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1-15 of 15
- Poetic retelling of George Orwell's 1984, adapted from the 4th play created at the University of Tulsa.
- Three brothers fight for their lives and family as they get caught between the mob and a senator with a dirty secret.
- A mysterious lone Cowboy is blackmailed by a local business man into a meeting that was rigged from the start. A double cross is afoot, and the murderer unknown.
- An adaptation of a historic dinner between Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, Representative James Madison, and Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton that took place in June 1790, New York City. Pivotal topics were discussed, including the formation of a national bank and where to place the United States Capitol. The agreement they reached would have a drastic effect on the social and political developments of the budding United States.
- A woman is in for a big surprise when her new job as a mediator turns out to be about causing chaos, rather than bringing peace.
- In 1921, the Tulsa, Oklahoma neighborhood of Greenwood was one of the most affluent all-black communities in America. Known as the 'Black Wall Street,' it covered 40 square blocks and boasted more than 600 businesses and 15,000 residents which was demolished, scores killed, and thousands left homeless. This is the retailing of this story through a mix of mediums and performances as well as spoken word.
- A young school teacher has a bad day that gets progressively worse.
- Pawn: The Series is a five episode prequel to the original 2015 Pawn short film noir, and tells the story of Detective Tom Lester's early investigation into the dangerous Downtown mobster, Walter Rose. To learn the truth about Rose, Tom must seek the help of notorious Downtown criminals, his contacts in Downtown's underground, and an old friend from his past.
- Goin' Back to T-Town tells the story of Greenwood, an extraordinary Black community in Tulsa, Oklahoma, that prospered during the 1920s and 30s despite rampant and hostile segregation. Torn apart in 1921 by one of the worst racially-motivated massacres in the nation's history, the neighborhood rose from the ashes, and by 1936 boasted the largest concentration of Black-owned businesses in the U.S., known as "Black Wall Street." Ironically, it could not survive the progressive policies of integration and urban renewal of the 1960s. Told through the memories of those who lived through the events, the film is a bittersweet celebration of small-town life and the resilience of a community's spirit.
- The 1920s was a decade of unprecedented change for America. Soldiers returned from war. Well-paid jobs were plentiful. Women cast aside "proper behavior," and the Jazz Age erupted. It was an era of vibrant times and colorful characters, but for nearly a century, many have only seen it in black and white, until now. For the first time, we present the Roaring '20s in color, from Ford's assembly line to Charles Lindbergh's transatlantic flight and from speakeasies to New York's Wall Street, before and after the crash.