Lily Gladstone, the first indigenous actress to win a Golden Globe, discusses the resurgence of Indigenous filmmaking and the treatment of Indigenous women. She emphasizes the interconnectedness of how Indigenous women are treated with the treatment of the land. The 'Gladstone effect' is being felt profoundly in the Blackfeet Nation, where she grew up, particularly in schools and with children.
Call it the "Gladstone effect." And nowhere is it being felt more profoundly than in the schools and with the children of the Blackfeet Nation, where Lily Gladstone, the first indigenous actress to win a Golden Globe, grew up in Montana. @karinbrulliard https://t.co/l88nCPFbZN
Call it the "Gladstone effect." And nowhere is it being felt more profoundly than in the schools and with the children of the Blackfeet Nation, where Lily Gladstone, the first indigenous actress to win a Golden Globe, grew up in Montana. @karinbrulliard https://t.co/XtpjeAZjkI
Call it the "Gladstone effect." And nowhere is it being felt more profoundly than in the Blackfeet Nation, where Oscar nominee Lily Gladstone grew up. @karinbrulliard https://t.co/gorHo7fQ7n
Lily Gladstone: “How we treat our Indigenous women, in particular, is the biggest indicator of how we treat our land. They’re the same thing.” https://t.co/eDkMbS6Mjl https://t.co/FLuSJKcMaP
“In the 1920s, we Natives were making our own films, and people cared about what we had to say. There’s a resurgence of that again,” says Lily Gladstone. “For Indigenous peoples on this continent, we’ve already lived through the end of the world.” https://t.co/eDkMbS6Mjl https://t.co/EifvYxNUH5