Showing posts with label Charlie Low. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Charlie Low. Show all posts

February 23, 2019

Jeff Adachi & The Golden Ring

~   
This morning I heard on the news that San Francisco Public Defender Jeff Adachi had a heart attack and died yesterday; I was dumbfounded to hear this.     
  
I met Jeff in 1999 when I was producing an event for the Asian American Arts Foundation (links below). Jeff was the chair for the event and we worked together for many hours and became friends. I liked him tremendously; he was gentle and soft spoken but when he did speak, it was with authority and certainty. He was polite to everyone and when needed, he could rationally direct them to what was the proper course to take. He was magnificent! 
     
      
Jeff Adachi 
photo by Quint King


It was an experience of a lifetime; while working on the production I met a few celebrities: Charlie Low of the Forbidden City, Rolling Stone journalist Ben Fong-Torres (link below), actress Pat Suzuki (link below), actor Lou Diamond Phillips (link below), Mayor Willie Brown and many others.    

We kept in touch for a while after the event but eventually drifted apart, however, I would watch his career progress over the years. In addition to his many legal activities he was active in social reform, hailed as a warrior for criminal justice reform and praised as a champion “for those who didn’t have a voice.”

On August 1, 2013 He gave a brilliant talk on the ethical dilemma of implicit or unconscious bias in the law at the Criminal Litigation Ethics Seminar at UC Hastings College of the Law (link below). 

He  wrote, produced, and directed The Slanted Screen, a 2006 documentary film about stereotypical depictions of Asian males in American cinema. The film won awards at the New York International Independent Film & Video Festival and at the Berkeley Film Festival. In 2009, he directed You Don't Know Jack: The Jack Soo Story, which won the best documentary film at the Accolade Film Festival

In 2016, he made the film America Needs a Racial Facial, an eight-minute history of racism in the U.S. It won the best short documentary at the Hollywood Independent Documentary Film Festival awards in February of 2016 and earned a distribution deal by the Films for the Humanities and Sciences later that year.    


Jeff Adachi - February 21, 2016 
photographer unknown


His 2017 documentary Defender, co-directed with Jim Choi, won best documentary at the Independent Television Festival. The 70-minute piece followed a racially charged case tried by Adachi as well as a case handled by the office's immigration unit.        

Jeff Adachi is believed to have suffered a heart attack at 46 Telegraph Place near Coit Tower. He was 59 years old. He will be missed by many people.     
     
     
      Viewfinder links:        
   
Jeff Adachi articles/mentions      
Flower Drum Song & Pat Suzuk     
Golden Ring Awards ~ October 2, 1999        
       
Net links:        

SF Public Defender ~ Talk: Implicit Bias - August 1, 2013    
ABC News ~ obit
KQED ~ obit       
LA Times ~ obit
SF Chronicle ~ obit
SF Examiner ~  obit      
        
YouTube links:        
         
Jeff Adachi - Golden Ring Awards 1999       
Lou Diamond Phillips - Golden Ring Awards 1999         
Ben Fong Torres - Golden Ring Awards 1999       


"The history of man has just begun; 
in the aeons which lie before him 
lie limitless hope or limitless despair."
                      ~ Jeff Adachi - 2013


Styrous® ~ Saturday, February 23, 2019    








February 17, 2014

Golden Ring Awards ~ October 2, 1999

~
As I have observed in previous postings, it is interesting that people and events from various periods of my life have been reappearing in the last two or three years. I was surfing through YouTube a few days ago and discovered an event I was involved with in 1999.

It was early in 1999 that Jeff Adachi approached me about scoring the theme song for the Asian American Arts Foundation's awards ceremony to be held on October 2nd of that year. At that time he was a deputy public defender with the San Francisco Public Defender’s Office. He later became Public Defender of the City and County of San Francisco.

While working on and researching the music for the production I had the opportunity to meet many interesting people. It was a role call of luminaries.

The presentation of awards was captured on video and and I found they now can be seen on YouTube. There are 18 videos in all. Below are links to those videos of the honorees, presenters and performers of that event, the 1999 awards ceremony of the Asian American Arts Foundation.

Enjoy, Styrous®


Links to YouTube urls:


1-18 The Mountain Brothers - performance

2-18 Janice Mirikitani & Willie Brown - Lifetime Achievement Award
Amy Hill, Janice Mirikitani, Mayor Willie Brown, Genevieve Lee

3- 18 Jeff Adachi - Chairman & Producer
Amy Hill, Jeff Adachi

4-18 Tatyana Ali - Emerging Artist Award
Amy Hill, Dante Basco, Fakin'the Funk, The Fresh Prince of Bel Air,

5-18 Pearl Ubungen - Film: International Hotel
Amy Hill, Pearl Ubungen, Dance

6-18 Chang Chen Yi - Animation Award
Amy Hill, Gedde Watanabe, Chang Chen-Yi, Mulan

7-18 Ann Carli - Film & Music Producer
Amy Hill, Ben Fong Torres, Jada Pinkett Smith, Will Smith, Ann Carli

8-18 Julie Plug - performance

9-18 "Remembering Charlie Low"
Amy Hill, Kelvin Han Yee, The Forbidden City Tribute, "Remembering Charlie Low"

10-18 "Remembering Charlie Low" Honored Award
Amy Hill, Pat Suzuki, Charlie Low, Joyce Low, The Forbidden City

11-18 Chris Chan Lee - Asian American Filmmakers
James Shigeta, Miiko Taka, Chris Chan Lee, Yellow

12-18 Mia Wu & Dick Gallagher - performance
Amy Hill, Mia Wu, Dick Gallagher

13-18 Phillip Rhee - Best of the Best
Amy Hill, Robin Shou, Phillip Rhee

14-18 Ming Na - Ana Mae Wong Award
Amy Hill, Rick Yune, Ming Na Wen, Mulan

15-18 - One Vo1ce - performance
Amy Hill, One Vo1ce, What you think about me

16-18 Lou Diamond Phillips - Honor Award
Amy Hill, Lou Diamond Phillips




Styrous® ~ Monday, February 17, 2014