The San Luis Obispo International Film Festival took a heavy hit the last two years, forcing the festival to go virtual. This year, it returns with live screenings and events through Sunday, May 1āand most of the films will also be available virtually on May 1.Ā
But festival organizers are hoping that this year the public is ready to venture back into theaters and fully engage.Ā

āTicket sales are picking up and things are going well,ā SLOIFF Executive Director Skye McLennon noted. āI think thereās a little hesitancy to come back out, but at the same time, people are really excited to come out and do things, so thatās been really positive.ā
The always popular Surf Nite happens on Thursday, April 28, at the Sunset Drive-In in SLO, with a concert by the Boomer Surf Band before a screening of The Yin and Yang of Gerry Lopez, a new film about the Pipeline legend by award-winning documentary filmmaker Stacy Peralta.Ā
On Friday, April 29, is the second-ever Music Video Showcase. There were a bunch of great videos last year, and this year promises to be even better.Ā
The Awards Night Gala is in the Fremont on Saturday, April 30, emceed by Turner Classic Movie channel host Ben Mankiewicz. On May 1, closing day, thereās a panel called Adapting Your Script from Short to Feature, where screenwriter Meg LeFauve (Inside Out, Captain Marvel) and filmmaker Jeff Graham will workshop attendeesā ideas. That evening, the festival concludes with a screening of the stand-out documentary Mija at the Fremont Theater.
In between these big events, dozens of films will be shown: shorts and features, documentaries and narrative films.

This yearās King Vidor Award winner is one of the most recognizable female character actors working today. Sheās had small but pivotal roles in films such as The Pledge with Jack Nicholson, Domino with Keira Knightly, Changeling with Angelina Jolie, Winterās Bone with Jennifer Lawrence, Super 8 with Elle Fanning, and Being Flynn with Robert De Niro.
This year Dickey has the lead role in A Love Song, which is screening as part of the film festival.
āItās so nice to see her because sheās always been kind of a supporting role, so to see her as the starāitās so well-deserved,ā McLennon said. āSheās one of those people that, maybe they donāt know her name, but when they see her, theyāre like, āOh, I know her.āā
You certainly will. Sheās got an amazingly recognizable and expressive face, and she has a knack for bringing just the right tone to her roles. She started theater acting as a child with the Clarence Brown Theatre at the University of Tennessee.

āOnce I did that I didnāt want to stop ever,ā Dickey said via phone. āI was 9, and I did three plays a year at the university growing up. I just loved it.ā
After high school, she attended the university as a student from 1980 to ā84 before moving to New York, where she admitted she struggled to get work and secure an agent.Ā
āBut I loved it,ā she said. āI pounded the pavement, I worked with casting directors, I started doing regional theater, and I did one Broadway show, and then I started to do some film and television.ā
She got her first film role in 1995 in The Incredible True Adventure of Two Girls in Love, did a TV series in New York with Tyne Daly called Christy, and finally decided to relocate āto La-La Land, where Iāve been ever since,ā she explained.
She goes back to the University of Tennessee, which awarded her an honorary MFA, every five years or so and does a play with their MFA students.Ā
Winterās Bone in 2010 was definitely a breakout role for Dickey, earning her a Film Independent Spirit Award for Best Supporting Actress. She played Merab, a tough but practical country woman trying to protect the āold ways.ā
āWinterās Bone was such a unique film, and so well embraced by so many people,ā she noted. āThe weirdest thing about going through that awards ceremony was, I look very different if Iām in a dress with makeup and my hair done, and a lot of peopleāI think because the movie did such a great job blending unknowns and known character actors with real local peopleāpeople didnāt recognize me. Iād be introduced, āThis is Dale,ā and they sort of look, and they do a double take.ā
Dickeyās face is one for the ages. She describes it as āhard edged,ā and she drew on her experience growing up near the Smoky Mountains, āpopulated by people who sometimes frightened me,ā to play Merab and make her violence understandable.

āIāve worked really hard and I still love what I do. Iāve been really blessed to work as much as I have,ā Dickey said.Ā
She explained that making A Love Song was particularly scary because she was ācarrying a film, and Iāve never done thatānot a lead in a filmāIāve done them on stage,ā but she was incredible in the film, communicating volumes without dialogue, simply by letting emotions wash over her face.
When she told Tyne Daly she was going to Hollywood, Daly told her she wasnāt what Hollywood was looking for physically, but to be happy that she was a character actress because she was going to work more when she got older.Ā
Dickey was also told by a New York casting agent to be happy to be typecast because āāthat means they see something in you that they donāt see in anyone else. Even though you donāt have a Southern accent, you reek Southern.ā
āIāve embraced being typecast as sort of Southern white trash, and I started getting work,ā Dickey said. āIf Iām going to be typecast, itās been a dang fun journey. Iāve had a lot of gritty, crusty, unsavory roles, but theyāre meaty and I love digging deep and trying to find the humanity in all of them.ā
Contact New Times Senior Staff Writer Glen Starkey at gstarkey@newtimesslo.com.
This article appears in Apr 28 – May 5, 2022.

