
Brighton Beach
1980 : 54 minutes
Director: Susan Wittenberg, Carol Stein
synopsis
Set against the iconic Coney Island boardwalk, Brighton Beach is a neighborhood that is constantly reinventing itself to fit each new wave of immigrants. From directors Susan Wittenberg and Carol Stein, Brighton Beach is an unposed, seductively shot, color film about life's simple pleasures and the creating of a community. It's a vérité portrait of the immigrant communities that changed the Brooklyn neighborhood--mostly Soviet Jews and Puerto Ricans--as they mingle on the boardwalk with long-time residents, eye one another, and coexist around a shared sense of uprootedness. Includes a rare performance by The Barry Sisters, the queens of Yiddish Swing music, playing live at the Beach. In probably his first PBS credit, Ken Burns was the Sound guy.