Week 9

Monday May 25

Office Closed in Observance of Memorial Day Holiday

Day Mon 5/25

A129 Murphy Hall

UCLA Financial Aid & Scholarships will be closed on Monday, May 25, 2026, in Observance of the Memorial Day holiday. We will resume regular operating hours on Tuesday, May 26, 2026.

Financial Aid and Scholarships

Tuesday May 26

UCLA Affordability Workshop

Time Tue 5/26 • 12PM - 1PM PDT RSVP

Join UCLA Financial Aid & Scholarships for a one-hour interactive workshop designed to help newly admitted students and their families better understand their financial aid offer and estimated net cost of attendance. During this hands-on session, a UCLA financial aid expert will walk you through the key parts of your Bruin Financial Aid Letter, explain the different types of aid offered, and demonstrate how to calculate what attending UCLA may actually cost after grants, scholarships, and other support. Please complete the RSVP form below to join us!

Financial Aid and Scholarships

The Classroom – Millennial Leadership: Communication

Time Tue 5/26 • 5:30PM - 7PM PDT

Zoom

The Millennial Leadership course provides practical skills and builds confidence in key leadership areas, including effective delegation, managing former peers, conflict resolution, mitigating impostor syndrome, and navigating ambiguity.

Alumni

TEDxUCLA 2026: Renaissance & Revival

Time Tue 5/26 • 6PM - 9PM PDT

UCLA Northwest Auditorium

TEDx proudly returns to UCLA, celebrating UCLA students, alumni, staff, faculty, community, and impact. Please stay tuned for further details on the event! #Educational

#Educational #CampusCommunityConversations

Connects

TEDxUCLA 2026: Renaissance & Revival

Time Tue 5/26 • 6PM - 9PM PDT

UCLA Northwest Auditorium

TEDx proudly returns to UCLA, celebrating UCLA students, alumni, staff, faculty, community, and impact. Please stay tuned for further details on the event!

#Educational

Office of Inclusive Excellence

Wednesday May 27

Website Makers Meetup

Time Wed 5/27 • 11AM - 12PM PDT

Zoom

These meetups are for people who make websites. Join us every other week, on Wednesday at 11am, to ask any questions you may have about making websites at UCLA.

#FacultyStaff #Educational #Media

BruinTech

Practice and Play with EdTech: Active Learning in Modernized Classrooms

Time Wed 5/27 • 3:30PM - 5PM PDT RSVP

Powell 186

In this session, participants will explore how modernized classroom spaces can engage students and support meaningful active learning. Through guided practice and reflection, attendees will examine how flexible classroom layouts and integrated technologies support pedagogical goals. Participants will engage in hands-on experiences designed to foster collaboration, deepen content processing, increase student engagement, and promote inclusive participation. Attendees will leave with practical ideas for creating dynamic, student-centered learning environments in their own courses. This session is designed for graduate students, TAs, and postdocs. All instructors are welcome to attend. What is Practice and Play with EdTech The Practice and Play with EdTech series offers instructors a hands-on opportunity to explore teaching tools and strategies with TLC staff. Each session begins with a brief overview of a tool followed by a guided exercise and time to explore and apply the tool to participants’ own course

#GraduateProfessional #Educational #Academic

Teaching and Learning Center

Your Next Degree: Graduate School

Time Wed 5/27 • 5PM PDT

Zoom

Careers and academic interests often evolve over time, and many people choose to pursue graduate education after gaining experience in the workforce or further exploring their fields. Whether you are considering a master’s or PhD, in an academic or professional program, graduate school can be a powerful step toward advancing your goals, shifting career paths, or deepening your expertise. This UCLA Alumni webinar will explore what it takes to apply to graduate school across a range of disciplines. The application process can differ significantly from other advanced degrees and depends on your individual goals and motivations. You will gain an overview of the process and timeline, hear from a representative from the UCLA Division of Graduate Education, and learn how to evaluate programs such as those offered through the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health. A UCLA Career Center representative will also share insights on how graduate education can help unlock future career opportunities. Whether you are actively preparing an application or just beginning to consider graduate school, this session will help clarify the process and available pathways. ### **The panel of speakers includes:** * * * ![](https://assets.alumni.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Johanna-Arias.jpg) ****Johanna Arias, M.Ed.**** _**Student Affairs Officer for the Executive Master of Public Health (EMPH) Program,** **Executive Programs, Department of Health Policy & Management,** **UCLA Fielding School of Public Health**_ A higher education professional, Johanna Arias is passionate about empowering the next generation of healthcare leaders. Johanna holds a Master of Education in Educational Counseling from the USC Rossier School of Education and a Bachelor of Arts in Public Policy from the University of California, Riverside. Working closely with EMPH Program Director Dr. Isomi Miake-Lye, Johanna offers guidance to EMPH applicants and is the first point of contact for anyone with inquiries about the program or the admissions process. She works closely with EMPH faculty and students and is currently taking 1:1 meetings with prospective applicants to discuss their academic and career goals. UCLA's Executive Master of Public Health is a two-year graduate program in Health Policy and Management designed to equip working professionals with the essential knowledge, skills, and resources to navigate the complexities of the modern healthcare environment. This in-person, cohort-based program features a full-time curriculum that meets on the UCLA campus every other weekend, allowing students to balance rigorous academic training with their professional careers. With one start per year in the Fall, the program emphasizes leadership in health policy and management and provides students the opportunity to develop a practical business plan through their coursework. For the capstone project, all students conduct an applied consulting project beginning in the summer following their first academic year; working in two-person teams, students address policy development issues, management consultations, or mentored problem resolutions in coordination with sponsoring organizations or other health-related entities. Upon graduation, students earn an MPH degree and gain access to a robust and active alumni network, ensuring continued professional support and collaborative opportunities. For more information, please visit:https://www.exechpm.ucla.edu/ * * * ![](https://assets.alumni.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/MJ-Hidalgo-Flores.jpg) ****Maria José (MJ) Hidalgo Flores, M.S. (she/her/ella)**** _**Assistant Director, Undergraduate Career Education and Development**_ Maria José (MJ) is a two-time alumna of Mount Saint Mary’s University, Los Angeles, where she earned her M.S. in Counseling Psychology and B.A. in Psychology. As a first-generation Latina, her experiences shaped her passion for guiding others in finding their path. She is currently the Assistant Director of Undergraduate Career Education and Development at the UCLA Career Center, where she supports Humanities and Social Science students and collaborates with the First To Go and Transfer Student Center offices. MJ is dedicated to helping students build confidence and navigate their careers, grounded in her belief that self-awareness is key to fulfillment. * * * ![](https://assets.alumni.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Jenna-Mendoza.jpg) ****Jenna Mendoza, MA**** _**Student Affairs Officer for the Online Master of Healthcare Administration Program,** **Executive Programs, Department of Health Policy & Management,** **UCLA Fielding School of Public Health**_ Jenna Mendoza holds a Master’s in Clinical Psychology from Pepperdine University and a Bachelor of Arts in Psychology from Loyola Marymount University. Jenna began working in student affairs at UCLA in 2020, where she utilized the counseling skills she developed during her graduate studies and the experiences she gained while working with first-year students at LMU. Jenna has been working with the UCLA Fielding School of Public Health online MHA program since 2021 and is committed to assisting MHA students from around the globe in achieving their academic and professional goals. UCLA's online MHA program is designed to equip working professionals with the leadership skills to implement effective, value-based care strategies guided by both data and compassion. The program offers a fully online curriculum with asynchronous learning accessible from anywhere, supplemented by two intensive on-campus immersions. To accommodate diverse professional schedules, the program provides four start dates per year—Fall, Winter, Spring, and Summer—with both full-time and part-time tracks available. With a core emphasis on healthcare management, the degree requirements include a comprehensive capstone project that allows students to apply their knowledge to real-world challenges. Graduates earn an MHA degree and gain entry into a robust and active alumni network, ensuring long-term professional connectivity and support. For more information, please visit:https://www.exechpm.ucla.edu/ * * * ![](https://assets.alumni.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/2026/04/Tiara-Wair-Headshot-scaled.jpg) ****Tiara Wair**** _**Assistant Dean, Recruitment, Outreach & Admissions, UCLA Division of Graduate Education**_ With more than 18 years of experience in higher education, Tiara is committed to expanding educational access and advancing student success. She holds a B.A. in Communication and an M.A. in Higher Education and Student Affairs Administration from Saint Louis University. In her current role as Assistant Dean for Recruitment, Outreach, and Admissions at the University of California, Los Angeles, she leads campus-wide strategies to recruit, admit, and enroll exceptional graduate students across more than 130 master’s and doctoral programs. A proud first-generation college graduate, Tiara has guided countless students and families through the complexities of the college search and admissions process. * * *

Alumni

Getting Started on the Dissertation (Humanities, Social Sciences, and Related Fields)

Time Wed 5/27 • 5:15PM - 6:15PM PDT RSVP

This workshop gives an overview of organization, time management, writing process issues and writing strategies. Recommended for people in the early stages of the dissertation, but useful for all stages.

#GraduateProfessional #Educational #Academic

Graduate Writing Center

Orange County: OC UCLA Book Club

Time Wed 5/27 • 6:30PM PDT

Come to discuss this month's free read, a book you choose to read and share with us to formulate our next booklist.

Alumni

Thursday May 28

Daily Bruin Alumni Network: L.A. Mixer at Boomtown Brewery

Time Thu 5/28 • 8AM - 5PM PDT

Boomtown Brewery • Los Angeles CA

Joing the Daily Bruin Alumni Network for a casual mixer at the Boomtown Brewery in Los Angeles. In addition to their taproom offerings, the brewery hosts different food trucks daily. This is a great opportunity for local Daily Bruin alumni to make new friends and expand their network!

Alumni

Rez Metal Show - Rezisting Borderlands

Time Thu 5/28 • 10AM - 7PM PDT

Fowler Museum, Room A222

10:00–11:30 AM - Sound Rezistance Session Gregg Deal + Native Audio 11:30–1:00 pm - Lunch and Pedal Demo 1:15–2:15 - Rez Metal-Indigenous Punk Session 3:00 PM - Reception in the Courtyard 5:00 PM - Rez Metal Pop up show

#Arts #Music

Institute of American Cultures

Planning and Organizing a Systematic Review

Time Thu 5/28 • 1PM - 2PM PDT

This workshop will offer an overview on the entire systematic review process — from hypothesis to publication, and why it takes so long to conduct one! Attendees will leave with concrete steps to take to plan a systematic review, as well as an understanding of systematic review methodology and how it differs from other types of review articles. This workshop will be offered via Zoom. If you're registered, you'll receive the Zoom invitation information the day of the workshop. Instructor: Robert Johnson, Clinical and Research Support Librarian

#Undergraduate #GraduateProfessional #Educational #Research

Library

UCLA Social Enterprise Academy Venture Showcase

Time Thu 5/28 • 4PM PDT

Zoom

UCLA Alumni Affairs, the UCLA Department of Economics, and the Academies for Social Entrepreneurship invite you to the UCLA Social Enterprise Academy Venture Showcase. Three student teams representing local community organizations will pitch business ventures to a panel of industry experts, angel investors, and prominent members of the UCLA community.

Alumni

Graduate Student and Alumni Networking Night

Time Thu 5/28 • 5PM PDT

James West Alumni Center •

UCLA Graduate Career Services and the UCLA Alumni Association is excited to invite you to the Graduate Student and Alumni Networking Night. This event consists of an opportunity for alumni to network amongst themselves from 5PM-6PM, and then with current graduate students from 6PM onward. Appetizers and drinks will be served! Date: May 28th, 2026 Time: 5PM-8PM Location: James West Alumni Center, UCLA Campus

Alumni

UCLA Affordability Workshop

Time Thu 5/28 • 6PM - 7PM PDT RSVP

Join UCLA Financial Aid & Scholarships for a one-hour interactive workshop designed to help newly admitted students and their families better understand their financial aid offer and estimated net cost of attendance. During this hands-on session, a UCLA financial aid expert will walk you through the key parts of your Bruin Financial Aid Letter, explain the different types of aid offered, and demonstrate how to calculate what attending UCLA may actually cost after grants, scholarships, and other support. Please complete the RSVP form below to join us!

Financial Aid and Scholarships

Bay Area Bruins and Asian Pacific Alumni of UCLA - Golden State Valkyries vs. Indiana Fever WNBA Basketball

Time Thu 5/28 • 7PM PDT

Chase Center, San Francisco, CA • San Francisco CA

Join the UCLA Bay Area Bruins for an unforgettable night of WNBA action as the Golden State Valkyries take on the Indiana Fever! After an incredible inaugural season that ended with a historic playoff appearance, Asian Pacific Alumni (APA) of UCLA, in partnership with the UCLA Bay Area Bruins, are excited to host an even bigger UCLA group night this year.  Why This Game? \* EXCLUSIVE POST-GAME CHALK TALK WITH COACH NATALIE NAKASE, UCLA Class of 2003! Golden State Valkyries Head Coach Natalie Nakase is known for her rise from a walk-on to a three-year starter and three-time team captain. After UCLA, she built an impressive coaching career, first overseas and then in assistant coaching roles with the NBA Los Angeles Clippers and the WNBA Las Vegas Aces, and is now the first Asian American head coach in WNBA history. \* EXCLUSIVE DISCOUNTED GROUP PRICING: Tickets are $98 each, approximately 50% below public pricing, with no additional taxes, surcharges, or fees through our UCLA group link \* STAR POWER ON THE COURT: This matchup features the Indiana Fever and rising phenom Caitlin Clark, known for her deep three-point range and electrifying performances. The Fever also features UCLA alum Monique Billings (UCLA Class of 2018), whom we cheered on last season as a member of the Valkyries \* ELECTRIC, HIGH-ENERGY ATMOSPHERE: Chase Center, dubbed “Ballhalla” by fans during Golden State Valkyries games, sold out nearly every home game last season. The vibe has been compared to the legendary “Roaracle” era of Golden State Warriors basketball Additional details about the meetup and other logistics will be shared with registered attendees a few days prior to the event.

Alumni

Friday May 29

Black Girl

Time Fri 5/29 • 7:30PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Your seat will be assigned to you when you pick up your ticket at the box office. Seats are assigned on a first come, first served basis. The box office will open one hour before the event. Introduction by Archive Director May Hong HaDuong. Q&A with writer J. E. Franklin. Screening 1 of 2 Hearst Metrotone News: "Porgy & Bess Opening" (excerpt) Year: 1959 Country: U.S. Runtime: 2 min. Digital. B&W. Silent. Screening 2 of 2 Black Girl Year: 1972 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 97 min. Digital. Color. West Coast Premiere of New Restoration Named by Film Comment as one of the best restorations of 2025, director Ossie Davis’ third feature is finding its audience more than 50 years after its original release. The play on which the film is based, Black Girl, by J. E. Franklin, who wrote the screenplay, was already a landmark of Black theater after a record-setting off-Broadway run in 1971 that earned Franklin the Drama Desk Award for Most Promising Playwright. Actor-turned-director Davis was coming off the box office success of his Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970), an adaptation of Chester Himes’ politically charged detective novel that helped spark the Blaxploitation wave of the 1970s. In a contemporaneous interview, civil rights icon Davis nevertheless lamented the lack of films about the “trials and tribulations of the Black middle class.” For the family in Black Girl, the personal and cultural politics of upward mobility are central to the conflicts among three generations of Black women. The youngest, Billie Jean (Peggy Pettitt), strives to become a dancer, earning taunts from her half-sisters (Gloria Edwards, Lorette Greene). Their mother, Rose (Louise Stubbs), still stinging from her own mother’s indifference, has seemingly given up on her own children, placing her hopes in Netta (Leslie Uggams), a neighborhood girl she took in now studying for law school. Every member of the ensemble cast — including a swaggering Brock Peters as Rose’s ex — rises to the occasion as their characters clash in a cramped Venice, California, home, prompting Variety to declare Black Girl the best depiction of Black family life “since Lorraine Hansberry’s A Raisin in the Sun.” The film’s distributor, however, gave it an exploitation-style release, booking it in action houses with posters promising the same, leading the trade paper to complain the strategy would “keep away serious filmgoers who would have been rewarded by the fine directing and acting.” Black Girl now stands ready for rediscovery.—Paul Malcolm DCP. Production: Marconlee. Distribution: Cinerama Releasing. Producer: Robert H. Greenberg. Director: Ossie Davis. Screenwriter: J. E. Franklin. Based on the play by J. E. Franklin. Cinematographer: Glenwood J. Swanson. With: Brock Peters, Claudia McNeil, Leslie Uggams, Louise Stubbs, Peggy Pettitt. Restoration funding provided by the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and The Film Foundation from 35mm acetate original picture and track negatives. Laboratory services by illuminate Hollywood, Audio Mechanics, Simon Daniel Sound, Fotokem. Special thanks to J. E. Franklin, Malika Nzinga.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

And Beautiful

Time Fri 5/29 • 10:15PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Your seat will be assigned to you when you pick up your ticket at the box office. Seats are assigned on a first come, first served basis. The box office will open one hour before the event. Introduction by Josslyn Luckett, Associate Professor, Cinema Studies Tisch School of the Arts, New York University ...& Beautiful Year: 1969 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 60 min. Digital. Color. World Premiere of New Preservation With original commercials Hosted by comedian Redd Foxx, …& Beautiful was the first syndicated television special produced for African American audiences to be sponsored by a Black-owned company (Johnson Products, makers of Afro Sheen). Directed by trailblazer Mark Warren, the first African American to win an Emmy Award in a directing category (for his work on Laugh-In), the groundbreaking music-variety special offered viewers a rare primetime showcase foregrounding Black excellence and pride. Dynamically stylized with Afrocentric and psychedelic designs and costuming, the vibrant production represents an invaluable late-’60s audiovisual time capsule documenting the joy, liberation and empowerment of the Black Is Beautiful movement.—Mark Quigley DCP. Syndicated. Production: Western Video Production. Executive Producer: Richard Gottlieb. Producer: Mark Warren. Director: Mark Warren. Writer: Cal Wilson. With: Redd Foxx, Della Reese, Donald McKayle Dancers. Preservation funding provided by the John H. Mitchell Television Preservation Endowment. Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from an original 2 in. videotape. Engineering services by CBS Media Exchange.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Saturday May 30

Adventures of Casanova

Time Sat 5/30 • 10AM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. The box office will open 30 minutes before the screening. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by animation historian Jerry Beck and Senior Film Preservationist Miki Shannon. Screening 1 of 3 The Mouse of Tomorrow Year: 1942 Country: U.S. Runtime: 6 min. Digital. Color. World Premiere of New Restoration Riffing off Fleischer Studios’ successful feature-length animation Superman (1941), Terrytoons Studio debuted the first film in the Mighty Mouse series, The Mouse of Tomorrow, the following year. While Terrytoons was known as the “budget” studio or the “Woolworths” of animation, Mighty Mouse lifted the studio into Oscar-nominated status. The animation earned a “swell” from the Showmen’s Trade Review upon debut. While many saw Mighty Mouse’s first flick on black-and-white, 8mm home reels from Castle Films or on CBS television reruns, the Festival presents a restoration of the beautiful color original.—Jackie Forsyte DCP. Production: Terrytoons. Distribution: 20th Century Fox. Producer: Paul Terry. Director: Eddie Donnelly. Writer: John Foster. Restoration funding provided by ASIFA-Hollywood. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from 35mm nitrate successive exposure positive and nitrate print. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., Audio Mechanics, Simon Daniel Sound. Special thanks to Paramount Pictures Archive. Screening 2 of 3 Copy Cat Year: 1941 Country: U.S. Runtime: 6 min. 35mm. World Premiere of New Restoration Although a pioneer in the animation field, here Dave Fleischer played the role of the smaller “copycat” to MGM’s Hanna-Barbera team, creators of another cat-and-mouse duo first seen in Puss Gets the Boots (1940). Copy Cat was distributed by Paramount Pictures in the Animated Antics series, just a year before Paramount bought Fleischer Studios. On display is Fleischer’s characteristic rotoscoping technique, patented by Max Fleischer in 1915. The lively technique of painting over motion pictures, frame by frame, creates smooth and compelling movements. When the patent expired in 1934, competitor animation studios, including Disney, adopted the process.—Jackie Forsyte Production: Fleischer Studios. Distribution: Paramount Pictures. Director: Dave Fleischer. Animation: Myron Waldman, Willian Henning. Writer: Bob Wickersham. Restoration funding provided by ASIFA-Hollywood. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from 35mm nitrate original picture negative and 35mm safety prints. Laboratory services by the PHI Stoa Film Lab, Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., Audio Mechanics, Simon Daniel Sound. Special thanks to Paramount Pictures Archive. Screening 3 of 3 Adventures of Casanova Year: 1948 Country: U.S. Runtime: 83 min. Digital. B&W. West Coast Premiere of New Restoration Who do you call when you want to liberate Sicily? Who else but Casanova? Spanish-English-language cross-market leading man Arturo de Córdova and Lucille Bremer of Meet Me in St. Louis (1944) star in this swashbuckling B-movie that has extraordinarily little to do with the real-life Giacomo Casanova. Summoned by a band of insurgents to lead a Sicilian rebellion against the Austrian Empire, Casanova seduces, swordfights and twists romantic complications into revolutionary intrigue. You can expect plenty of adventure, high romance, some light cross-dressing, production design that rivals major Hollywood studios, and George Tobias’ unmistakable thick Brooklyn accent. From a historical perspective, Adventures of Casanova is more than the sum of its rather shlocky parts. The film represents a major step in collaboration between the Mexican and American film industries at the height of their respective power and prestige, a level of partnership possibly unmatched until the Nuevo Cine Mexicano movement of the 1990s and 2000s. Adventures of Casanova was also among the first films to make use of Mexico City’s Estudios Churubusco, one of the last legacy Mexican production studios still operating today. Although critics at the time cited budget outlay as the motivation behind the partnership, Adventures of Casanova does stand in contrast to the Mexploitation usually served up to the Anglo-American audiences of the period. Roberto Gavaldón, an icon of Mexican cinema, was perhaps the first Mexican director hired to lead an American crew outside the United States. Gavaldón would go on to make one more English-language feature, The Littlest Outlaw (1955), before returning fully to Mexican cinema. His film Macario, another work shot at Estudios Churubusco, would compete at Cannes in 1960 alongside La Dolce Vita and earn a nomination for Best Foreign Language Film at that year's Academy Awards.—Noah Brockman DCP. Production: Bryan Foy Productions. Distribution: Eagle-Lion Films. Producers: Bryan Foy, Leonard S. Picker. Director: Roberto Gavaldón. Screenwriters:

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Lorna Doone

Time Sat 5/30 • 11:55AM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Associate Motion Picture Curator Steven K. Hill. Screening 1 of 4 Hearst Metrotone News: “Famous Wind-jammer Wrecked on British Coast” Year: 1936 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 30 sec. Digital. Screening 2 of 4 Hearst Metrotone News: “U.S. Ambassador Has John Bull All Excited” Year: 1938 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 1 min. Digital. Screening 3 of 4 Hearst Metrotone News: “??Town Criers’ Championship” Year: 1953 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 1 min. Digital. Screening 4 of 4 Lorna Doone Year: 1922 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 81 min. Digital. B&W and tinted/toned. Silent. World Premiere of New Restoration French-born director Maurice Tourneur’s adaptation of R. D. Blackmore’s 19th-century novel Lorna Doone offered audiences a romantic drama of love and revenge set amid the picturesque landscapes of Exmoor in southwest England. Influenced by his background in painting and illustration, Tourneur approached filmmaking with a pronounced sensitivity for pictorial design, treating the frame as a carefully organized visual field that could convey mood and meaning. After moving to the United States in 1914, he firmly established his reputation through works such as The Wishing Ring (1914), The Poor Little Rich Girl (1917), The Blue Bird (1918) and The Last of the Mohicans (1920), all admired for their visual sophistication and cinematic storytelling. Lorna Doone is supported by a cast aligned with Tourneur’s preference for naturalistic, non-theatrical performances. Madge Bellamy’s spirited portrayal of Lorna proved to be one of the defining roles of her career and showcased her distinctive, luminous presence, earning her the nickname “the exquisite Madge.” She would later star in the John Ford epic The Iron Horse (1924) and the cult-classic White Zombie (1932), the latter of which has been restored by UCLA. John Bowers, one of the top leading men in early 1920s Hollywood, imbues the hero John Ridd with a quiet physicality and sincerity. Anchoring the drama are strong supporting turns by Frank Keenan as the fallen-nobleman-turned-outlaw Sir Ensor Doone, and Donald MacDonald as the brutal Carver Doone, whose menacing physique and explosive intensity lend weight to the film’s central conflict. While much of the production was shot at the Thomas H. Ince Studio in Culver City (reportedly with four cameras, instead of the customary two), Tourneur supplemented the studio-bound sets with outdoor location photography to heighten the film’s sense of authenticity. A critical success when released, Lorna Doone remains one of the most visually and dramatically accomplished American silent films of the early 1920s.—Steven K. Hill. DCP. Production: Thomas H. Ince Corp. Distribution: Associated First National Pictures. Producer/Director: Maurice Tourneur. Screenwriters: Katherine Reed, Cecil G. Mumford, Wyndham Gittens. Based on the novel by R. D. Blackmore. Cinematographer: Henry Sharp. With: Madge Bellamy, John Bowers, Frank Keenan, Donald MacDonald, May Giracci. Restoration funded by the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and The Film Foundation from a 35mm dupe picture negative, 35mm nitrate fine grain sections and 16mm prints. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., FotoKem. Special thanks to Academy Film Archive, Kevin Brownlow, Dan Bursik, Jere Guldin, National Film Preservation Foundation.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

BUS End Of Year Celebration

Time Sat 5/30 • 12PM - 3PM PDT RSVP

Tom Bradley International Hall Room 300

The Bruin Underground Scholars (BUS) End of Year Celebration is a gathering to honor and celebrate the accomplishments, resilience, and leadership of formerly incarcerated and system-impacted scholars at UCLA. This event brings together students, campus partners, families, and community members to recognize the journeys and achievements of our scholars throughout the academic year.

#Educational #Academic

Bruin Resource Center Bruin Underground Scholars Program

The heart of the matter

Time Sat 5/30 • 2:30PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Head of Preservation Jillian Borders and Women’s Film Preservation Fund co-chair and restoration consultant Kirsten Larvick. Q&A with co-director Gini Reticker. the heart of the matter Year: 1994 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 56 min. Digital. Color. West Coast Premiere of New Restoration Shot on 16mm by an all-women crew, the heart of the matter is a tender portrait of AIDS activist Janice Jirau and a landmark in feminist documentary history. The film traces Jirau’s transformation from devoted wife to fearless public health advocate after she contracts HIV from a husband who refused to practice safer sex, a story told with devastating clarity. Her journey is braided with a Greek chorus of HIV-positive women from diverse backgrounds whose testimonies dismantle the comforting myth that only “certain kinds” of women are at risk. In a pivotal scene, Jirau delivers a poignant account of surviving abuse from the pulpit of a Black church, and directors Gini Reticker and Amber Hollibaugh linger on the congregation’s embrace — an image that cuts through the stigma and stereotypes that defined the era. Completed at the edge of feature length, the production itself was a political struggle, shaped by a protracted fundraising battle in a culture that routinely devalued women’s stories, and people with AIDS. That tension gives the film its palpable urgency. It is direct and unafraid to ask viewers to reflect on their own relationship to HIV transmission risk, a conversation the filmmakers also carried into public screenings. The collaboration brought together a remarkable team, including cinematographers Ellen Kuras and Maryse Alberti early in their careers, whose camera work gives the film both tenderness and resolve. Premiering at Sundance, where it won the Freedom of Expression Award, and later broadcast on PBS in 1994, the heart of the matter ultimately helped change policy through a grassroots impact campaign — and became a model for activist filmmaking for generations to come.—Beandrea July Directors: Gini Reticker, Amber Hollibaugh. Producers: Gini Reticker, Amber Hollibaugh. Cinematographers: Ellen Kuras, Maryse Alberti. Editor: Ann Collins. With: Janice Jirau. Restoration funding provided by Women’s Film Preservation Fund of New York Women in Film & Television and the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Restored by Women’s Film Preservation Fund of New York Women in Film & Television and the UCLA Film & Television Archive from 16mm A/B original negative rolls, D2 and U-Matic tapes. Laboratory services by Colorlab, Endpoint Audio Labs. Special thanks to Gini Reticker, Kirsten Larvick.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Merrily We Live

Time Sat 5/30 • 4:10PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by animation historian Jerry Beck and Senior Film Preservationist Miki Shannon. Screening 1 of 3 Way Back When a Triangle Had Its Points Year: 1940 Country: U.S. Runtime: 8 min. Digital. B&W.  West Coast Premiere of New Restoration Way Back When a Triangle Had Its Points was the first of 12 in Fleischer Studios’ Stone Age cartoons. It features a fabulous Betty Boop-style, Stone Age working girl on the hunt for a typist job. Paramount Pictures announced the series in the Miami News in June 1939, saying, “it will be based on the absurdity of modern life and modern inventions.” A rock-solid attempt, it wasn’t quite the smash the studio was looking for. However, Dan Gordon, one of the Fleischer animators on the project, later joined Hanna-Barbera and was a key creator of The Flintstones.—Jackie Forsyte DCP. Production: Fleischer Studios. Distribution: Paramount Pictures. Director: Dave Fleischer. Animation: David Tendlar, Thomas Golden. Writer: William Turner. Restoration funding provided by ASIFA-Hollywood. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from 35mm nitrate original picture and track negatives. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., Audio Mechanics. Special thanks to Paramount Pictures Archive. Screening 2 of 3 The Nutty Network Year: 1939 Country: U.S. Runtime: 6 min. Digital. Color. World Premiere of New Restoration Just a year earlier, the 1938 radio broadcast of H. G. Wells’ The War of the Worlds stunned the public, convincing many that Martians were invading Earth. Terrytoons’ The Nutty Network cleverly spoofs the radio play, transforming public anxiety into slapstick comedy. The short exemplifies animation’s ability to respond quickly to contemporary culture with a playful critique of mass communication at a time when radio dominated American media. Although Terrytoons adopted Technicolor later than other studios, this short’s vibrant use of color showcases the expressive power of the technology, even in humorous satire.—Jackie Forsyte DCP. Production: Terrytoons. Distribution: 20th Century Fox. Producer: Paul Terry. Director: Mannie Davis. Writer: John Foster. Restoration funding provided by ASIFA-Hollywood. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from 35mm nitrate successive exposure positive, acetate track negative and track positive. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., Audio Mechanics. Special thanks to Paramount Pictures Archive. Screening 3 of 3 Merrily We Live Year: 1938 Country: U.S. Runtime: 95 min. Digital. B&W. World Premiere of New Restoration Debuting near the end of the screwball comedy trend, Merrily We Live is one of the zaniest. When novelist and ladies’ man Wade Rawlins’ (Brian Aherne) car breaks down he seeks help at a mansion inhabited by a family of eccentrics. Mistaken for a tramp by the well-meaning matron of the house, Mrs. Kilbourne (Billie Burke), Rawlins finds himself hired as the family chauffeur. His protests fall on deaf ears, and the handsome young man soon becomes embroiled in romantic encounters and family crises. Throw in a large white rabbit, reproducing goldfish, a raucous parrot and two rambunctious Great Danes, and you have another hit from Hal Roach Studios, “Laugh Factory to the World.” Based on the 1924 novel The Dark Chapter: A Comedy of Class Distinctions and often compared to My Man Godfrey (1936), this spoof of social conventions never takes itself seriously; as one reviewer wrote, “Insanity runs rampant!” Roach, director Norman Z. McLeod and cast members Burke, Constance Bennett and Alan Mowbray from the hit Topper (1937) team up once again and, as a poster proclaimed, Merrily We Live “tops Topper by a hundred howls!” Best known for short comedies starring Laurel and Hardy and the Our Gang kids, Hal Roach Studios earned accolades when this film was nominated for five Academy Awards, including Best Actress in a Supporting Role for Burke, Best Cinematography, Best Art Direction, Best Music, Original Song, and won for Best Sound Recording. Roach would further prove his prowess the next year, receiving critical acclaim for Of Mice and Men (1939). Cinematographer Norbert Brodine and art director Charles Hall give the film a stunning look with depth of focus, shades of gray and an overall visual style not often seen in a comedic production. And we’d all like to know how many takes were needed to film the opening ensemble song!—Miki Shannon DCP. Production: Hal Roach Studios. Distribution: MGM. Producer: Milton H. Bren. Director: Norman Z. McLeod. Screenwriters: Eddie Moran, Jack Jevne, E. J. Roth. Cinematographer: Norbert Brodine. With: Constance Bennett, Brian Aherne, Alan Mowbray, Billie Burke, Patsy Kelly. Restoration funding provided by the Century Arts Foundation. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Arch

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

The Magnificent Matador

Time Sat 5/30 • 7:30PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Head of Preservation Jillian Borders. The Magnificent Matador Year: 1955 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 95 min. Digital. Color. World Theatrical Premiere of New Restoration Trained as a matador in Mexico, director Budd Boetticher frequently returned to the topic of bullfighting in his films, from his start in Hollywood as a technical advisor on Rouben Mamoulian’s Blood and Sand (1941) to his first major film, The Bullfighter and the Lady (1951). Unsatisfied with the final editing of that film, Boetticher revisited his toreador past with The Magnificent Matador. In Boetticher’s words, “the story … isn’t just bulls. It’s really a love drama about a man on top who falters through fear, and an American woman who restores his faith in himself.” Mexican-born star Anthony Quinn was a natural to play “El Numero Uno,” having prior experience portraying matadors in Blood and Sand and The Brave Bulls (1951). Maureen O’Hara plays opposite him as his wealthy pursuer who becomes a possible means to his redemption. Acclaimed cinematographer Lucien Ballard (The Wild Bunch, 1969) brought his well-trained eye to the striking vistas and big action in the ring. Filming entirely on location, Ballard utilized the large CinemaScope format in its full width to capture Mexico’s countryside, bustling Mexico City and its giant arena in vibrant Eastmancolor. Legends of Mexican bullfighting are featured in the corrida, including Jesús “Chucho” Solórzano, Antonio Velásquez and Jorge “El Ranchero” Aguilar. Action sequences were staged to avoid any gore (to man or bull) to satisfy the Production Code, with ballet-like choreography and masterful passes that Variety called “some of the best bullfight scenes yet captured on film.” Prominent matador Carlos Arruza offered technical advice as well as the shooting location of Pastejé, his bull-breeding ranch. Boetticher would later direct the documentary Arruza (1971), narrated by Quinn, chronicling the matador’s life and tragic death.—Jillian Borders DCP. Production: National Pictures Corporation. Distribution: 20th Century-Fox. Producer: Edward L. Alperson. Director: Budd Boetticher. Screenwriter: Charles Lang. Based on a story by Budd Boetticher. Cinematographer: Lucien Ballard. With: Maureen O’Hara, Anthony Quinn, Manuel Rojas, Richard Denning. Restoration funding provided by the Hobson/Lucas Family Foundation. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and The Film Foundation from the 35mm color separation master positives and a 35mm Cinemascope print. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., FotoKem, Audio Mechanics, DJ Audio, Inc. Special thanks to George Eastman Museum, Ignite Films.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Si muero antes de despertar (If I Should Die Before I Wake)

Time Sat 5/30 • 9:25PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Si muero antes de despertar (If I Should Die Before I Wake) Year: 1952 Country: Argentina Language: Spanish with English subtitles. Runtime: 72 min. Digital. B&W. A complex father-son relationship is at the center of this Argentine film noir directed by Carlos Hugo Christensen. Originally meant to be included in a noir trilogy with No abras nunca esa puerta (Never Open That Door, 1952), previously restored by UCLA, the Grimm’s fairy-tale-like Si muero antes de despertar was instead released as a stand-alone feature. In this suspenseful adaptation of a Cornell Woolrich short story, the disappearance of several young girls, presumed to be victims of a sexual maniac, has the local population on edge. Police inspector Santana (Floren Delbene, a popular leading man in Argentina through the 1950s) is stymied by a lack of clues, while his wife (Blanca del Prado) simply says, “Those monsters ... They should leave them to us mothers.” Unknown to either parent, their obstreperous son, Lucho (Néstor Zavarce, who for an earlier Christensen film had earned the title of a “Child Prodigy of Venezuelan Cinema”), has vowed to keep a secret that might be of vital importance. Plagued by guilt, Lucho suffers through a feverish nightmare, courtesy of production designer Gori Muñoz, as surreal as the one concocted by Salvador Dalí in Hitchcock’s Spellbound (1945). The climax of the film, eerily lit by cinematographer Pablo Tabernero (a German émigré), with aspects too strong for North American censors, is nothing short of terrifying and was likely responsible for many sleepless Argentine nights. Archivist Fernando Martin Peña, responsible for finding the original complete version of Metropolis (1927), has championed Argentine films for decades. In 1969, a large fire destroyed most of the country’s nitrate negatives, and it is hoped that a cinematheque can be built to house their remaining treasures. We have Peña, our collaborators at the Film Noir Foundation and Eddie Muller to thank for this restoration made from scant surviving materials nearly lost to decomposition.—Miki Shannon DCP. Production: San Miguel Studios. Distribution: San Miguel Studios. Director: Carlos Hugo Christensen. Writer: Alejandro Casona. Adapted from a short story by Cornell Woolrich. Cinematographer: Pablo Tabernero. With: Néstor Zavarce, Blanca del Prado, Floren Delbene, Homero Cárpena. Restoration funding provided by the Film Noir Foundation and Eddie Muller. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 35mm acetate composite print. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc, Audio Mechanics, Simon Daniel Sound. Special thanks to Argentina Sono Film, Luis Scalella; Malba Museo de Arte Latinoamericano de Buenos Aires; Fernando Martin Peña.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Screenings: The Computer-Laser-Videos of Raphael Montanez Ortiz (1996-7)

Time Sat 5/30 • 10:45PM - 11:30PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater, UCLA Hammer Museum

World premiere of new preservations! Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation led by the UCLA Film and Television Archive. These four selected works are Ortiz’s final computer-laser-videos, marking a significant point in his career as an interdisciplinary artist and pioneer of the Destructivism movement. Introduction by UCLA distinguished professor Chon Noriega, School of Theater, Film and Television, and processing conservator Yesenia Perez.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Institute of American Cultures

The Computer-Laser-Videos of Raphael Montanez Ortiz

Time Sat 5/30 • 10:55PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by UCLA Distinguished Professor Chon Noriega, School of Theater, Film and Television, and Processing Conservator Yesenia Perez. Co-presented by the UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center. World Premiere of New Preservations In his piece Destructivism: A Manifesto (1962), artist and filmmaker Raphael Montañez Ortiz states: “The art that utilizes the destructive processes will purge, for as it gives death, so it will give to life.” A key figure in the Destruction in Art movement of the 1960s, Ortiz is best known for his object-based work and performance art, most notably his piano destruction concerts. However, his expansive oeuvre of time-based media art also merits revisiting. Ortiz experimented with film starting in the late 1950s, creating found-footage films that deconstruct/reconstruct conventional Hollywood, newsreel and instructional films as a means of combating the xenophobia, classism and repression manifested within them. Decades later, Ortiz revisited this practice of partition and random reassembly; 1984 to 1997 was a fruitful period resulting in over 50 works Ortiz termed “computer-laser-videos.” The rise of consumer video formats and new technologies brought renewed opportunities for deconstruction — this time, in a realm that merged analog and digital. These videos were made by using films on laserdiscs (mainly titles from the 1930s to 1940s), selecting segments ranging from one to 10 seconds, editing and distorting clips via computer, and using joysticks to move footage back and forth at various speeds. Once it was finalized, Ortiz would transfer the footage to 3/4 in. videotape. This practice resulted in a new visual landscape of disjointed movement that was further heightened by the use of a wave-form generator to alter sound, creating a cacophony of words, music and disembodied noises. In expanding the length of these clips, Ortiz dissects and scrutinizes the whiteness, hegemony and gendered behaviors presented on-screen, reconstructing them as satire, performativity and artifice. These four selected works are Ortiz’s final computer-laser-videos, marking a significant point in his career as an interdisciplinary artist and pioneer of the Destructivism movement.—Yesenia Perez Screening 1 of 4 That's Too Much Year: 1996 Country: U.S. Language: Swedish with English subtitles Runtime: 6 min. Digital. B&W. DCP. Director: Raphael Montañez Ortiz. Source: Dollar (1938), directed by Gustaf Molander. Preservation funding provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center from the director’s Betacam master. Laboratory services by The MediaPreserve. Special thanks to Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Chon Noriega. Screening 2 of 4 Ring Ring Ragtime Year: 1996 Country: U.S. Language: Italian with English subtitles Runtime: 12 min. Digital. B&W and color. DCP. Director: Raphael Montañez Ortiz. Sources: unidentified Italian film, undated footage from the Olympics. Preservation funding provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center from the director’s Betacam master. Laboratory services by The MediaPreserve. Special thanks to Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Chon Noriega. Screening 3 of 4 Busy Bodies Year: 1997 Country: U.S. Runtime: 9 min. Digital. B&W and color. DCP. Director: Raphael Montañez Ortiz. Sources: A Night at the Opera (1935), directed by Sam Wood; Gone With the Wind (1939), directed by Victor Fleming. Preservation funding provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center from the director’s Betacam SP master. Laboratory services by The MediaPreserve. Special thanks to Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Chon Noriega. Screening 4 of 4 It's Coming Up Year: 1997 Country: U.S. Runtime: 5 min. Digital. B&W and color. DCP. Director: Raphael Montañez Ortiz. Sources: unidentified exercise video, c. 1930s; The Bride of Frankenstein (1935), directed by James Whale; unidentified footage of a volcano eruption. Preservation funding provided by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center from the director’s Betacam SP master. Laboratory services by the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Special thanks to Raphael Montañez Ortiz, Chon Noriega.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Sunday May 31

Golf vs UCLA

Day Sun 5/31

Club Sports Golf

Pilipino Alumni Association Sing-a-thon

Time Sun 5/31 • 10AM PDT

James West Alumni Center •

UCLA's Pilipino Alumni Association is hosting Sing-A-Thon to celebrate and share Filipino culture through musical expression. We welcome UCLA students, alumni, and the friends and family of UCLA's Filipino Community.

Alumni

Trailin'

Time Sun 5/31 • 11AM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. The box office will open 30 minutes before the screening. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Film Preservationist Brian Belak. Screening 1 of 2 Doctor Cupid Year: 1911 Country: U.S. Runtime: 14 min. 35mm. B&W and tinted. Silent. World Premiere of New Restoration Alice Linton and poet Percy Primrose (Carlyle Blackwell) are in love, against her father’s (John Bunny) wishes. When Alice falls ill with grief over the forbidden relationship, Percy disguises himself as “Doctor Cupid” to trick Alice’s father into approving the marriage. Celebrated stage actor and comedian John Bunny starred in over 150 short films for the Vitagraph Company, often paired with Flora Finch in a series of “Bunnyfinch” comedies, from 1910 to his untimely death in 1915. Despite Bunny’s popularity, only a portion of his work survives.—Brian Belak Production: Vitagraph Company of America. With: John Bunny, Carlyle Blackwell. Preservation funding provided by Louis B. Mayer Foundation. Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 35mm tinted nitrate print. Laboratory services by the PHI Stoa Film Lab. Special thanks to the Irish Film Institute. Screening 2 of 2 Trailin' Year: 1921 Country: U.S. Runtime: 56 min. 35mm. B&W and tinted. Silent. Los Angeles Premiere of New Restoration In the early decades of American cinema, few figures loomed as large, or rode as boldly across the silver screen, as Tom Mix. As an actor, the former frontier lawman and Wild West show performer brought genuine horsemanship and the ability to do his own stunts to his film roles. He also cultivated an instantly recognizable identity punctuated by a white 10-gallon Stetson, ornate costumes and a confident grin, establishing a colorful vision of the American cowboy that captivated audiences throughout the 1920s. This persona reflected both the mythologizing of the Old West and the desires of a modern, urban audience seeking escapism in the aftermath of World War I. Based on the Max Brand novel, the mystery-melodrama Trailin’ was helmed by Mix’s favorite director, Lynn Reynolds, and co-starred Eva Novak in one of her 10 feature film appearances opposite Mix. Novak was a popular actor in her own right, appearing in 48 films from 1921 to 1928, and reportedly learned to perform many of her own stunts from Mix himself. In order to play the wealthy young hero Anthony Woodbury, Mix shed his familiar flamboyant Western regalia in favor of the refined garments of an aristocrat-in-training. Dissatisfied with his privileged position in life, Anthony longs to discover the identity of his mother — a secret that his father refuses to reveal. When his father is killed in a mysterious duel, Anthony embarks on a quest for justice and self-discovery, confronting danger, intrigue and the charms of the spirited Sally Fortune (Novak). As expected, the film performed well at the box office, and contemporary reviews were generally enthusiastic. Wid’s Filmdom hailed it as “a different Tom Mix and a different Mix picture,” while Moving Picture World declared, “Mix at his best. A splendid Western that has the thrills and plenty of action.”—Steven K. Hill Production: Fox Film Corp. Director: Lynn F. Reynolds. Screenwriter: Lynn F. Reynolds. Based on the novel by Max Brand. With: Tom Mix, Eva Novak, J. Farrell MacDonald, Sid Jordan. Preservation funding provided by the National Film Preservation Foundation. Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 35mm nitrate print. Laboratory services by the PHI Stoa Film Lab.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Lela Swift: Television Director

Time Sun 5/31 • 12:25PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Archive Research and Study Center Officer Maya Montañez Smukler. Lela Swift began her career in television during the early 1940s as an assistant to the chief television engineer at CBS, where she was at the forefront of an evolving broadcast industry. By 1945, she had moved into production as a writer and studio assistant floor manager, and in 1950, she was promoted to director. During a decades-long career, Swift directed a variety of genres, including early 1950s television anthologies such as CBS’ prestigious Studio One, ABC’s Wide World of Mystery and NBC’s Purex Specials for Women, and won three Emmy Awards for directing the daytime series Ryan’s Hope. Swift’s prolific creative output traces television’s history of innovation, imagination and changing audience taste.—Maya Montañez Smukler Screening 1 of 2 The Web: “Time For Hate” Year: 1953 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 30 min. Digital. B&W. World Premiere of New Preservation With original commercials As a pioneering staff director at CBS Television in New York, Lela Swift helmed episodes of the live anthology mystery The Web on alternating weeks, trading duties with series producer Herbert Hirschman. In this Swift-directed installment, a mysterious man (John Baragrey) seemingly returns from the dead to upend the lives of a domineering mother (Jessie Royce Landis) and her tormented daughter (Marian Russell). Punctuated by close-ups and a gently foreboding atmosphere, this early effort by Swift anticipates her later innovative work directing hundreds of episodes of the cult-classic gothic soap opera Dark Shadows (1966–71).—Mark Quigley DCP. CBS. Production: A Mark Goodson-Bill Todman Production in association with the CBS Television Network. Producer: Herbert Hirschman. Director: Lela Swift. Writer: Art Wallace. With: Jessie Royce Landis, John Baragrey, Marian Russell. Preservation funding provided by the John H. Mitchell Television Preservation Endowment. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 16mm kinescope. Laboratory services by Endpoint Audio Labs. Screening 2 of 2 Justice: “House of Hatred” Year: 1955 Country: U.S. Runtime: 30 min. Digital. B&W. World Premiere of New Preservation Produced live, this Dragnet-style series explored social justice cases adapted from the files of the Legal Aid Society of New York City. Lela Swift directs this tense installment starring Gary Merrill (All About Eve, 1950) as an earnest lawyer attempting to help an innocent family being unfairly persecuted following the murder conviction of their son. At a time when the Hollywood Blacklist dictated many hiring practices in the film and television industry, the episode, written by Anne Howard Bailey (The Adams Chronicles, 1976), boldly examines the immorality of “guilt by association” and prejudice.—Mark Quigley DCP. NBC. Production: Talent Associates-John Rust Production. Producer: David Susskind. Director: Lela Swift. Writer: Anne Howard Bailey. With: Gary Merrill, Glenda Farrell, Frank McHugh. Preservation funding provided by the John H. Mitchell Television Preservation Endowment. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 16mm kinescope. Laboratory services by Endpoint Audio Labs.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Le Jeu de Robin et Marion (The Play of Robin and Marion, 1283) by Adam de la Halle

Time Sun 5/31 • 1PM - 4PM PDT RSVP

UCLA William Andrews Clark Memorial Library

The UCLA Early Music Ensemble, joined by internationally renowned vielle player/fiddler, Shira Kammen, presents a new adaptation of Adam de la Halle’s Le Jeu de Robin et Marion (The Play of Robin and Marion, 1283) outdoors on the Clark Library's grounds. The English adaptation by Dr. Lawrence Rosenwald (Professor Emeritus, Wellesley College) tells the original tale of Maid Marion, Robin Hood, and their merry friends as they outsmart a cruel knight. Modern audiences of all ages will feel enchanted as actors and singers transport us to the thirteenth century with music performed on instruments from the Middle Ages. Pack a picnic basket and join us in our feast to celebrate the knight’s defeat! Visit the event webpage to learn more and register to attend this free event.

#Arts #Music

Center for 17th- & 18th-Century Studies

Demedicalization and the Dying Body: Sallekhana, Kinship, and the Limits of Liberal Bioethics

Time Sun 5/31 • 2PM - 4PM PDT

Royce Hall, Room 306

Zoom

In this talk, Miki Chase (U of Wisconsin-Madison) explores how trajectories of illness and care, such as terminal cancer or anticipated cognitive decline, are reinterpreted through Jain doctrinal frameworks in the narratives of adult children of women who undertake the Jain ritual fast to death (sallekhana or santhara). Drawing on ethnographic accounts of women’s deaths in contemporary urban Jain households, Chase traces how narratives of bodily decline are reframed not as losses to be managed through medical intervention but as conditions of spiritual possibility that invite ascetic detachment and renunciation. Rather than resisting biomedical or bioethical paradigms outright, these narratives inhabit a complex zone of overlap where cognitive clarity is both a medical and religious ideal; the attenuation of pain is karmically elevated rather than clinically managed; and the logic of institutionalized care is subtly displaced not by the absence of obligation but by alternate forms of care. In tracing the limits of bioethical paradigms that presume the necessity of medicalization and institutional oversight, this talk describes how “illness narratives” and “santhara narratives” coalesce to challenge prevailing understandings of what it means to die well, and how suffering, pain, and the medicalized body is accounted for in the lives—and deaths—of Jain women.

#Cultural

Center for the Study of Religion

The Unwanted

Time Sun 5/31 • 2:30PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by producer-director José Luis Ruiz and John H. Mitchell Television Curator Mark Quigley. Special thanks to our community partner: UCLA Chicano Studies Research Center The Unwanted Year: 1975 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 50 min. Digital. Color. World Premiere of New Restoration “They come in search of the American Dream, only to find they have become the unwanted,” begins this groundbreaking television documentary on the troubles faced by Latino immigrants in the United States. Amid calls for broader governmental reform of the immigration process, the film focuses on human roles in the everyday drama, casting immigrants’ plight as powerless political pawns in a game that exploits undocumented migrants’ labor while criminalizing them at the same time. As Pablo, Gabriel and Yolanda Lopez and the Garcia family seek to improve their livelihood in a new country, away from economic troubles at home, they face repeated profiling, raids and deportation by border patrol and immigration enforcement officers, creating a revolving door of frustration for all involved. Producer-director José Luis Ruiz produced programs for KABC, KNBC and KCET throughout the 1970s, establishing a Latino presence in film and television, and was later executive director of the National Latino Communications Center (NLCC) and a founding board member of the National Association of Latino Arts and Culture (NALAC). Writer Frank del Olmo was the first Latino listed on the masthead of the Los Angeles Times, where he worked as a reporter for decades covering issues of illegal immigration and the Latino community, earning a Pulitzer Prize in 1984. The Unwanted won an award for Current Affairs Special at the 1975 Los Angeles Area Emmy Awards after its primetime airing on KNBC Channel 4. Praised at the time by the Los Angeles Times for the choice to “minimize statistics, to humanize stereotypes,” the documentary and the discussion around who gets the privilege to be American is as relevant as ever 50 years later, as immigration policy remains hotly debated and deportations continue. This revolving door has yet to stop spinning.—Brian Belak DCP. KNBC. Producer: José Luis Ruiz. Director: José Luis Ruiz. Writer: Frank del Olmo. Cinematographer: Larry Mitchell. With: Barry Newman. Restoration funding provided by the John H. Mitchell Television Preservation Endowment. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from multiple 16mm reversal prints, a 16mm work print and a 35/32mm track negative. Laboratory services by Prasad Corp. and Endpoint Audio Labs. Special thanks to José Luis Ruiz.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Screening: The Unwanted (1975)

Time Sun 5/31 • 2:30PM - 4PM PDT

World premiere of a new restoration! Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation led by the UCLA Film and Television Archive. “They come in search of the American Dream, only to find they have become the unwanted,” begins this groundbreaking television documentary on the troubles faced by Latino immigrants in the United States. Introduction by producer-director José Luis Ruiz and John H. Mitchell Television Curator Mark Quigley.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Institute of American Cultures

Touring California

Time Sun 5/31 • 3:40PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Research and Public Access Coordinator Nicole Ucedo. California glows on- and off-screen as our warm home and the dreamy backdrop to countless Hollywood and independent films from the 20th century. The Archive is honored to house and restore hundreds of productions set in California, including UCLA student work, news programs and home movies. This program features short films and excerpts filmed by and about Californians around the Golden State from the 1920s to the 1990s.—Nicole Ucedo Screening 1 of 10 California Scenics Presents Hollywood (excerpt) Year: circa 1920s Country: U.S. Runtime: 10 min. Digital. Tinted. Silent. Take a trip through Hollywood in this travelogue from the latter half of the 1920s. Documenting architectural relics, some still standing, some gone, the footage guides us through Los Angeles history at the height of the studio system. Featuring the Carthay Circle Theatre, Mary Helen Tea Room, Hollywood Storage Company Building and other historic sites. DCP. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 16mm print in The Packard Humanities Institute Collection at the Archive. Laboratory services by the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Special thanks to The Packard Humanities Institute. Screening 2 of 10 A Southland Scenic: “Fairyland Trails” Year: circa 1920s Country: U.S. Runtime: 9 min. 35mm. B&W and tinted. Silent. The “Switzerland of California,” as the film phrases it, Clear Lake and its surrounding parks and towns were the ideal vacation location for the San Franciscan family of the 1950s. In this travelogue we cruise through Northern California’s redwoods, lakes and clear skies. The magical allure of California is captured in these images, many of the natural phenomena still existing today. Production: Richard P. Young Studios. Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 35mm nitrate print. Laboratory services by Film Technology Company, Inc. Screening 3 of 10 Sylvia Ashley’s Home Movies (excerpt) Year: 1937–1939 Country: U.S. Runtime: 3 min. Digital. Color. Silent. The Lauretta Edlund Home Movies collection was donated to the UCLA Film & Television Archive by Lauretta Edlund. Her aunt, the 1930s socialite Sylvia Ashley, was married five times, one of them to Douglas Fairbanks Sr. The home footage was taken during their married years. Compiled out of chronological order, the 16mm film documents the couple lounging poolside with friends at their Pacific Coast Highway home as well as some travel footage. A brief scene shows Fairbanks walking on a hillside within the Edmund Goulding estate in Palm Springs. Guests to the Fairbanks home included Charlie Chaplin, Gloria Swanson, Fay Wray and many others. DCP. Director: Sylvia Ashley and friends. Digitally preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from a 16mm original picture reversal. Laboratory services by the UCLA Film & Television Archive. Special thanks to Lauretta Edlund and Kerry Edlund Morris. Screening 4 of 10 Hearst Metrotone News: “California Gets Famed Estate” Year: 1957 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 1 min. Digital. B&W. Hearst Corporation founder William Randolph Hearst’s palatial castle in San Simeon opens up to tourism after his passing. DCP. Screening 5 of 10 Hearst Metrotone News: “Rocket Town U.S.A.!” Year: 1948 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 2 min. Digital. B&W. A small town near Death Valley, dedicated to the research and production of rockets, gets its news camera close-up. DCP. Screening 6 of 10 Popular Science: “Frozen TV Dinners; Mechanical Brain at UCLA (The World’s First Mechanical Computer); The Flying Wing Northrop Jet” (excerpt) Year: 1947 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 4 min. Digital. Color. This segment of Popular Science shows campus life at UCLA in 1947 as students lounge outdoors while studying an early computer design. Two decades later on this same campus, another group of students and faculty would launch the first messages sent via the internet. DCP. Production: Paramount Pictures. Writer: George Brandt. Digitally restored by The Packard Humanities Institute from an original nitrate 35mm print at the PHI Stoa Film Lab. Screening 7 of 10 Ifé Year: 1993 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 5 min. Digital. B&W. West Coast Premiere of New Restoration Ifé is an ode to the city of San Francisco in the 1990s as well as to the women in the narrator, Ifé’s, life. Ifé cruises around San Francisco in her car, admiring the city, her new home. Through a relaxed, diaristic monologue, Ifé pays tribute to the freedom and joy the city offered for queer life in the ’90s. DCP. Distribution: Frameline. Director/Screenwriter: H. Len Keller. With: Celine Allouchery, Nsomeka Gomes. Restoration funding provided by Rachael Reiley and the UCLA

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Eight Girls in a Boat

Time Sun 5/31 • 4:55PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Archive Director May Hong HaDuong and television writer-producer and author David Stenn. Screening 1 of 4 Hearst Metrotone News: “The Wellesley Crew!” Year: 1947 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 1 min. Digital. B&W. Screening 2 of 4 Hearst Metrotone News: “Wellesley Girls Crew Race” (excerpt) Year: 1957 Country: U.S. Runtime: 30 sec. Digital. B&W. Silent. Screening 3 of 4 Hearst Metrotone News: “Water Skiing In Mountain Resorts, Lake Arrowhead, Calif.” (excerpt) Year: 1936 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 1 min. Digital. B&W. Screening 4 of 4 Eight Girls in a Boat Year: 1934 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 85 min. Digital. B&W. World Premiere of New Restoration At an all-girls school in Switzerland, Christa Storm (Dorothy Wilson) is a star pupil and stroke seat on the rowing team, but her clandestine affair with young chemist David Perrin (Douglass Montgomery) from another college leads her into trouble when she discovers she’s pregnant. As Christa’s attention in school slips, she incurs the discipline of the team’s steely coach, Hannah (Kay Johnson), who removes her from the boat and threatens expulsion. Worse, Christa’s businessman father (Walter Connelly) objects to marriage between Christa and David over concerns that David’s studies doom him to a life of poverty. How will Christa and her coming baby keep an even keel through all this choppy water? This pre-Code film was a remake of a 1932 German original (Acht Mädels im Boot) and billed as “America’s daring reply to Mädchen in Uniform (1931).” Paramount’s advertising played up the salacious suggestion of a female-only school where men are forbidden. Most of the cast members were selected through a nationwide beauty contest aimed at filling out the ensemble with new faces to Hollywood, including Jean Rogers of Flash Gordon (1936). Silent film star Peggy-Jean “Baby Peggy” Montgomery (also known as Diana Serra Cary), now a teenager, appears as one of the students. Mostly filmed on location at Lake Arrowhead in the San Bernardino Mountains, Eight Girls in a Boat shines during its rowing scenes as sunlight dapples on the water. The New York Times praised director Richard Wallace’s “considerable delicacy and tact” around the illicit motherhood theme and Dorothy Wilson’s “genuinely and shyly touching” portrayal of “the girl’s loneliness, her sense of ostracism and shame.” Wilson, known for being cast as the lead in The Age of Consent (1932) while working as a secretary at RKO, eventually married Eight Girls screenwriter Lewis R. Foster and largely retired from film roles just a few years later.—Brian Belak Production: Charles R. Rogers Productions, Inc. Distribution: Paramount Pictures. Producer: Charles R. Rogers. Director: Richard Wallace. Screenwriters: Helmut Brandis, Lewis R. Foster, Casey Robinson. Cinematographer: Gilbert Warrenton. With: Dorothy Wilson, Douglass Montgomery, Kay Johnson, Walter Connelly, Peggy-Jean “Baby Peggy” Montgomery. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive and The Packard Humanities Institute from the 35mm original nitrate picture negative, acetate composite fine grain positive and nitrate print. Laboratory services by The PHI Stoa Film Lab, Audio Mechanics, Simon Daniel Sound. Special thanks to the Library of Congress, NBCUniversal, David Stenn.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

Pitfall

Time Sun 5/31 • 7:40PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Screening 1 of 5 Hearst Metrotone News: “Now They're Mr. and Mrs. Dick Powell” Year: 1936 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 30 sec. Digital. B&W. Screening 2 of 5 Hearst Metrotone News: “That ‘New Look’ In Men's Hats!” Year: 1948 Country: U.S. Runtime: 1 min. Digital. B&W. Silent. Screening 3 of 5 Hearst Metrotone News: “Those He-Men Are Here Again!” Year: 1948 Country: U.S. Runtime: 30 sec. Digital. B&W. Silent. Screening 4 of 5 Hearst Metrotone News: “Police Test TV — Cops Play Robbers” Year: 1954 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 1 min 30 sec. Digital. B&W. Screening 5 of 5 Pitfall Year: 1948 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 86 min. Digital. B&W. World Premiere of New Restoration Described as “tight, swift and sexy” by the Los Angeles Daily News, Jay Dratler’s 1947 novel The Pitfall was a perfect vehicle for Hungarian émigré and hard-hitting genre director André de Toth. Despite jettisoning the novel’s more salacious moments due to Hays Code restrictions, screenwriter Karl Kamb and an uncredited William Bowers perfectly capture the trappings of infidelity, larceny and obsession, played out in sun-drenched post-war Southern California (as opposed to the rainy back alleys typical of the noir genre). The Regal Films production was shot at General Service Studios in Hollywood by longtime RKO cinematographer and frequent noir contributor Harry J. Wild. Iconic Los Angeles locations such as Santa Monica Bay, the downtown May Co. Building and the Hall of Justice were also utilized. Former Warner Bros. song and dance man Dick Powell had already proven his noir chops as hard-boiled private detective Philip Marlowe in 1944’s Murder, My Sweet, and he is impeccably cast as bored, married insurance man John Forbes, whose life is about to spiral out of control after meeting the alluring Mona Stevens, played by Lizabeth Scott. Raymond Burr had mostly been relegated to bit parts in the nine films he completed in 1948; Pitfall provided a breakout co-starring role, as private investigator J. B. MacDonald, which he plays with subversively kinky malice. Aided by a script that flips the traditional femme fatale archetype, Scott’s luminous portrayal reveals a more textured and sympathetic victim of circumstance, given that her character is the target of three wildly different and problematic men. The New York Times heralded Scott as “provocative, and acting better than she has ever done before,” and the performance is now considered one of her greatest. Despite some of its atypical attributes, Pitfall is a deftly executed meditation on the degeneration of mid-century masculinity, and it stands as one of the great entries in the noir genre.—Todd Wiener Production: Regal Films, Inc. Distribution: United Artists. Producer: Samuel Bischoff. Director: André de Toth. Screenwriter: Karl Kamb. Based on the novel by Jay Dratler. Cinematographer: Harry Wild. With: Dick Powell, Lizabeth Scott, Jane Wyatt, Raymond Burr. Restoration funding provided by the Century Arts Foundation. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from acetate dupe picture negatives and track negatives. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., Audio Mechanics.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive

The Other Love

Time Sun 5/31 • 9:35PM PDT

Billy Wilder Theater

Part of the 2026 UCLA Festival of Preservation. Free admission. No advance reservations. Ticketing is on a first come, first served basis. Seats will not be assigned. Introduction by Head of Preservation Jillian Borders. The Other Love Year: 1947 Country: U.S. Language: English Runtime: 99 min. Digital. B&W. World Premiere of New Restoration Based on an unpublished short story by Erich Maria Remarque, The Other Love explores the existential themes of love and death that recur throughout his novels, such as Three Comrades and Arch of Triumph. The plot concerns a concert pianist, Karen Duncan (Barbara Stanwyck), convalescing from tuberculosis in the Alps, who is tempted by a short, adventure-filled life as opposed to the sedate existence in the sanatorium that offers her a chance at a future. She must choose between two lovers: her doctor (David Niven) and an impetuous race car driver (Richard Conte). Director André de Toth, though better known for helming gutsy and tense low-budget Western and film noir projects than for high-fashion “woman’s pictures,” guides his stellar cast, as well as cinematographer Victor Milner and composer Miklós Rózsa, to deliver a moody and melodramatic gem. An early feature from Enterprise Productions, The Other Love was released to significant fanfare with an equally large marketing pitch. The independent production company was founded as an alternative to the vertically integrated major studios, with the egalitarian hope that talent partnerships would yield larger profit participation for all involved. The rollout for The Other Love spared no expense, with months of advance print and radio advertising, extensive promotional tie-ins and a U.S. premiere aboard a DC-6 airliner. Unfortunately, Enterprise’s bloated budgets took a toll, and the studio only lasted three years until its bankruptcy — though not before releasing such classics as Body and Soul (1947), Ramrod (1947) and Force of Evil (1949). After the premiere and preview screenings of The Other Love, the original longer ending was replaced with one deemed more palatable to American audiences for its general U.S. release. This original version, now restored, has not been seen by audiences since the 1940s.—Jillian Borders DCP. Production: Enterprise Productions, Inc. Distribution: United Artists. Producer: David Lewis. Director: André de Toth. Screenwriters: Ladislas Fodor, Harry Brown. Based on a story by Erich Maria Remarque. Cinematographer: Victor Milner. With: Barbara Stanwyck, David Niven, Richard Conte, Gilbert Roland, Joan Lorring. Restoration funding provided by the Century Arts Foundation. Restored by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from the 35mm original nitrate picture negative, nitrate fine grain positive and original nitrate track negatives. Laboratory services by Roundabout Entertainment, Inc., Audio Mechanics, Simon Daniel Sound. Special thanks to Paramount Pictures Archive, FotoKem, Deluxe Media Audio Services.

#Arts #MovieFilm

Library Film & Television Archive