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Joanne Shenandoah

Acting

Biography

Joanne Shenandoah was one of "America's most celebrated and critically acclaimed Native American musicians of her time," Associated Press. A Grammy and multiple award winner, she was considered an Ambassador of Peace. "Joanne Shenandoah is one of the finest attributes to Native American Music and Culture." Neil Young "She weaves you into a trance with her beautiful Iroquois chants and wraps her voice around you like a warm blanket on a cool winter's night," Robbie Robertson.Shenandoah was a Native American singer, composer and multi-instrumentalist, a member of the Oneida nation. Her father was Clifford Shenandoah (1934-1972), a chief of the Onondaga who was noted as a jazz guitarist. Her mother was Oneida clan mother Maisie Shenandoah (1942-2019). Joanne grew up on the Oneida reservation in New York and was involved with music and singing from an early age. However, she worked as a computer systems architectural engineer for fourteen years before discovering her calling as a musician through her people's songs and stories. Her music is a fusion of traditional songs, new age, western and pop. Her style has been entirely unique. Joanne's lovely, clear voice, exemplified by such songs as "To Those Who Dream", has been described as 'Native American trance'. Her instruments included acoustic guitar, piano and flute.In addition to her many recordings, Joanne performed at the White House, Carnegie Hall and Madison Square Garden. In 1994, she opened the Woodstock and Earth Day concerts in Washington D.C.. Her original compositions have featured in several documentaries, as well as the acclaimed TV series Northern Exposure (1990). She was also a guest artist on the CD-ROM video game version of The Indian in the Cupboard (1995), released by Viacom. Joanne was a winner of fourteen 'Nammys' (Native American Music Awards) and a recipient of the inaugural Atlas Award in 2012 for her contribution to the climate change movement. - IMDb Mini Biography By: I.S.Mowis

Known For

The Last Winter
5.4

In the Arctic region of Northern Alaska, an oil company's advance team struggles to establish a drilling base that will forever alter the pristine land. After one team member is found dead, a disorientation slowly claims the sanity of the others as each of them succumbs to a mysterious fear.

The Last Winter

2006
Four Souls of Coyote
6.7

This film is a tribute to a humiliated and destroyed nation. "As Long as the Grass Grows" is an alternative, ancient and humble creation story, where man is not the crown of the creation, but the weakest of all creatures. The film takes us back to the beginning of time, where Old Man begins to create the world out of a handful of mud. Everything he creates is new and nameless, and affects the rest of the world. Even feelings and desires are unknown and when they emerge, the world becomes more and more complicated.

Four Souls of Coyote

2023
Making a Noise: A Native American Musical Journey with Robbie Robertson
7.0

This doc explores "The Band" guitarist and songwriter Robbie Robertson's Native American background. Half Mohawk on his mother's side, the film follows him back to the Six Nations reservation in Ontario where he spent summers growing up and picked up his first guitar. The resulting album, "Contact From the Underworld of Red Boy", draws on his childhood First Nation influences and includes musical collaborations wth Native artists such as John Trudell, Rita Coolidge and Buffy Ste Marie.

Making a Noise: A Native American Musical Journey with Robbie Robertson

1999
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10.0

A combination of live-action and animation, the Iroquois Creation Story is a 17-minute film based on the ancient and complex Iroquois Creation Story.

Iroquois Creation Story

2015