Don't miss out! Get the best events & activities in your inbox weekly...
Home > Events > Arts & Culture > Film & Discussion Blackness and Identity Making in Popular Music
Submit Event View Newsletter


Film & Discussion Blackness and Identity Making in Popular Music

Report Error
Email It
Write a Review
You are Viewing a Past Event

If this is a recurring event that will be happening again this year, please let us know.
Dates:Friday, October 4, 2024 - Friday, October 4, 2024
Hours:6:00 pm
Ages:Adults
In/Outdoor:Indoor
Cost:Free
Category:Arts & Culture
Film Screening: Milli Vanilli

Conversation with Alexander Ghedi Weheliye and Matthew D. Morrison

• 6:00 PM

Film Screening of Milli Vanilli Documentary directed by Luke Korem, produced by MRC and Keep on Running Pictures USA 2023, 106min, digital

MILLI VANILLI tells the story of Robert “Rob” Pilatus and Fabrice “Fab” Morvan, who became fast friends during their youth in Germany.

With Rob coming from a broken home and Fab having left an abusive household, they shared a similar upbringing and future goal: to become famous superstars.

In a few short years, their dreams came true.

In 1989 their first album went platinum six times in the U.S., and the hit song “Girl You Know It’s True” sold more than 30 million singles worldwide.

Rob and Fab, better known as “Milli Vanilli,” became the world’s most popular pop duo in 1990 and won the GRAMMY for Best New Artist.

However, their ascension to success came with a devastating price that ultimately led to their infamous undoing.

• 8:30 PM

Conversation with Alexander Ghedi Weheliye and Matthew D. Morrison

Taking the 2023 documentary about music group, Milli Vanilli, as the starting point, the conversation will focus on the role of Blackness and identity making in the history of German popular music.

Milli Vanilli’s late 1980s racialized performance forms part of a longer tradition of Blackness and Blackface produced in Germany during 1970s and 1980s Eurodisco as well as Eurodance in the 1990s.

In this context, Blackness forms an integral part of how Germany imagines itself in relation to the rest of the world.

With the help of sound samples, Alexander Ghedi Weheliye and Matthew D. Morrison give insight into issues of cultural appropriation that have plagued popular music from the beginning with a focus on Germany and the US.

WEBSITE↑ top

www.goethe.de/ins/us/en/sta/bos/ver.cfm?event_id=25958551

LOCATION↑ top

Goethe-Institut Boston, Boston, MA, 02116 map

RELATED LINKS↑ top

Info changes frequently. We cannot warrant it. Verify with Film & Discussion Blackness and Identity Making in Popular Music before making the trek. If you find an error, please report it...
Report Error
Popular Resources
Boston with Kids
Free Things to Do
Family & Kids Events
Mass RMV - DMV
Boston Birthday Parties
Boston Museums
Rose Kennedy Greenway
Boston Aquarium
Boston Massachusetts
Boston Bowling
Boston Haymarket
Boston Whale Watching