Release Date: Tue, Jan 27, 2015

Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore and Others to Honor Civil Rights Leader Vel Phillips

For More Information:David Glisczinski, WPT publicist, [email protected] Kit: https://uwmadison.box.com/Vel-Phillips-Media-KitMilwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett, U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore and Others to Honor Civil Rights Leader Vel PhillipsEvent Will Feature a Preview of the New Wisconsin Public Television Film Vel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams. Community leaders, including Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett and U.S. Rep. Gwen Moore (both are scheduled to appear), will gather to celebrate Vel Phillips' career and lifetime achievements at the Milwaukee Art Museum, 5:30 p.m. Thursday, Jan. 29. Members of the media are invited to attend.More than 500 leaders from the greater Milwaukee community are expected to attend the event, which serves as the launch of a statewide initiative to celebrate Vel Phillips' lifetime of community service. Phillips — one of Wisconsin's most prominent civil rights leaders — helped lead the movement for Open Housing in Milwaukee in the 1960s and was the first African American woman elected Wisconsin Secretary of State.Phillips, along with family and friends, will also attend the event. In addition to the scheduled appearances by Barrett and Moore, Alderwoman Milele A. Coggs, Rep. Mandela Barnes and filmmaker Robert Trondson are scheduled to speak at the event.Vel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams, a new documentary film from Wisconsin Public Television (WPT) that tells the history of Vel Phillips will premiere 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 16 on WPT and on Milwaukee Public Television's Channel 10.About the FilmThe hour-long documentary film is the first of its kind to chronicle Phillips' life and career using archival film footage and contemporary interviews with Phillips and family and friends,including Hall of Fame baseball player Henry "Hank" Aaron. The film also features interviews with Vel Phillips' son Michael Phillips, former Gov. Patrick Lucey, former members of the Milwaukee Commandos and professor Patrick D. Jones, author of "Selma of the North: Civil Rights Insurgency in Milwaukee."The documentary explores the many ways Phillips strived to build a better community in Milwaukee and throughout Wisconsin. Beginning with her upbringing, Vel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams shows how Phillips achieved several firsts throughout her life, rising to prominence as one of Wisconsin's great civil rights leaders and later becoming Wisconsin Secretary of State, making her the nation's first African American woman elected to executive state office.In her own words and the words of others, the film documents the many challenges Phillips faced as the first African American and first female alderman on Milwaukee's Common Council and highlights Phillips' lengthy struggle to pass Open Housing legislation in Milwaukee in the 1960s — a time in which Phillips joined Father James Groppi in protest marches throughout Milwaukee.By weaving together Phillips' personal and professional narratives, the film illustrates how her husband Dale played a major supporting role throughout her political career. After the couple graduated from the University of Wisconsin Law School in 1951, and opened their own law firm, Dale continued to support Phillips' political career as a strategist, advisor and devoted father to the couple's two children.More than just a documentary, Vel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams is a statewide engagement project that will bring communities together for conversations about equity and race relations in the 21st century. Learn more at wpt.org/VelPhillipsVel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams, narrated by Emmy Award-winning actress S.Epatha Merkerson ("Law & Order"), is the first WPT documentary from producer/director Robert Trondson. WPT production director Kathy Bissen and WPT program director Garry Denny are executive producers of the film.Additional interviews shot for the film include University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee professor Genevieve McBride, former Milwaukee Journal writer Greg Stanford, former Milwaukee Sentinel writer Dan Patinos, former Capital Times writer Bill Hauda, African American community leader Reuben Harpole Jr., friends Leonard and Ruth Zubrensky, NAACP Youth Council member Margaret "Peggy" Rozga, Milwaukee Commando Prentice McKinney, and niece Shaune Curry.Funding for Vel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams is provided by the Harvey E. and Harriette V. Vick Fund of the Greater Milwaukee Foundation, the Helen Bader Foundation, The Evjue Foundation: Charitable Arm of the Capital Times, the Wisconsin Humanities Council, the Brewers Community Foundation, the
Milwaukee Chapter of The Links, Inc., and Friends of Wisconsin Public Television.Vel Phillips: Dream Big Dreams is a Wisconsin Public Television production. Additional engagement partners include the Wisconsin Historical Society, the Milwaukee Urban League, the National Endowment for the Humanities, Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Wisconsin Black Historical Society, Ex Fabula, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Milwaukee County Department on Aging, Marquette University, Cultures & Communities, Bay View Historical Society, America's Black Holocaust Museum and Alverno College.WPT is a service of the Educational Communications Board and University of Wisconsin-Extension.Wisconsin Public Television is a place to grow through learning on WHA-TV, Madison; WPNE-TV, Green Bay; WHRM-TV, Wausau; WLEF-TV, Park Falls; WHLA-TV, La Crosse; and WHWC-TV, Menomonie-Eau Claire.-END-

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