In an open letter, Redford credited the National Endowment for the Arts for the success of his Sundance Institute and the Sundance Film Festival, saying that the funding "must not only survive, but thrive", according to The Hollywood Reporter.
"This is entirely the wrong approach at entirely the wrong time," he wrote.
"We need to invite new voices to the table, we need to offer future generations a chance to create and we need to celebrate our cultural heritage."
"I'm asking you to please join me in adding your voice to the chorus of concerned citizens by contacting your congressional representative and voicing your opposition to these cuts and in favor of continued support for the role the arts play in enriching our American story."
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Trump's USD 1.15 trillion budget (unveiled to Congress on Thursday) cuts funding for many arts organizations, including public broadcasting, to finance an increase in the military and put a down payment on the US-Mexico border wall.
PBS president and CEO Paula Kerger said that the cost of public broadcasting is USD 1.35 per citizen, per year, which is "less than a cup of coffee."
Redford credited the NEA for contributing a USD 25,000 grant in 1981 that launched his Sundance Institute as well as the Sundance Film Festival to support young filmmakers.
"That first promising investment from the NEA, and their belief in my project was vital to launching programs that now support tens of thousands of American artists working in film and theater and new media," he wrote.
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