molly's world
Sneak-peek the gripping new film about legendary Texas journalist Molly Ivins
Fans of Molly Ivins, the legendary Texas journalist, humorist, and media firebrand whose byline appeared in more than 400 newspapers nationwide, will be glad to know the wait is almost over for the new documentary about her life, Raise Hell: The Life and Times of Molly Ivins.
The gripping new film hits theaters around Texas on August 30, but Alamo Drafthouse will feature special advance screenings around the state on August 28. Locally, they'll take place at Alamo in North Richland Hills and Denton at 7:45 pm.
After the screenings, a conversation with filmmaker Richard Linklater, former Texas Agriculture Commissioner Jim Hightower, Texas Tribune Editor-in-Chief Emily Ramshaw, and director Janice Engel will will be live-streamed from an Austin theater.
The documentary is directed by award-winning filmmaker Janice Engel (no relation to Margaret and Allison Engel, the twin-sister journalists who wrote the 2010 play Red Hot Patriot: The Kick-Ass Wit of Molly Ivins).
Raise Hell chronicles Ivins' career as a sharp-tongued, rabble-rousing, leftist reporter and columnist who went after corruption wherever she found it — most particularly, in her home base of Texas.
Although her bylines appeared in The New York Times, Washington Post, and Texas Observer, she spent more than two decades of her career writing for newspapers in Dallas-Fort Worth: at the Dallas Times-Herald from 1981-1991, and at the Fort Worth Star-Telegram from 1992-2001.
Ivins died in Austin in 2007 at the age of 62, after a long bout with Stage 3 inflammatory breast cancer.
Ivins was not your typical political reporter. Brash, witty, and standing 6 feet tall, she spent her 40-year career fighting corruption, defending free speech, and making all the right enemies. A pioneering woman in a male-dominated field, she skewered the good old boys’ system with her incisive writing and her gift for deploying a well-timed bon mot torpedo on her targets.
By turns moving and hilarious, the film is a candid portrait of a reporter who shined with moral clarity, even while matching legislators drink for drink. Dan Rather, Paul Begala, and Rachel Maddow are some of the people who are interviewed. A portion of ticket sales from the film will be split between the ACLU and The Texas Observer.
Raise Hell will hit screens nationwide in September. It will screen six times, September 6-8, at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.
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Showings for Raise Hell: The Life and Times of Molly Ivins are available via the documentary website.