Past Film/Video

The Learning Tree

(Gordon Parks, 1969)

Man being filmed

The first Hollywood studio film directed by an African American, The Learning Tree is multitalented Gordon Parks’s adaptation of his own semiautobiographical novel for the screen. Set in 1920s segregation-era Kansas, this poignant coming-of-age story features all the hallmarks of the genre—from neighborhood crushes and the discovery of sex to moral crisis. But tensions are heightened throughout as its young main character tries to navigate a community where the white residents make the rules. Recommended for ages 13 and over. (107 mins., 35mm)

Film still of a group of young men gathered together by a tree

The Learning Tree, image courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

Film sill of young men sitting in the dark illuminated by firelight

The Learning Tree, image courtesy of Warner Bros. Pictures

SEASON SUPPORT FOR FILM/VIDEO

Rohauer Collection Foundation

 

SUPPORT FOR THE FILM/VIDEO STUDIO PROGRAM 

Institute of Museum and Library Services

The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts

National Endowment for the Arts

 

SUPPORT FOR FREE AND LOW-COST PROGRAMS

Huntington Bank

Cardinal Health Foundation

 

GENERAL OPERATING SUPPORT FOR THE WEXNER CENTER

Greater Columbus Arts Council

Ohio Arts Council

Columbus Foundation

Nationwide Foundation

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Past Film/Video

The Learning Tree