Ministries Small miracles of the soul
By ARTHUR JONES
Hollywood, Calif.
Bill Moyers got it right when he
described the essence of the Paulist Fathers ministry to moviedom as not
bellyaching but affirmation.
On the stage of the Universal City Hilton this summer, Paulist
Productions director Fr. Frank Desiderio nodded in agreement. The setting was
the Paulists annual Humanitas Prize awards -- the Catholic version of an
Oscar ceremony. PBS reporter and storyteller Moyers -- who won the first
Humanitas Prize for documentaries in 1977 -- told the assemblage of big screen
and little screen greats and lesser-knowns that the Paulists initial
Hollywood presence, the late Paulist Fr. Ellwood Bud Kieser,
believed he was here to do battle with the bastard muses.
Those bastard muses, said Moyers, are propaganda, which
pleads, sometimes unscrupulously, for special causes at the expense of the
total truth; sentimentality, which works up emotional responses unwarranted and
in excess of the occasion; and pornography, which focuses on one powerful drug
at the expense of the human personality.
Bud took on the bastard muses, he said of his pal of
three decades, because it bothered him that we human beings consume so
much nonsense, trivia and violence, and he puzzled on what it was doing to our
sensibilities to feed on a steady diet of carnage masquerading as
entertainment.
Kieser, founder of Paulist Productions -- and later producer of
Romero (1989) and Entertaining Angels (1996), the story
of Dorothy Day and the founding of the Catholic Worker movement -- then had to
decide what to do next.
Moyers, on stage, described Kiesers ploy to the huge
audience of scriptwriters, directors and producers that included such
screenwriting luminaries as Aaron Sorkin (The West Wing, NBC),
Moises Kaufman (The Laramie Project, HBO), Akiva Goldsman (A
Beautiful Mind, Universal Studios), and Kristine Johnson and Jessie
Nelson (I Am Sam, New Line Cinema).
Bud didnt go around bellyaching or pointing fingers or
telling people to eat their spinach, said Moyers, He chose instead
an old-fashioned, somewhat unfashionable -- but not altogether naïve --
strategy of affirmation.
He wanted to offer an antidote to vulgarity. Vulgarity to
the ancient Greeks was the absence of experience in things beautiful. Bud acted
as if life were a continuing course in adult education.
The adults Kieser chose to educate were writing for Hollywood.
His teaching tools were the Humanitas Awards. Moyers was in town
to receive the annual ceremonys first Kieser Award,
established following Kiesers September 2000 death.
Added Moyers, Kieser believed that this medium could dignify
instead of debase life, and that in the vast cornucopia of popular cultures
someone had the cultivated garden here and there where people could be touched
by the beauty of an idea, or honest emotions, something authentic, possibly
even to experience a small miracle in the soul. Bud brought many small
miracles.
Moyers wasnt too bad at coming up with small miracles
either, Desiderio said of the originator of the conversational Joseph Campbell
series, The Power of Myth and many similar Moyers
projects.
This years presenters were Steven Zaillian, a Humanitas
feature film trustee, and Suzanne de Passe, a Humanitas television trustee.
They explained that the trustees for the various categories for thousands
of hours studied more than 350 scripts and screenings.
This year was the 28th Humanitas ceremony. The presenters
introductions to the winners provide sharp insights into what the multiple
panels of judges search for as they watch childrens live action and
animated movies, Sundance Festival feature films, 30- and 60- and 90-minute
made-for-television series segments and television specials, 90-minute PBS and
cable presentations and documentaries, and major feature films that this year
included as finalists, A Beautiful Mind, I Am Sam and
Iris.
Heres Zaillian describing why Iris screenplay
writers Richard Eyre and Charles Wood, working from John Bayleys memoir
of his wife, were selected for the $25,000 feature film prize: For
showing us the faithful love of a married couple through the better and
especially the worst. For the celebration of a classical education that values
the interplay of freedom, truth, goodness, beauty and the relation to
happiness. For an intimate look at two people deeply in love surrendering their
bodies to the ravages of age but never their dignity.
The recipients are asked to briefly respond but not give a big,
long thank you everyone speech. Some forget. Heres Suzanne de
Passe announcing the Sundance award category winner -- and Josefina
Lopezs genuine brushing-away-tears response -- in a behind-the-scenes
look at how some movies come about:
For its portrayal of opposition to oppression, both personal
and cultural, for assertion of freedom to seek the fullness of human
development and for its affirmation of the dignity of the individual regardless
of class, race or signs, the 2002 Humanitas Award and a check for
$10,000, said de Passe, goes to George LaVoo and Josefina Lopez for
Real Women Have Curves.
Lopez said, I didnt prepare a speech because we had
already won at Sundance. I got married and Im having a baby, so I said,
Thank you, Lord. I have enough. So this comes as a real surprise.
First of all, I know youre not to thank people,
she said, but George LaVoo saw the play, Real Women Have
Curves, about three years ago and fell in love with it. I was really
amazed that, you know, a New York gay man would be so in love with a story
about five, full-figured women working in a tiny garment factory in East
L.A.
Lopez continued, George just said that he believed in my
voice. No one wanted to make this play into a movie because it is about large
women, you know. Its about Mexican women. Its about women whom no
one really pays attention to, but you need them because they take care of your
kids or make your clothes.
So I really have to thank my cowriter [LaVoo] because he
really helped me expand the story and see new possibilities, and because, thank
God, HBO came up with a Latino division and we were able to finally make this
movie.
OK, said Lopez, I get to put this award on my
resume. But this is for my parents, because I was very fortunate that I grew up
with two parents -- who, although they were undocumented -- worked very hard,
who had so much dignity that I know that in my writing my characters portray
that. Because I have such good examples.
And I wanted people to know who my parents were, she
said, and I wanted people to know who we are, who Mexican-Americans are.
And so I accept this prize for all the undocumented people and the garment
workers.
The Humanitas trustees this year created a fellowship in the name
of David Angell, co-writer with Peter Casey of Frasier, five times
a finalist and two times a Humanitas Prize winner. Angell and his wife, Lynn,
were killed in one of the doomed planes that crashed into the World Trade
Center towers Sept. 11. The fellowship, funded initially by Paramount
Television and annually destined for a film school student writer, will
instill in each successive generation of writers the Humanitas Prize
ideals.
This years Humanitas prizewinners and runners-up were:
Childrens live action category: Anna Sandor for My
Louisiana Sky. Runner-up, Gary Rosenkranz, The Student Buddy,
an episode of the series The Brothers Garcia on Nickelodeon.
Childrens animation: Dev Ross for Balto II,
Wolf Quest (Cartoon Network). Peter K. Hirsch, The Boy with
His Head in the Clouds, an episode of the series Arthur, PBS.
Melody Fox, Harolds Birthday Gift, an episode of Harold
and the Purple Crayon, HBO Family.
30 Minute Category: Matt Tarses, My Old Lady, an
episode of Scrubs, NBC. Brenda Lilly and Hollis Rich, Love,
Love, Me Do, an episode of State of Grace, ABC Family. Steven
Peterman and Gary Dontzig, Looking for God in All the Right Places,
an episode of State of Grace, ABC Family.
60 Minute Category: A tie between Lukas Reiter and David E. Kelley
for Honor Code, The Practice, ABC, and Aaron Sorkin,
Two Cathedrals, an episode of The West Wing, NBC.
90 Minute or Longer Network or Syndicated Category: Kirk Ellis,
Anne Frank, ABC. John Wierick, Crossed Over, CBS, based
on the book by Beverly Lowry. Paris Qualles, The Rosa Parks Story,
CBS.
90 Minute or Longer PBS/Cable Category: Moises Kaufman and the
members of the Tectonic Theater Project, The Laramie Project,
HBO.
John Pielmeier, writer of Sins of the Father, FX.
Robert J. Avrech, Within These Walls, Lifetime.
To encourage new filmmakers to write and produce material that
celebrates human dignity and communicates human values in Sundance Film
Festival Independent Feature Films: LaVoo and Lopez, Real Women Have
Curves. Phillip Gwynne with Paul Goldman, Australian Rules.
Mark Gordon, Her Majesty.
Feature Film Category: Eyre and Wood, Iris, Miramax
Films. Akiva Goldsman, A Beautiful Mind, Universal Studios.
Kristine Johnson and Jessie Nelson, writers of I Am Sam, New Line
Cinema.
Arthur Jones is NCR editor at large.
Related Web site
The Humanitas
Prize www.humanitasprize.org
National Catholic Reporter, September 20,
2002
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