Canadian-born American singer-songwriter, guitarist, political activist, and visual artist known especially for her use of music to promote awareness of issues affecting Native Americans. Orphaned as an infant in Canada when her mother, a Plains Cree, died in an auto accident, Sainte-Marie was adopted by an U.S. couple of Mi’kmaq ancestry and raised in Massachusetts & Maine. Her earliest days as a self-taught folk singer were spent shaking up the coffeehouses and consciousnesses in Greenwich Village and helping Joni Mitchell get discovered. Along with her lifelong commitment to and advocacy for Indigenous and Aboriginal people around the world, she has changed the education system from within, and maintained an unwavering passion for social justice, equality and the Earth mixed with her love of sound and songs. Her legacy is that of as an ever-curious, ever-evolving, and technologically pioneering musician, producer, composer and artist — despite her inability to read a note of music.
Join iconic Canadian artists, activists, actors, and athletes as they...
Documentary about the role of Native Americans in popular music...
Vatican documents issued by various popes during the fifteenth century...
Explores the music scene in Greenwich Village, New York in...
Buffy Sainte-Marie is best known for her protest songs (Universal...
This doc explores "The Band" guitarist and songwriter Robbie Robertson's...
Documentary chronicling the government relocation of 10,000 Navajo Indians in...