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The Execution of
Wanda Jean

Friday May, 31, 2002
8:00 PM-Theater 2
150 Seats
88 minutes
Language: English
Year and Country of Production: 2001. USA
Director: Liz Garbus
THE EXECUTION OF WANDA JEAN chronicles the life-and-death
battle of Wanda Jean Allen. By telling one woman's story, the film becomes an
unforgettable exploration into one of America's most controversial moral and political
dilemmas: the death penalty. THE EXECUTION OF WANDA JEAN is an unflinching investigation
of the role that poverty, mental health, race, and sexuality play within the criminal
justice system.
Wanda Jean was sentenced to death in 1989 after she shot
and killed her lover, Gloria Leathers, outside an Oklahoma City Police Station.
The film finds her eleven years later, her execution date just months away. With
chilling intimacy, the filmmakers follow Wanda Jean's final months on death row,
as she and her legal team prepare for her clemency hearing, as she and her family,
friends, and spiritual advisors have their final visits. At her Clemency hearing,
her attorneys argue that during her original trial, her defense failed to present
crucial and potentially life-saving evidence: Wanda Jean had borderline mental
retardation and brain damage. But the Oklahoma Pardon and Parole Board, which
in its thirty-year history had never granted clemency, denies Wanda Jean's plea.
The film chronicles Wanda Jean's final weeks as step-by-step her legal team exhausts
every option to save her life.
At the same time, THE EXECUTION OF WANDA JEAN tells the
story of the victim's family. Remarkably, Ruby Wilson, Gloria Leathers' mother
and the only witness to Wanda Jean's fatal shooting of her daughter, is able to
forgive Wanda Jean, relying on her strong religious beliefs. As the days run out
for Wanda Jean, however, forgiveness takes a back seat to punishment. On January
11, 2001, the State of Oklahoma executed Wanda Jean Allen, the first black woman
to be put to death in the United States in the modern era.
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