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Once Known for Death Row, San Quentin Hosts a Star-Studded Film Festival

The California prison used to house some of the state’s most violent criminals, but has become more known lately for creative pursuits.

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A man with a baseball cap and large necklace looks out a window. In the background, a crowd watches a screen.
Louis Sále won an award for his film “Healing Thru Hula.” Mr. Sále is originally from Hawaii and is currently incarcerated at San Quentin.Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times

Reporting from San Quentin, Calif.

The prizes were paper certificates. The red carpet measured just a few feet long. The catered lunch spread was state-issued bologna sandwiches wrapped in plastic.

The first-ever San Quentin Film Festival, held just north of the Golden Gate Bridge in California’s oldest prison, was not glamorous. But the incarcerated men who screened their films in front of a crowd dotted with Hollywood bigwigs this week could not have been more thrilled.

“Tribeca, eat your heart out!” exclaimed Dante Jones, the director of “Unhoused and Unseen,” a documentary about how incarceration and homelessness are intertwined.

Mr. Jones, 41, has been imprisoned for 17 years for attempted murder after he shot a nemesis in the jaw in Los Angeles. When he was first incarcerated, he could never have imagined that power players would enter the thick metal gates of San Quentin to meet him and his fellow inmates.

Among the attendees were Kerry Washington, the star of the TV drama “Scandal,” and Jerry Seinfeld and W. Kamau Bell, the famed comedians. Also on hand: Cord Jefferson, who won the Academy Award for best adapted screenplay this year for the film “American Fiction,” and Jessica Seinfeld, the author and producer who is married to Mr. Seinfeld.

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W. Kamau Bell, left, moderates a panel of current and formerly incarcerated filmmakers at the festival.Credit...Jim Wilson/The New York Times

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