Summer in Mississippi
Summer in Mississippi is a 1965 Canadian cinéma-vérité documentary short from Beryl Fox, produced by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation and first shown on This Hour Has Seven Days. It won the award for Best Film, TV Information, at the 17th Canadian Film Awards.
Synopsis
Director Beryl Fox traveled to Mississippi after the bodies of the three civil rights workers working for the Congress of Racial Equality and Freedom Summer project were found on August 4, 1964. Andrew Goodman, James Chaney and Michael Schwerner were killed while attempting to register black Americans in Mississippi to vote; their deaths are now known as the Mississippi Burning Murders.Fox's objective was not to follow the murder trail, but to examine the difficulties faced by new student volunteers heading to Mississippi and the region's frenzied social climate. The film, characteristic of the developing CBC documentary style of the period, paints a vivid picture of a time when the summer heat reflected the inflamed emotions of an entire state.