This April marks the first in-person Full Frame Documentary Festival in five years. Itโ€™s also the first without Nancy Buirski, the Emmy and Peabody Award-winning filmmaker who founded the festival in 1998. Buirski, who directed the festival for a decade, died on August 29 at age 78. 

On Thursday, the downtown Durham festival released its full slate of programming for the sprawling April 4-7 event. It includes 50 titles, 35 features, and 15 short films from 22 countries. โ€œIn Process: Documenting Creativity,โ€ the festivalโ€™s annual thematic program, is curated by filmmakers Jessica Edwards and Gary Hustwit, who were originally tapped to curate the 2020 program, which was canceled due to the onset of COVID-19. Subsequent festivals in 2021 and 2022 were held virtually, while the 2023 festival was paused amid institutional uncertainty at Dukeโ€™s Center for Documentary Studies. The center has organized the event since its inception. 

The festival will hold a tribute for Buirski alongside filmmaker D. A. (Penny) Pennebaker, a Full Frame board member who died in 2019. 

โ€œRemembering Nancy and Penny, I cannot think of two people who are more responsible for shaping Full Frame as a cultural institution,โ€ co-festival director and artistic director Sadie Tillery wrote in a press release. โ€œFull Frame would not be Full Frame without them, and it means the world to me to highlight their invaluable contributions this year.โ€ 

The tribute showcases three of Buirskiโ€™s films, including The Loving Story, a documentary about the interracial couple behind the history-making Supreme Court case Loving v. Virginia. The tribute will also feature four documentaries by Pennebaker, who often trained his camera on mid-century icons like Bob Dylan, Duke Ellington, and Norman Mailer. 

A still from Eno directed by Gary Hustwit and produced by Hustwit and Jessica Edwards. Photo courtesy of the filmmakers.
A still from Eno directed by Gary Hustwit and produced by Hustwit and Jessica Edwards. Photo courtesy of the filmmakers.

Music icons emerge as a theme elsewhere in the festival with the screening of Eno, directed by Hustwit, and produced by Hustwit and Edwards, following the creative process of musician Brian Eno. 

โ€œFull Frame is enormously proud of this yearโ€™s NEW DOCS and Invited Programs,โ€ said Tillery. โ€œThese selections come from around the world and illuminate a stirring array of ideas and lived experiences. They also exemplify the craft of documentary filmmakingโ€”its extraordinary range of form and approach.โ€

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Sarah Edwards is culture editor of the INDY, covering cultural institutions and the arts in the Triangle. She joined the staff in 2019 and assumed her current role in 2020.