Showing posts with label The Way We Get By. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Way We Get By. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 18, 2009

The Way We Get By Crew at the White House


Our blogs are coming slow but they are coming.

In October, we were fortunate to get a special tour of the White House and a 30 minute meet and greet with Vice President Biden. It was a wonderful opportunity for Bill, Joan, and Jerry to talk with the Vice President about their love of troop greeting. And the Vice President talked with all of us about his son's journey of service in the military. It was a very emotional meeting for us all and one we will never forget.

We would like to thank the White House team for giving us this wonderful, lifetime opportunity!

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

And...we're back!!

Note to self: Never follow months and months of working 7 days a week with a 3-day wedding extravaganza, and a 2-week trip traveling state-to-state all through the south again...because you WILL get a horrible, debilitating cold. Got it. Never again.

Yes, Gita and I enjoyed our first two screenings on the Southern Circuit Film Tour. We enjoyed our two free days in Nashville. We flew to Alexandria, Louisiana on day 5, and promptly got sick. Me first and then Gita-- both with bad colds that we are just now beginning to recover from. Let me tell you, nothing cures a cold faster than constant travel...lots of airplanes and driving.



It started with a sore throat in Alexandria. But with our biggest crowd on the tour-- a really great, engaged audience-- it was easy to look past it. We were told before the screening that a soldier had called the venue, saying he had been through Bangor and been greeted by the Maine Troop Greeters, and was planning to attend the show. During our Q&A, he stood up and recounted his experience traveling through Bangor, saying he remembered how nice my Mom had been to him. After the Q&A, he introduced himself as Bobby Strother and said he had a gift he wanted to send back to the troop greeters with us. We agreed to meet him the next morning so he could bring us the gift before we hit the road to New Orleans. The next morning we met Bobby in front of the local drug store after stocking up on cold medicine and tissues. Bobby handed me a large triangular wooden box with a glass front. A perfectly folded American flag rested behind the glass, and an engraved plaque read...



This was no normal gift...a unit coin, a thank you card, no-- this was something Bobby had laid his life on the line for. Something that represented everything Bobby loved about America, and he talked to us for a long time about just that, and about how tough it is to come back after serving and having to re-adjust, and about friends getting divorced, and about friends dying, and about how if he had to go back again he'd pack his bag and leave tomorrow because serving his country was worth it. He said, "when we're over there we're wearing our vests which are about 75 lbs. and all our gear and we carried two weapons, so you're talking about 100 lbs of gear...we had a lot of weight we were carrying with us over there."...And it just made me think about watching the troops walk down the ramp over and over again at the Bangor International Airport and seeing them breathe a big sigh of relief at the sight of the troop greeters, and the flags waving, and the smiles welcoming them home, and how it really is "that moment" when the weight of it all is finally lifted off their shoulders. I can't wait to get back to Bangor to pass along Bobby's gift.

Tomorrow, I'll spare you the most boring trip to New Orleans ever, as we spent the entire time in our hotel room coughing and sneezing, and I'll skip ahead to our screenings in Alabama and Mississippi and the story of "Big Joe" Evans going for the oyster eating record. How can you not be excited?!

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Southern Circuit Film Tour - Day 1 & 2...

"This is not our honeymoon..."
Aron Gaudet

This was Gita and I on Friday...



That's right, we got married on the coast of Maine (notice the paparazzi chasing us?), and two days later we were in Nashville, TN. The Southern Circuit Film Tour happened to fall directly after our wedding, and so although we made it very clear to each other that "THIS IS NOT OUR HONEYMOON!", the trip definitely has a weird honeymoon vibe to it all.

Day one took us from the Bangor International Airport (where much of The Way We Get By takes place) to Nashville and Vanderbilt University. This is the first year the folks at Vanderbilt have taken part in the Southern Circuit Film Tour-- so that means we're even. It meant maybe a slightly smaller crowd than normal, but definitely a group of people that would probably otherwise never have the opportunity to see our film in a semi-theatrical setting. And even though we were screening at a university, the crowd was littered with people of all ages, so the word apparently had spread beyond the campus. All in all a successful screening.

Gita and I love a good breakfast place, so day two started with us trying to choose between the Loveless Cafe and The Pancake Pantry-- 2 local favorites that everyone seemed to recommend. The choice was made easier when we discovered The Pancake Pantry was less than a mile away. We drove up to find a long line waiting outside on a Tuesday morning!! This place had to be good right? The line moved quickly and Gita and I were soon experiencing the best pancakes either one of us has ever had... we're still talking about them. Let's hope the pancakes on day two are not the highlight of the trip, but you've got to start somewhere.

After the best pancakes on earth, we set out for Bowling Green, Kentucky for our screening at Western Kentucky University. It's a little over an hour north of Nashville and the scenery is exactly what I would expect driving from Tennessee into Kentucky-- rolling fields and farms, old weathered boards holding up barns that looked like they should collapse, but somehow were still standing. Just beautiful countryside for a drive.

We made it to Bowling Green and to our screening to find a bigger audience made up primarily of students. We always like showing the film to a younger audience because everyone assumes that The Way We Get By will appeal more to senior citizens and baby boomers, but what many people forget is it's young men and women on the other side of the handshake, heading to war or returning home, so a university campus is filled with people that have brothers or sisters or friends that have been through Bangor and met the troop greeters. Last night was no exception, as a student approached us after the film to tell us he had been deployed through Bangor and remembered meeting all three of the subjects from the film-- especially Bill who is always the first in line to greet the troops. Everywhere we go it seems the Maine Troop Greeters have made their mark in some way. It was reassuring to know Bowling Green was no different.

Coming up... Day 3 & 4 are rest/travel days so we're working on something fun to do before heading to Alexandria, LA for our next screening on Friday. Keep reading.

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Southern Circuit Welcomes Aron Gaudet, Gita Pullapilly, and "The Way We Get By"

Southern Arts Federation welcomes Director Aron Gaudet and Producer Gita Pullapilly with their highly acclaimed documentary, "The Way We Get By," on the 2009-2010 Southern Circuit Tour of Independent Filmmakers beginning Monday, October 19, at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tennessee, and concluding on Friday, October 30, at the Center for Documentary Studies at Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Along the way, the film will also screen at Western Kentucky University in Bowling Green, Kentucky; the Arts Council of Central Louisiana in Alexandria, Louisiana; the Mobile Arts Council in Mobile, AL; the Capri Theatre in Montgomery, Alabama; Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi; Clemson University in Clemson, South Carolina; and Western Carolina University in Cullowhee, North Carolina .

More about Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly, "The Way We Get By" and the tour schedule

Web site for "The Way We Get By"

Audio interview with Aron Gaudet and Gita Pullapilly

Monday, August 24, 2009

Southern Circuit Films and Filmmakers: Tour 1


Southern Arts Federation is proud to announce the films and filmmakers who will be featured on Tour 1 of the 2009-2010 Southern Tour of Independent Filmmakers. With venues located throughout the South, the tour will include:

September 15-26, 2009
Let Them Know: The Story of Youth Brigade and BYO Records
with Director Jeff Alulis

October 19-31, 2009
The Way We Get By
with Director Aron Gaudet and Producer Gita Pullapilly

November 10-21, 2009
Flying on One Engine
with Producer/Director Joshua Z. Weinstein

February 9-22, 2010
Trimpin: The Sound of Invention
with Producer/Director Peter Esmonde

March 16-27, 2010
God's Architects
with Producer/Director Zack Godshall

April 5-17, 2010
Between Floors
with Producer/Director Jen White

Visit the Southern Circuit web site for more information about the Tour of Independent Filmmakers, including screening dates and locations.