MASTER
 
 

Film Sneak Peek: Stacy Has a Thing for Black Guys

By Stacy (other events)

Monday, May 7 2018 7:30 PM 9:00 PM CDT
 
ABOUT ABOUT

ONE NIGHT ONLY!

Join us at the historic Texas Theatre for a sneak peek of Stacy Has A Thing For Black Guys, an independent, feature film shot entirely in Dallas featuring all-local talent before it hits the film festival circuit. The 30-minute screening will be followed by a reception and a short panel discussion with the cast and crew.

Think Get Out meets Who's Afraid Of Virginia Woolf?

Three people sit in a living room. A white married couple. And a black man. Drinking lemonade. And making small talk. However, as the night goes on, what started off as a seemingly safe and silly sex farce suddenly becomes slightly darker and more violent as hidden prejudices bubble up to the surface. In most contemporary films, the insecurities and anxieties that control our daily lives remain invisible, but Stacy Has A Thing For Black Guys operates with a heightened sense of awareness of the historical and social context in which we now live, offering a sharp and fiercely funny commentary on how we all choose to avoid honest conversations with others and ourselves about sex, gender, and race in America. TheaterJones called the script "a smart, funny, and layered look at marriage" that is "fiercely funny in unexpected ways" with "twists [that] are always surprising".

Written and Directed by Ruben Carrazana

Starring Brian Witkowicz, Christopher Dontrell Piper, and Anastasia Muñoz

Director of Photography: Adolfo Cantú-Villareal

First Assistant Camera: Brady Tulk

Second Assistant Camera: Ale Z. Melara

Sound Mixer: Ivan Cantú-Villareal

Gaffer: Brandon Satterfield

Head of Make-Up and Hair: Madeleine Rose

Script Supervisor: Debbie Crawford

Key Grip/Data Wrangler: Ivan Jasso

Production Designer: Jeffery Bryant Moffitt

Fight Coordinator: Jeff Colangelo

Color Correction by Adolfo Cantú-Villareal

Edited by Ruben Carrazana

Music by Nigel Newton

Produced by Ruben Carrazana, Stephanie Cleghorn Jasso, Adolfo Cantú-Villareal, Jeffery Bryant Moffitt, and Gabriella Padgett