swag外流

UPDATED: Actress to present film, press efforts to help slum dwellers

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Photos (2) and graphic: Connie Nielsen and Simon Larsen in "Lost in Africa", GSM Dean Steven C. Currall and the Human Needs Project logo
Connie Nielsen, pictured with Simon Larsen in <i>Lost in Africa,</i> is coming to the Mondavi Center next week to talk about the film and the Human Needs Project. The May 21 program will begin with Nielsen being interviewed by GSM Dean Steven C. Currall,

Dateline staff

Danish actress Connie Nielsen is coming to swag外流 next week to talk about the plight of millions of people around the world who live in slums like Kibera, a place she encountered outside Nairobi, Kenya, while making the film Lost in Africa.

The film will be screened during Nielsen's appearance, Saturday night, May 21, in the Vanderhoef Studio Theatre at the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. See the program details below.

UPDATE: Getting a ticket may be difficult but not necessarily impossible. They were given away free last week, and all had been spoken for as of 5 p.m. May 13. However, some may be returned and other ticket holders may not show up 鈥 so, if you are interested, contact the box office for further information. The Vanderhoef Studio Theatre holds only about 200 for a film screening.

鈥淭he film humanizes the lives of people in the slums and makes them real to us, not blankly apathetic the way victims are often portrayed in the press and in films. Of that I am really proud," said Nielsen, who starred opposite Russell Crowe in the Academy Award-winning Gladiator (2000).

Her swag外流 audience will be the first in the United States to see the film. Before that, Nielsen, who lives in Marin County, will sit down for an interview with Dean Steven C. Currall of the Graduate School of Management. A panel discussion and question-and-answer session will follow.

鈥渟wag外流 has a long-standing commitment to social and economic progress in developing communities around the world,鈥 Currall said. 鈥淭he film will promote an important dialogue among those who examine economic development, cultural studies and sociology, and matters concerning infrastructure such as water, sanitation and electricity.

鈥淲e must identify and promote healthy developing communities through improvement plans that are environmentally and economically sustainable.鈥

Lost in Africa debuted in Europe in 2010 with the title Kidnappet (Danish for 鈥渒idnapped鈥). The film centers on an 11-year-old boy, the soccer-loving Simon, who travels to his native Kenya with his Danish mother (played by Nielsen), who adopted him. While in Kenya, Simon loses his soccer ball 鈥 and, when he goes looking for it, gets lost in a slum and becomes the target of kidnappers.

Since making the film, Nielsen has become involved in the , serving as coordinator for what is described as a 鈥渨ater-based, clean technology project." It aims to establish community resource centers in slums around the world, providing clean water and public baths and sanitation, as well as energy 鈥 all via clean and sustainable technology.

The centers also would include information kiosks, adult education, Internet access and microloan offices 鈥 offering the tools by which slum dwellers can improve their own lives.

The program

Dean Currall鈥檚 interview with Nielsen is scheduled to begin at 6:30 p.m. The film, in Danish with English subtitles, will begin at 7. Afterward, Nielsen and others are due to participate in a discussion panel and a question-and-answer session, with Jim Wunderman as the moderator. Wunderman is president and chief executive officer of the  (a business-sponsored, public policy advocacy organization for the nine-county San Francisco Bay Area), and he is active with the Human Needs Project.
 

Media Resources

Dave Jones, Dateline, 530-752-6556, dljones@ucdavis.edu

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