Gei Zantzinger

Alfred Geist Zantzinger (April 6, 1936 February 16, 2007) was an American documentary filmmaker specializing in documentaries about traditional musics of the world. He directed and produced films about the musics of Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Cape Verde, Lesotho, South Africa, and Brittany.

He was the grandson of noted Philadelphia architect Clarence C. Zantzinger.[1]

He graduated from Westminster School in Connecticut and earned bachelor's and master's degrees in folklore and anthropology from the University of Pennsylvania.

Zantzinger began making films in southern Africa in 1966, while a Ph.D. candidate in the folklore/folklife program at the University of Pennsylvania. He studied film with Sol Worth at the University of Pennsylvania's Annenberg School of Communications.

Zantzinger also worked as a record producer. He lived in Devault, Chester County, Pennsylvania, where his production company, Constant Spring Productions, was based.

He died of leukemia on February 16, 2007, at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania.

Filmography (includes country filmed in)

  • 1971 - KUR
  • 1973 - MADA (Mozambique)
  • 1973 - DEIVIS QDE LAINA (Mozambique)
  • 1973 - ONE PIECE 4EVA
  • 1974 - Ola Belle Reed: Memories
  • 1978 - Urban and Rural Ceremonies (Zimbabwe)
  • 1978 - Matepe dza Mhondoro: A Musical Healing Party (Zimbabwe)
  • 1978 - Dambatsoko: An Old Cult Center (Zimbabwe)
  • 1978 - Karanga Songs in Christian Ceremonies (Zimbabwe)
  • 1978 - The Technique of the Mbira dza Vadzimu (Zimbabwe)
  • 1978 - Religion at the Family Level (Zimbabwe)
  • 1980 - The Chopi Timbila Dance (Mozambique)
  • 1980 - Ndando Yawusiwana
  • 1981 - Audrey Bronson
  • 1984 - Songs of the Badius (Cape Verde)
  • 1985 - Songs of the Adventurers (Lesotho)
  • 1990 - SUSUMU - A Tone Poem in Three Movements
  • 1994 - A Spirit Here Today: A Scrapbook of Chopi Village Music (Mozambique; filmed in 1973 but not edited until 1994)
  • 1999 - Of Pipers & Wrens/De Souffle et de Roseau (Brittany)

Notes

  1. "Obituary: Clarence Clark Zantzinger, Jr". St. Paul's School. Winter 1994. Archived from the original on October 29, 2013. Retrieved September 16, 2013.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.