The Grand Theatre is a community arts center in Downtown Frankfort. Built in 1911 as a vaudeville house, it operated as a movie theater from the 1940s onward. Prior to the Kentucky Civil Rights Act of 1966, white patrons sat at stage-level, while Black patrons were required to sit in the balcony.
Twenty years ago, documentarian Joanna Hay began recording oral histories with people who recalled going to the Grand while segregation was enforced. Twenty years later, Hay invited lifelong Frankfort resident Katima Smith-Willis to re-interview those same patrons.
"That was their space. That was their community," said Smith-Willis. "That's where they felt safe."
Prior to taking on the project, Smith-Willis learned how to take oral histories with Kentucky Arts' Council's Community Scholars Program with Folk & Traditional Arts Director Mark Brown. She conducted interviews with over 20 people featured in the film.
"I spent time with Mark Brown, and he taught me how to go into these interviews with not the lens of an activist, not the lens of an advocate, not the lens even as a black woman, just to be able to receive the information and to be able to communicate it back to the community in a way that it could be understood," said Smith-Willis.
Smith-Willis said the Grand Theatre's history reflects the broader story of Frankfort's Black community - something she kept in mind while taking her young son, Mylo, to that same theater to see the Polar Express last month.
"I feel so honored and privileged to be able just to walk in that space," said Smith-Willis. "You feel the people that paved the way for me and Mylo to be able just to walk in and not have to be escorted up to the balcony."
Stories from the Balcony premieres Friday January 9 at 6:30. Doors open at 6, and the event is free and open to the public.