A self-taught topiary artist transforms bushes and minds, Saturday
On Saturday March 21, The Visionary Edge will host a screening of A Man Named Pearl at the Johnson House Train Depot in Half Moon Bay. A Man Named Pearl tells the inspiring story of self-taught topiary artist Pearl Fryar, whose unlikely journey to national prominence began with a bigoted remark.
In 1976, Pearl took a job in a can factory in Bishopville, South Carolina. New to this rural southern town, he and his wife Metra looked at a house for sale in an all-white neighborhood. The Fryars’ real estate agent was notified by neighbors in the prospective neighborhood that a black family was not welcome. A homeowner voiced the collective concern: "Black people don’t keep up their yards."
Assembled without frills or fuss, A Man Named Pearl is as much a portrait of a small Southern town as of an unassuming black folk artist. Aided by Fred Story’s jazzy score, the directors, Scott Galloway and Brent Pierson, keep things moving with appreciative comments from the financial and spiritual beneficiaries of Mr. Fryar’s talents (and from the female admirers who find his lithe, 68-year-old body every bit as interesting as his foliage). Those white families who, decades ago, rejected him as a neighbor because "black people don’t keep up their yards" must be weeping into their seed catalogs."
Saturday, March 21st. Doors will open at 7:00 pm, film begins at 7:30. The Johnson House Train Depot, 110 Higgins Purisima, HMB. The film is free, however donations are encouraged to cover screening costs. Call 650-560-0200 for information and reservations as seating is limited. Located in Half Moon Bay, The Visionary Edge produces events to inform and inspire us all to create a wiser, sustainable and more compassionate world.