SCA partners with David E. Talbert & Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs)

by Desa Philadelphia

HBCU Next, a fellowship program that brings students from Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU) to take classes in the Summer Program at the USC School of Cinematic Arts, launched this summer with two fellows from Morgan State University.

The program was conceived and funded by playwright, author, and filmmaker David E. Talbert (Jingle Jangle, Almost Christmas, First Sunday) longside his wife and producing partner Lyn Sisson-Talbert as an opportunity for talented storytellers from HBCU’s to get advanced training and mentorship in filmmaking. The program’s first two participants, Directing/Producing Fellow Sha-Shonna Rogers and Screenwriting Fellow Imani Mullings, are current students at Morgan State, Talbert’s alma mater.

Sha-Shonna Rogers
HBCU Next Directing/Producing Fellow
Current Morgan State University Student

Imani Mullins
HBCU Next Screenwriting Fellow
Current Morgan State University Student

As the Directing/Producing Fellow, Rogers enrolled in Filmmaking Intensive which introduces students to the basic technical and aesthetic concepts underlying motion picture production. In this course, students collaborate with their fellow filmmakers in various core roles (director, producer, and cinematographer) on three digital short films. Reflecting on her experience, Rogers said, "I'm here to learn. To expand my resources with all the things that I don't have back at Morgan State and in Baltimore… and the program being here at USC, it’s an amplifier of our talents and our voice.”

Mullings took Advanced Screenwriting: Writing the First Draft Feature Screenplay, a class where students work with their instructors and peers in a “writers’ room” setting to complete the first draft of a three-act, full-length feature screenplay in under six weeks. Mullings captured the essence of the program's significance, stating, “Programs like this are so important because speaking as an HBCU student and as a Black person, we don't get these opportunities often… and this is giving us that pathway to make sure that we are seen, that we are heard. And that's what makes HBCU Next so incredibly special, it allows us to be seen!”

Both fellows received full tuition, room and board, and round-trip airfare transportation to and from the USC School of Cinematic Arts campus in Los Angeles.

HBCU Next is currently a pilot program that hopes to expand next year. To be considered, applicants submitted a written statement along with a sample of work and a short video introduction. The goal is to afford HBCU students, who might be considering graduate programs in the cinematic arts, an opportunity to get practical exposure to the academic and practical practices of the industry.

For more information, please visit cinema.usc.edu/hbcunext or e-mail hbcunext@cinema.usc.edu.