Our History Started in 1999 by Tim and David McMullen-Sullivan (pictured below), “OUT TAKES Dallas – The Annual Lesbian and Gay Film Festival”
is now considered a Dallas arts institution. We are proud that the
festival is organized and managed by a completely volunteer staff and
Board of Directors. The Board has a broad range of experience in the
business, arts and non-profit worlds. Over 75 volunteers now contribute
to the success of OUT TAKES Dallas.
 (OUT TAKES Dallas founders, Tim and David McMullen-Sullivan)
For its inaugural year, the OUT TAKES Dallas ’99 festival ran
over four days at Dallas’ historic Lakewood Theatre. The roster
of festival sponsors totaled over 40 individuals and corporations. The
list of founding corporate sponsors was comprised of nearly a dozen
national, regional and local companies including, PlanetOut, Genre and
Curve Magazines, Skyy Vodka, Subaru of America, Kroger Food Stores, KY
Liquid and Dallas Voice.
By all measurers OUT TAKES Dallas ’99 was a phenomenal success.
Attendees totaled nearly 3,000 moviegoers. Sponsorship contributions
exceeded $50,000. Net proceeds were positive, enabling a contribution
of $5,000 to the festival beneficiary, Walt Whitman Community School, a
private alternative school specializing in adolescent
sexual-orientations issues.
OUT TAKES Dallas 2000 built upon the success of the previous year. To
address both attendee demands and the ever-increasing selection of gay
and lesbian theme film, the film festival expanded to two consecutive,
three-day weekends from its original, four-day inaugural event. The
festival showcased over 20 screenings of 33 films and accommodated over
4,500 moviegoers. We began to see that the public was beginning to take
“ownership” of the film festival through their generous
support. Due
to the outstanding artistic and financial success of the second year,
we were able to present a check to that year’s beneficiary, Walt
Whitman for $10,000.
The 2001 film festival was successful in its individual sponsorship
donations, film quality and diversity, and integrating the general
public. We had over 70 individual sponsorship packages sold in 2001,
solidifying in our minds that Dallas was building a following for the
festival. We also greatly expanded our shorts programs to 5 screenings.
This way, we were able to screen over 66 films in just 6 days. We also
brought in more filmmakers than ever before: four directors and two
actors. We also screened films that were of great notoriety, including
“Southern Comfort,” the 2000 Sundance winner for Best
Documentary, “My Left Breast” which we partnered with the
Susan G. Komen Foundation, and partnered with Beth El Binah on
“Trembling Before G-d,” a film on Orthodox Jews and
Homosexuality that the Dallas Jewish Film Festival refused to screen.
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