virtual Special Presentation Events as part of its 2020 program. Access to each event was offered for free and open to the public during the 5-day Festival and posted on the VAFF’s YouTube channel after the Festival. The free virtual events included:

  • A Conversation with Leslie Odom, Jr. – The multi-talented actor Leslie Odom, Jr. joined the VAFF for a wide ranging conversation about his role as the legendary Sam Cooke in the VAFF’s Opening Night Film One Night in Miami and his remarkable career launched by his Tony Award-winning performance in Hamilton.
  • A Tribute to Thomas Newman – 15-time Academy Award nominated film composer Thomas Newman discussed his outstanding career with Benjamin Rous, director of the Charlottesville Symphony at the University of Virginia. Newman’s credits include The Shawshank RedemptionThe Green MileAmerican BeautyFinding Nemo, the James Bond films Skyfall and Spectre, and 2019’s Golden Globe-winning film for Best Picture, 1917. The tribute included clips from these movies and more and also feature Newman’s frequent collaborator, director John Lee Hancock.
  • Light House Studio Shorts – This locally produced short film package showcased the work of Charlottesville students from Light House Studio.

In a partnership with Common House, the VAFF hosted a series of free panel discussions open to our visiting guest artists and local community members on Friday of the Festival and an interactive Virtual Reality Lab on Saturday and Sunday of the Festival, all free and open to the public for the past two years.

Recent Friday panels including a Virtual Reality Filmmaking about the present and future of the rapidly-evolving world of VR filmmaking with leaders in the field; Women and Work addressing the question of how work, or the lack thereof, defines the female identity and impacts the female experience and featuring Shelly Chopra Dhar (How I Felt When I Saw that Girl), Marty Elcan (Ladies Most Deject) and Amy R. Letourneau (PBS), moderated by Claire Kaplan (UVA); and A Critical Eye on the current state of the film criticism industry and featuring Alonso Duralde (The Wrap), Soraya McDonald (The Undefeated), Brian Truitt (USA Today), and Alissa Wilkinson (Vox), moderated by VAFF Advisory Board member Scot Safon.

Our VR Lab exhibited numerous projects offering visitors a glimpse into what is rapidly becoming possible with VR and immersive film technologies, curated by UVA Assistant Professor of Digital Media Mona Kasra

Community Feedback

Cars parked at a drive-in movie theater showing a film on a large outdoor screen at night.

VAFF Drive-In Movies at Dairy Market, VAFF 2020


The following quotes were collected from our patrons and supporters through surveys and feedback requests after the 2020 Virginia Film Festival:  

“I was so happy to hear about the successes from the week.  Under what must have been trying times, you have risen to the occasion and created an amazing weekend that celebrates FILM, yet again. Great job, to you all!”

“The festival was a tour de force from every perspective — the technical arrangements were superb and so easy to master; the innovative drive-ins were incredibly well-organized and just plain cool; and the content was really world class.”

“The inventiveness you all displayed in keeping it going during Covid was remarkable.”

“I loved that the drive throughs made the festival still feel like a community event, and like something different from the norm. I’ve been attending other virtual film festivals this year, so if it had been purely virtual there would not have been much to distinguish it. I also love the different series, and I love the strong commitment to increasing the diversity of programming and programmers. It shows in the slate of films, and makes for a great festival.”