FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Motown Legend Kim Weston’s Legacy Reemerges Through New Film, Book, and Cultural Preservation Campaign Led by Filmmaker Valerie Denise Jones
There are voices that shape music history, and then there are voices that shape culture itself.
Kim Weston is one of those voices.
Best known for timeless recordings including “Take Me In Your Arms (Rock Me A Little While)” and the Grammy-nominated duet “It Takes Two” alongside Marvin Gaye, Weston helped define the emotional sound and global reach of the Motown era. Her artistry represented elegance, power, vulnerability, and Black musical excellence during one of the most transformative periods in American music history.
Yet like many pioneering Black artists, the passage of time threatened to reduce a living cultural icon into a forgotten chapter.
Award-winning filmmaker and cultural storyteller Valerie Denise Jones is working to change that through an expanding preservation campaign designed to restore public visibility to Kim Weston’s life, music, and legacy.
At the center of the campaign is Kim Weston: Buried in Motown, an emotionally driven film and storytelling initiative exploring fame, survival, cultural memory, and the hidden emotional cost of helping build one of the most influential musical movements in American history.
Jones has also completed the companion book, Surviving Kim Weston: The Legendary Singer Buried by Motown, now available on Amazon, extending Weston’s story beyond film into literary and historical preservation while introducing her legacy to a new generation of readers and music audiences.
The project continues building momentum through strategic digital storytelling and audience engagement across Instagram, Facebook, TikTok, websites, press outreach, cinematic promotional campaigns, and festival positioning focused on preserving Black cultural history through emotionally grounded storytelling.
Upcoming festival appearances and screenings connected to the project include:
• Pulling Focus African American Film Festival
June 4, 2026
318 E. 7th Street, Suite 112
Davenport, Iowa 52803
• Detroit Trinity International Film Festival
July 17, 2026
These appearances continue expanding awareness around Kim Weston’s contributions to music history while positioning the project within conversations surrounding cultural restoration, music legacy, and socially meaningful cinema.
A former EBONY Fashion Fair model turned filmmaker, Valerie Denise Jones brings a distinct visual and cultural perspective to storytelling. Her work blends cinematic presentation with emotional honesty, rooted in themes of identity, memory, resilience, and preservation.
Her projects and media presence have been featured across platforms including Voyage Jacksonville Magazine, News4JAX, WFTS Tampa Bay 28, and WTVT FOX 13, while her growing body of work continues attracting attention within the independent film and cultural preservation space.
For festival programmers, distributors, investors, media outlets, and cultural institutions, Kim Weston: Buried in Motown represents more than a documentary initiative. It is an opportunity to participate in the preservation of an American legacy while helping restore visibility to an artist whose voice helped shape generations.
Because some stories are not lost.
They are waiting to be remembered.
Media & Industry Inquiries:
Valerie Denise Jones
Filmmaker | Cultural Storyteller | Media Professional
valeriedenisejones.com

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