By Jorge Antonio Vallejos ~ Exclusion is something Kortney Ryan Ziegler does not tolerate. An
accomplished blogger and filmmaker, Ziegler (pictured here) noticed
that movies about transgender people ignored the stories of Black
people. “Trans films are predominantly white. They give space to trans
bodies, but they exclude people of color,” says Ziegler.No more. Ziegler’s film Still Black: A Portrait of Black TransMen was released last year (clips can be seen at stillblackfilm.org). The film has been shown in several LGBT film festivals including Frameline in San Francisco and Outfest in Los Angeles. Putting
out a casting call through various LGBT list serves and through word of
mouth, Ziegler initially conducted phone interviews before choosing to
focus on six Black trans men: Kylar Broadus, Ethan Young, Louis
Mitchell, Jay Welch, Nicholas Rashad and Carl Madgett. Charismatic and
honest, the men demonstrate that there are as many ways to be Black and
trans as there are Black trans people. “They may change their
bodies and who they are, but they’re still Black. It’s sexy,” says
Ziegler. “Whatever they do with their lives, their Blackness is still
visible.” Ziegler leaned on personal experience to make the
film. The Black 28-year-old identifies as genderqueer and rejects both
male and female pronouns, preferring the plural “they.” Raising
$25,000 through online fundraising, Ziegler shot the film over a
six-month period and edited for another six months. “If you don’t get a
grant you can still make a film—you just have to be creative,” says
Ziegler, who earned an undergraduate degree in film at University of
California at Santa Cruz and has produced five films. Still Black is Ziegler’s first feature documentary. Working
now on a Ph.D. in African American Studies at Northwestern University,
Ziegler is the writer behind the award-winning blog Bla(k)ademic
(blackademic.com). “Academic writing is exclusive. The blog helped me
reach a wider amount of people than my seminar papers can do,” says
Ziegler, who is now achieving that goal with the new film.“We get emails from all over, from people of different colors saying the film has changed their lives,” Ziegler says.But
Ziegler notes that no invites have come from film festivals, which
routinely fly out white trans filmmakers for screenings and talks. “We
would like to be treated the way white trans filmmakers are treated.
We’re not stupid. There’s a pattern where people of color are second.
Whites come first,” says Ziegler.Despite these disappointments,
Ziegler is still positive and hopes viewers of the film will step
outside their comfort zone. “The people in the film stepped outside of
theirs. I hope people see the film and feel the same way.” For more about the film, go to stillblackfilm.org. SOURCE OF THIS STORY