Michelle Materre, Champion of Black Independent Film, Dies at 67

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By Annabelle Williams, The New York Times

Through her distribution company and an educational series, Ms. Materre was for decades a tireless advocate for underrepresented filmmakers.

Michelle Materre, an early proponent of independently released works by Black female filmmakers, in an undated photo. (via Materre Family)

Michelle Materre, a distributor and educator who promoted Black women’s voices in film and released influential independent movies by Black creators, died on March 11 in White Plains, N.Y. She was 67.

Her company, KJM3 Entertainment Group, worked on distribution for major films; one of its first projects was the marketing of Julie Dash’s “Daughters of the Dust.” Widely viewed as a masterpiece of Black independent cinema and said to have been the first feature film by a Black woman to have a wide release, “Daughters of the Dust” was inducted into the Library of Congress’s National Film Registry in 2004.

In a remembrance for The New School Free Press, Ms. Materre’s colleague Terri Bowles, with whom she taught a course at the New School, wrote:

“She radiated a love of media and cinema, immersing her students, colleagues and friends in the vernaculars of the image, its myriad presentations and its critical importance.”

Read the full story here.

Learn about another impactful African American woman here.

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