M.F.K. Fisher Film Newsletters, 2025
M.F.K. Fisher Newsletter, July 31, 2025Dear Fisher Friends, Last Thursday’s screening at the Sequoia Cinema in Mill Valley was a complete sell-out (300 seats) followed by a terrific conversation with Director Greg Bezat, Fisher’s daughter Kennedy Golden, “Consider the Oyster “artists Tabitha Soren and Libby Black, and the voice of Mary Frances, Mary Dilts. An encore screening will take place tonight, Thursday, July 31 at the Sequoia at 6pm. The showing will be followed by a lively conversation with former Food & Wine Editor for Sunset Magazine, Jerry Anne Di Vecchio. MFK POSTER Sequoia Advance tickets are available here. They will also be available at the theater box office at showtime. 25 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. (415) 818-9204 Director Greg Bezat was a 22-year-old when Di Vecchio hired him to join her for a series of interviews with M.F.K. Fisher in Glen Ellen. It started his interest in Fisher as both a writer and fascinating character. Jerry was a longtime friend of Fisher and is often considered “food royalty,” as she seems to know everyone. Jerry Di Vecchio “Jerry worked at Sunset for over 40 years. She has edited dozens of cookbooks, including The Peppers Cookbook, the Grill by the Book series and 15 Best of Sunset books. Jerry was a founding member of the San Francisco chapter of Les Dames d’Escoffier and was the 2001 recipient of their Grand Dame lifetime achievement award. She has held positions at the American Institute of Wine & Food and the International Association of Culinary Professionals and has been a judge on MasterChef. Despite her illustrious career, Jerry never uses a cookbook.” (Courtesy of Eating Well magazine) The Anthony Meier Gallery (next door to the theater) will continue the M.F.K. Fisher- inspired exhibit, “Consider the Oyster” through August 8. The gallery is open Tuesday-Friday from 10am-5pm (and until 5:30pm on July 31 before the screening). Admission to the exhibit is free. Learn more and see all of the works https://www.anthonymeier.com/ We thought you’d like to see a few photos of artists discussing their art at last Thursday’s reception. Tabitha Soren – The Arrow Rel Robinson – Supreme Fiction II Terri Freidman- HEAL Libby Black – Consider the Oyster MFK Fisher Three generations of M.F.K. Fisher’s family spent this past weekend together at her “Last House,” carefully packing items that have been on display in Glen Ellen for the past eight years. Learn more and see a photo at the M.F.K. Fisher Facebook page where there are regular updates and quotes posted. Kennedy Golden, Fisher’s grandson Alex Wright and grandnephew & author Luke Barr (Provence,1970, Ritz & Escoffier) have a candid conversation with Clark Wolf on “Savoring Sonoma.” They also talk about the Sixth Annual M.F.K. Fisher Emerging Writers Contest. Listen here. The Community of Writers Summer Workshop featured Greg and Gary for a wonderfully received presentation on how to make a film about a writer that celebrates her words and is visually exciting. We showed the first eight minutes as a teaser and there was much conversation after from the 50 authors who gathered for the session. The Workshop is an exciting gathering of established and promising new writers. We were pleased to see quite a few of them attend the Sequoia show. Cat Action Team is presenting an exclusive screening of The Art of Eating: The Life of M.F.K. Fisher on Saturday, August 2nd at the Skyway Center, 655 Skyway Road, San Carlos. There is a 5:30pm champagne reception for all donors – screening to follow from 6pm to 7:45pm. Tickets at kjproduction@aol.com. New York Times writer Wesley Morris also hosts the lively Cannonball podcast and recently was joined by chef/writer Samin Nosrat to discuss the popular TV show The Bear. It is a terrific look into the world of working at a restaurant and the highlights of the series. Their discussion of “time” especially resonated with us because of a wonderful scene in The Art of Eating: The Life of M.F.K. Fisher where she talks about time. “When shall we live if not now?” Listen here. Until the next time remember this wisdom from Mary Frances, “Dining partners, regardless of gender, social standing, or the years they’ve lived, should be chosen for their ability to eat – and drink! – with the right mixture of abandon and restraint. They should enjoy food, and look upon its preparation and its degustation as one of the human arts.”
M.F.K. Fisher Film Newsletter, July 3, 2025
“I began in Albion Michigan and was born on July 3,1908 in a heat wave. I leapt forth only a few minutes before midnight in a supreme effort from my mother whose husband had assured her that I would be named Indepencia if I arrived on the Fourth.” From Among Friends Happy Birthday to Mary Frances wherever you are. For M.F.K. Fisher fans she is as close as our bookshelves. She would have been 117 years old today.
We have a San Francisco Bay Area screening scheduled for Thursday, July 24 at the Sequoia Cinema in Mill Valley. It is a collaboration with the Anthony Meier gallery adjacent to the theater. The screening at 6:30pm will be preceded by an artist-led walk through of Consider the Oyster open to everyone. Consider the Oyster will be available for viewing through August 8,2025 at Anthony Meier, 21 Throckmorton Ave, Mill Valley. Hours: 10am to 5pm, Tuesday – Friday Greg and Gary are honored to have been invited by Community of Writers to participate in the Summer 2025 Writers Workshop in Olympic Village to discuss Bezat’s approach to making a film that honors the written word while making a richly visual experience. Cat Action Team is presenting an Exclusive screening of The Art of Eating: The Life of M.F.K. Fisher on Saturday, August 2nd at the Skyway Center, 655 Skyway Road, San Carlos. There is a 5:30pm champagne reception for all donors – screening to follow from 6pm to 7:45pm. Tickets at kjproduction@aol.com. The Sixth Annual “Last House Writing Contest,” hosted by the nonprofit Audubon Canyon Ranch, has announced the 2025 winners from a large number of U.S. and international submissions. This year’s theme was “water.” The range of writing styles and genres was adventurous and impressive, making for great reading. See a list of all the winners and read their stories here. The James Beard Foundation announced the 2025 M.F.K. Fisher Distinguished Writing Award on June 14 went to Jeff Gordinier and George McCalman for their article “The City that Rice Built” from Food & Wine magazine. Read the eye-opening article here that explores the history of Charleston, South Carolina, and its deep connection to rice cultivation. The article highlights how rice shaped the city’s economy, culture, and cuisine, particularly the development of Gullah Geechee foodways. It also delves into the legacy of rice farming, including the use of enslaved labor and the eventual decline of rice as a major cash crop. The award this year was presented by Padma Lakshmi.
Check out all the Awards at the James Beard Foundation honoring the nation’s top food authors, broadcast producers, hosts, journalists, podcasters, and social media content creators. Watch the Awards Ceremony here. Audubon Canyon Ranch mentioned above has been the location of Mary Frances’s Last House. On June 25 Gary and his wife Cathy joined the last tour of Last House on the Bouverie Preserve. It was superbly led by docents Suzanne Lempke and Mike Hyman with closing remarks from retiring Coordinator Susie Allen who has organized educational programs, events, fundraisers, and tours for the past six years. We are sorry to learn that this beautiful spot and the quirkily designed house full of art, books, and furniture that defined the author will no longer be accessible to the public. All M.F.K. Fisher programming ceased on June 30, 2025. We reached out to ACR for more information. The nonprofit acknowledged the global significance and enduring contribution of M.F.K. Fisher to literature and life. However, curating and running a program dedicated to M.F.K. Fisher is well outside the mission of the organization, and as Gardali told a dedicated group of volunteers, “we must invest our trusted resources toward achieving strategic outcomes.” Fisher penned thirteen books during twenty-one years of residence in her ‘Last House,’ which was built for her by Bouverie Preserve landowner and architect David Pleydell-Bouverie. It was here that she welcomed friends such as Julia Child, James Beard, and Maya Angelou for conversations at the table. Fisher lived in Last House on the Bouverie Preserve from 1971 until her death in 1992. The organization will continue to honor M.F.K. Fisher by working with her daughter Kennedy Golden to install a plaque on Last House that notes her life there and making the house welcoming to groups who wish to celebrate and honor M.F.K. Fisher, as coordinated by the family. Kennedy and Alex wrote, “In close partnership with ACR, the M.F.K. Fisher Literary Trust has assumed possession of all M.F.K. Fisher-related items within Last House, including those generously donated by so many people. These items are being carefully itemized and stored, and we look forward to sharing exciting plans for the future soon. This is only the end of one chapter, but the future is bright!” We are lucky to have such passionate and forward-thinking Trustees to lead M.F.K. Fisher’s legacy for current and future generations.
Woman’s Day: April 1, 2025
Dear Friends, “Dining partners, regardless of gender, social standing, or the years they’ve lived, should be chosen for their ability to eat – and drink! – with the right mixture of abandon and restraint. They should enjoy food, and look upon its preparation and its degustation as one of the human arts.” Dear Friends, Enjoy. ************************************************************************************* Dear Friends, During the past month people gathered with family and friends for the traditional holidays. Around our table M.F. K. Fisher’s joy in bringing people together over good food and wine with lively conversation was a theme much appreciated. But she didn’t wait for a holiday. Every chance she could get was a joyous occasion for all. “The smell of good bread baking, like the sound of lightly flowing water, is indescribable in its evocation of innocence and delight… [Breadmaking is] one of those almost hypnotic businesses, like a dance from some ancient ceremony. It leaves you filled with one of the world’s sweetest smells… there is no chiropractic treatment, no Yoga exercise, no hour of meditation in a music-throbbing chapel. that will leave you emptier of bad thoughts than this homely ceremony of making bread.” The Art of Eating At every screening of “The Art of Eating- The Life of M.F.K. Fisher” one of the most often asked questions is about the images in the movie. There are 488 rare images and film clips that accompany the illuminating interviews and Mary Frances’s eloquent words. Her daughter Kennedy provided the film’s director, Greg Bezat, with hundreds of images to choose from. Some were family, candid or travel photos while others were taken by famous photographers including Paul Fusco, Hurrell, John Engstead, Janet Fries, and Man Ray. And more were found during extensive research. One of the many challenges has been to find the owners of a wide variety of images and negotiate for the rights to include them. Like Sherlock Holmes we are still on the trail for some of the mystery items. When Greg first started his quest, he wrote to many film stock footage companies looking for certain kinds of scenes. A most important one was specific: “Dijon, France, 1929-1933” where the newlyweds travelled to and discovered how wonderful food could taste. And every one of them wrote back that they had nothing. He considered going to Dijon and trying to film locations where she lived, shopped and ate. The first restaurant they dined at and often returned to was Aux Trois Faisans. (read about Judy Merhar visiting it on her “Mincing Words Abroad” blog.) Describing that first meal there in “Long Ago in France,” But there was no budget for making such a trip to film. And then, months later, came an email from Gaumont Pathé Archives that they had found in a basement vault several reels of 35mm movies labelled “Dijon: 1929-1933.” An even more unexpected miracle was how beautiful the never previously screened footage looked. At a recent screening at the Jarvis Conservatory in Napa with the film’s director, daughter Kennedy, and publisher L. John Harris in conversation, some people in the audience told of their friendship with Fisher when she lived in nearby St, Helena for 20 years and then Glen Ellen in neighboring Sonoma Valley. Jessamyn West (Friendly Persuasion) was a friend and her daughter contributed comments that evening. In the film and each time we are with Kennedy she tells new stories not found in Fisher’s writings, as do the many others interviewed in the film. After that screening we were offered a challenge that would match a certain amount of money. It was met and we have now paid $18,000 for that French footage and some rare Mary Frances interviews. I bring this up as we are at the end of 2024 because we still need $50,000 to pay for the balance of the images before the movie can be properly distributed and brought to a wider audience of both Fisher fans and those who have yet to experience the joys of reading her. We are a 501(3)c non- profit which means a charitable tax write-off is available by donating here. If you want to discuss possible various options please write to Greg Bezat bezatvideo@gmail.com Of course everyone connected to the movie is proud and the notes of appreciation we get confirm that feeling. “I wish I had seen this movie before I interviewed Mary Frances in the late 1980s. It revealed her essence, a movie for every fan of M.F.K. Fisher to watch.” “In the wake of Thanksgiving, and many large and boisterous family meals, it was the perfect moment to watch your deeply moving film. Fisher’s life — her troubles, her depth, her hope, and her exquisite style and sensitivity — comes alive in watching this vivid and profound inspiration. Life will be over in a minute, for all of us, and yet, there are tangerines and kitchens and so many meals and gatherings to be enjoyed between then and now. I just pulled “The Gastronomical Me” from off the shelf and will spend the afternoon with it.” “A half century ago, when I was sick with the flu, a neighbor loaned me MFK’s book ‘The Art of Eating’” I lay in bed for several days reading through the entire book and never gave it back. Her writing is what inspired me to travel around the world and become a food writer. Now, all these years later, I had the joy of seeing ‘The Art of Eating: The Life of M.F.K. Fisher’ which is an exquisite production. It was wonderful learning so much more about her life.” Celebrated food writer Ruth Reichl, who appears in our film and recently made a movie with Laura Gabbert, “Food and Country,” has an essential blog, La Briffe. She often refers to M.F.K. Fisher and recently reprinted a moving piece about her last interview with Mary Frances. The New York Times recently published an article and discussion on “The 25 Most Influential Cookbooks From the Last 100 Years.” And guess who was high on the list? 8. “How to Cook a Wolf” by M.F.K. Fisher, 1942 (Daunt Books. Courtesy of the M.F.K. Fisher Estate) When Mary Frances Kennedy Fisher published her first collection of essays, 1937’s “Serve it Forth,” under the gender-obscuring initials M.F.K., she invented American food writing as we know it, making the case that eating should be a practice rooted in pleasure. Five years later, at the height of World War II, she published “How to Cook a Wolf,” a collection of essays and recipes about scarcity. Pleasure, she insisted, among instructions for dishes like sausage pie and the “moist dark loaf” she calls War Cake, was not merely an end in itself but an antidote to hardship. After the war, in the early 1950s, Fisher issued a new edition of her classic text, appending it with humorous marginalia that commented on her misfires as a cook and a writer, revealing a comic capacity to revise and revisit that she would rely upon for the rest of her life. In the conclusion of that addition, she offered what may be the defining axiom of her life: “I believe that one of the most dignified ways we are capable of, to assert and then reassert our dignity in the face of poverty and war’s fears and pains, is to nourish ourselves with all possible skill, delicacy and ever-increasing enjoyment.” By the time she died in 1992 at 83, she’d published 35 books, but in our era of pandemics and climate crisis, it’s her early meditation on frugality and resilience that’s emerged as a classic. — Michael Snyder. Samin Nosrat, Ligaya Mishan, and Jenny Comita discussed it (published in an edited version): That is our news for now. Please pass this on to your friends and family—or anyone you think might want to subscribe and keep up. Greg and I wish you a Happy New Year. Sincerely, |