As a filmmaker, I am determined to preserve my Cajun culture and French language. A hundred years from now, we’ll still have Cajun culture because there’s traditionalists, both young and old, who are working like me to keep the Cajun essence alive.
Pat Mire is a prize-winning documentary and narrative fiction filmmaker based in Lafayette, Louisiana.  Mire’s documentaries on Cajun culture have been aired nationally in the United States on PBS, the Discovery Channel, and other television and on-line networks around the world and have won numerous awards in national and international competitions.
 
Mire’s narrative feature film debut, “Dirty Rice,” was an official selection at the 1998 London Film Festival, where it played to two sold-out auditoriums. Neil Norman, film critic for the London Evening Standard, reviewed the film and wrote, “[w]hile the Big Easy, No Mercy, and more recently, Eve’s Bayou have flirted with the Cajun world, this is the real deal, 100% proof. This is not to be missed.” Theatrically released on United Artists screens, “Dirty Rice” still has the record of the longest running film to play in a Lafayette, Louisiana movie theater where it was held over for five straight months in 1998.
Mire directed “Against the Tide: The Story of the Cajun People,” which was a November 2000 PBS “Pick of the Week” and won the national “Best Historical Documentary” by PBS.
Clay Fourrier, executive producer of Louisiana Public Broadcasting, has recognized that Mire’s work has led to a number of high-profile film projects with LPB that have been aired nationally on PBS and that have garnered “both LPB and Mr. Mire numerous awards, including nationally recognized Telly and NETA awards of excellence.” According to Mr. Fourrier, all of these films highlight “the good things about South Louisiana and the Cajun culture.” Fourrier adds that “in his films, Pat shows the contributions of real people, not Hollywood stereotypes, to our country. This is the underlying theme of all of his work.”
Pat Mire is founder and artistic director of Cinema on the Bayou Film Festival in Lafayette Louisiana.  Founded in 2006, COTB was born when Hurricane Katrina resulted in the cancelation of the New Orleans Film Festival that year.  COTB is ranked in the top 15 winter film festivals in the U.S., and with over a thousand film submissions worldwide, it regularly screens nearly 200 world, U.S. and Louisiana premieres from around the world each January.
Pat Mire grew up in a farming community near Eunice, Louisiana. He is an English and French-speaking Cajun, busy at correcting stereotypes and misconceptions about his beloved Cajun culture by presenting an insider’s perspective.
Pat is also writing and directing a narrative feature film “Pointe Noire” in 2019 based on an original screenplay by Mire and his partner, Rebecca Hudsmith.
Filmography
Québec City Mambo (2018, 14 min., HD Color), Producer, Writer, Director
Sushi & Sauce Piquante: The Life and Music of Gerry McGee (2016, 84 min., 35 mm and RED), Producer, Writer, Director
Mon Cher Camarade (2008, 58 min., 35mm and HD Color, Black and White), Producer, Writer, Director
Forever My Love: Music from the Bayou (2002, 60 min., 16 mm Color), Producer, Writer, Director
Against the Tide: The Story of the Cajun People of Louisiana (2000, 60 min., 16mm Color), Director
Swapping Stories: Folktales from Louisiana (1998, 30 min., Color), Producer, Writer, Director
Dirty Rice (1997, 85 min., 35mm Color), Producer, Writer, Director
Dance for a Chicken: The Cajun Mardi Gras (1993, 60 min., 16mm Color), Producer, Writer, Director
Anything I Catch: The Handfishing Story (1990, 30 min., Color), Producer, Writer, Director
Wildflowers of the Cajun Prairie (1988, 39 min., Color). Producer, Writer, Director
  • Producer (2 Credits)
    Québec City Mambo2018
    Documentary, Short
    Sushi & Sauce Piquante: The Life & Music of Gerry McGee2016
    Documentary, Feature
  • Writer (2 Credits)
    Québec City Mambo2018
    Documentary, Short
    Sushi & Sauce Piquante: The Life & Music of Gerry McGee2016
    Documentary, Feature
  • Director (2 Credits)
    Québec City Mambo2018
    Documentary, Short
    Sushi & Sauce Piquante: The Life & Music of Gerry McGee2016
    Documentary, Feature
Birth Date
June 23
Birth City
Rayne, Louisiana
Current City
Lafayette, Louisiana
Hometown
Eunice, Louisiana
Gender
Male
Ethnicity
Cajun
As a filmmaker, I am determined to preserve my Cajun culture and French language. A hundred years from now, we’ll still have Cajun culture because there’s traditionalists, both young and old, who are working like me to keep the Cajun essence alive.
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