White People

As Sam recalled his grandmother telling him to never be “Uppity”  to white people this negative image is created as a time lapse. It is a scene of Carolyn Bryant Donham with her husband and two children in the courtroom of the Emmett Till murder trial. She was never charged in the murder of Emmett Till. The court case took place in in the court case in Sumner Mississippi, which was billed as a good place to raise a boy. Her husband Roy Bryant his accomplice J.W. Milam were found not guilty by a jury of all white men. The verdict took just an hour and seven minutes. It wouldn’t have taken that long, but the jury took a soda pop break to make it look good.

Knowing they could not be re-tried for murder, Roy and J.M later admitted to  journalist William Bradford Huie in a 1956 Look Magazine story,  that they had indeed tortured and murdered Emmett Till. They were paid $4000 for the story. The US Justice Department re-opened the case saying the case was a “gross miscarriage of justice.” The new evidence points to the possible involvement of more that a dozen people. Roy and J.M have already died.  J.M. Milam died of cancer in 1980 and Roy Bryant died of cancer in 1994.

Yesterday This Was Home: Boarding

I woke up this morning realizing how nice it is to wake up to just focus on animation. For the past 4 months I have been doing dark COVID-19 themed illustrations and my research always left me fuming about the incompetence and indifference of America’s response to this global health  crisis. Now I can put that aside and focus on this tale of a bus trip.

Of course 1957 was also a dark time. Emmett Till had just been lynched and the civil rights movement had just begun. Despite this turmoil, a 12 year old boy took a trip up to Detroit on his own and took a stand.

I created this board with the idea of having the viewer a bit lower than waste level, making the adults look tall in relation to the small boy. The protagonist approaches the line, which is being held up as a woman fumbles for her ticket. I’ll   probably have to get rid of that purse under her elbow when i animate to allow some freedom to move her arms.

This short film will be on display at the Orange County Regional History Center (65 E. Central Blvd. Orlando, Florida 32801) from October 3, 2020 to February 14, 2021. The exhibit titled Yesterday This Was Home is about the 1920 Ocoee Massacre in Orange County, Florida, which remains the largest incident of voting-day violence in United States history. This landmark exhibition will mark the 100-year remembrance of the Ocoee Massacre. The exhibition will explore not only this horrific time in our community’s history but also historical and recent incidents of racism, hatred, and terror, some right here at home.