African-American Film Festival, Broadway Performance Center February 14-18, 1994. Seattle's second African-American Film Festival created by African-American film director and head of the video-communications program can be seen at the Broadway Performance Center. On February 18, Brock Peters, Ivan Dixon, Nate Long, Vonetta McGee and Carl Lumbly will appear at a community forum workshop there from 1 to 4 p.m. Screenings are scheduled at the same location. Paul Schrader's "Blue Collar," starring Richard Pryor and Yaphet Kotto, will be shown at 5 p.m. today, followed by "The Eiger Sanction," in which McGee co-stars with Clint Eastwood, and "South Central," a 1992 drama starring Lumbly and Glenn Plummer. Screenings include "Miracle in Harlem" (1948) at 10 a.m.; "Midnight Shadow" (1939) at 11:20 a.m.; "Cornbread, Earl and Me" (1975) at 4:30 p.m.; "Claudine" (1974) at 6:15 p.m.; "Five on the Black Hand Side" (1973) at 8 p.m.; and "Ragtime" (1981) at 9:45 p.m. The film festival was funded by a grant from the King County Arts Commission.