Breaking Sacred Ground
The Cinema of Kathleen Collins
Born in 1942, raised in Jersey City, and educated at Skidmore and the Sorbonne, Kathleen Collins was an activist with SNCC during the Civil Rights Movement who went on to carve out a career for herself as a playwright and filmmaker, during a time when black women were rarely seen in those roles. She was married twice and had two children, who she raised in Piermont, New York. She died young, at age 46, from breast cancer. Her most known work is the film Losing Ground from 1982, which went largely unseen for more than thirty years before being released in 2015. Two never-before released collections of her writings, Whatever Happened to Interracial Love? and Notes from a Black Woman's Diary were published in 2016 and 2019, to much acclaim.1
- 1This collection was created in collaboration with Courtisane on the occasion of the screening Milestones: Losing Ground.