LaLee's
Kin: The Legacy of Cotton
Albert
Maysles, Deborah Dickson, Susan Fromke
U.S., 2000
English
81 minutes • Color
Production: Maysles Films / HBO Films
Cinematographer: Albert Maysles
Principal Cast: Reggie Barnes, LaLee Wallace
SHOWTIMES:
Tues May 1 7:30pm Landmark
IMM Screening Room
LaLee's
Kin takes us deep into the Mississippi
Delta and the intertwined lives of LaLee Wallace, a great-grandmother
struggling to hold her world together in the face of dire poverty, and
Reggie Barnes, superintendent of the embattled West Tallahatchie School
System. The film explores the painful legacy of slavery and sharecropping
in the Delta.
62 -year
old LaLee Wallace is the lifeblood of this film. Matriarch to an extended
family that moves in and out of her house, LaLee is a woman of contradictions
and hope. "Could have been worse," she says quietly, surveying
the rat- and roach-infested trailer she has been granted through a government
program after her own house was condemned.
Wallace
grew up in a family of sharecroppers; she began picking cotton at the
age of six, stopped attending school a few years later, and still cannot
read. As happened throughout the South, sharecropping gave way to low-paid
labor, but with the enforcement of minimum wage laws and increasing
mechanization, even those jobs were hard to come by. Without education
or skills, Wallace and other residents of Tallahatchie County had few
options, and the poverty and hopelessness they felt was passed down
to the generations that followed. The film also profiles educator Reggie
Barnes, who is determined to stop this cycle.
Barnes
was hired as Superintendent of Schools in West Tallahatchie in an effort
to get the school district off probation, where it was placed by the
Mississippi Department of Education because of poor student performance
on statewide standardized tests (the Iowa Test for Basic Skills, ITBS).
If Barnes fails to raise the school fromits current Level 1 status to
a Level 2, the state of Mississippi has threatened to take over. Barnes
and his faculty oppose this, fearing that administrators in far-off
Jackson would not do as well in addressing the special needs of the
community. "It's a different world," he says. "We get
kids in kindergarten who don't know their names; we get kids in kindergarten
who don't know colors; we get kids in kindergarten who have never been
read to." He adds, "If we can educate the children of the
illiterate parent, we stop this vicious cycle."
