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ASIAN AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL
FILM FESTIVAL
FACT SHEET
AAIFF is proudly known as 'The First
Home to Asian American Cinema.' It was the nation's
first festival dedicated to screening works by media
artists of Asian descent and, 26 years later, continues
to be a leading showcase for Asian American film and
video. Founded in 1978, AAIFF was originally held at
the Henry Street Art for Living Center in New York's
Lower East Side. For a consecutive year, films, panel
discussions, Q&A sessions, and workshops will be held
in association with the Asia Society at their state
of the arts facilities on Park Avenue in NYC.
The festival takes place in the U.S.'s
second-largest Asian American market. AAIFF reaches
an audience of more than 10,000 during its two weekends
of screenings, plus thousands more during a post-festival
tour of American cities. Hundreds of thousands of viewers
and readers follow the festival in local, national and
international media coverage...
Did you know that the Asian American
International Film Festival?
- Is the first and longest-running
festival to showcase Asian and Asian America media
works in the United States.
- Has been held in five different
locations as it gained popularity: Henry Street Art
for Living Center (1978), New York University (1979-1984),
Rosemary Theatre (1985-1995), The French Institute
(1996-2001), The Asia Society (2000-present)
- Has also screened films in Queens
at Queens Theatre in Flushing Meadows in Corona Park.
(1995) and the American Museum of the Moving Image
(1997).
- Has provided the U.S. premieres of
acclaimed film directors including Wayne Wang, Mira
Nair, and Marilou Diaz-Abaya, and Ang Lee.
- Has screened films from countries
including: Canada, China (Hong-Kong and mainland),
India, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, Singapore, Taiwan,
the Philippines, Australia, New Zealand, Iran, Germany,
and England.
- Has launched its first National Tour
in 1982 and the Tour continues to be the only Touring
Festival of its kind.
- Has helped established other Asian
film festivals in major cities including Chicago,
Los Angeles, San Francisco, Toronto, and Vancouver.
- Presents an annual Emerging Director
Award to a first/second time feature director.
- Holds a staged screenplay reading
from the winner of our Screenplay Competition.
- Has awarded the Asian American Media
Award since 1987 to Asian Americans who have contributed
significantly to Asian American media. Previous recipients
are: Wayne Wang(1987); Loni Dong (1988); Christine
Choy (1989), James Yee (1990), Steven Okazaki (1991);
Mira Nair (1992), Ang Lee (1993); Joan Chen (1994);
Kayo Hatta and Freida Lee Mock (1995), Russell Wong
(1996); Jessica Yu and Arthur Dong (1997), Michelle
Yeoh (1998); Sammo Hung(1999); Andy Lau (2000); Tamlyn
Tomita (2001); Marilou Diaz-Abaya (2002)
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