BEFORE YOU LEAVE Film Premiere

Ultravision is proud to announce that BEFORE YOU LEAVE will premiere at the Garden State Film Festival in Asbury Park, NJ on March 25, 2012.

BEFORE YOU LEAVE – Singer songwriter, Mary Gauthier, searches for the truth about her adoption after realizing that her deepest wounds stem from abandonment. In her own words and through her music, she shares personal thoughts about her life, her adoption and how she overcame drug and alcohol addiction. Mercy Now, I Drink, Goodbye and many other Gauthier songs are highlighted in this documentary that tells the stories behind her songs and reveals the answer to how she overcame adversity and finally discovered how to love.

 

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My Hero Award

ELIO won third place in the Humanitarian category for films that were about heros.  The MY HERO International Film Festival, held annually, showcases films submitted by children and adults worldwide and recognizes commercial media that calls attention to real life heroes.  The MY HERO International Film Festival is a not-for-profit educational Web project that celebrates the best of humanity with an ever-growing archive of hero stories, artwork and short films. This is the second award this film has received, ELIO won an award from the Pulitzer Center in 2010.

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Zonning Board Approves Greek’s Playland

 

 

 

Playland ‘could go on forever,’ Greek says

Monroe zoning board OKs variance for onsite banquet facility
BY CHRISTINA HABERSTROH
Staff Writer
Greek’s Playland, the nonprofit Monroe amusement park for disabled children, has a future after all.

After many hours of testimony given over several hearings before the Zoning Board of Adjustment, Spiro “The Greek” Drake and Dr. Beatrice Mittman got the vote they wanted last week — unanimous approval to operate the banquet facility they say is needed to continue operating their charity. Their operation on Spotswood-Englishtown Road has been closed due to a lack of permits and the denial last year of an application for the banquet facility already built on the site. The 87-acre property consists of: Greek’s Playland, where Drake, who goes only by the name “Greek,” has offered free parties for children with physical and mental disabilities since 1972; the Stone Museum, which is also free to visitors; and the Garden Falls and Mahal Gardens banquet facilities.

Greek and Mittman have said that the banquet facilities create a stream of revenue that is needed to maintain the playland and continue offering the free services to disabled children, and allow free entrance into the museum. Greek said he has offered the free services as the result of an oath he once made to the woman who raised him — that if he ever made a lot of money, which he eventually did through a landscaping business, he would devote half to causes involved with the physically and mentally challenged. He said the foster mother raised 60 children over the course of her life, and three were mentally challenged.

The Jan. 25 zoning board meeting was the last in a series of hearings on the application, which sought a use variance allowing the banquet facilities to reopen. A focal point at the hearing involved the operations’ impact on a neighboring property, and whether site
plan changes made recently by Greek and Mittman were enough to satisfy township regulations. “This is a very important topic here for Monroe Township,” said Zoning Board Chairman Stephen Dalina.  Ted Gaydos, a neighbor of the Greek’s Playland property,was joined by his attorney, Fredrick Niemann, to voice their concerns and objections to the banquet facility. Their issues included parking, noise and drainage from the adjacent site.Mittman stressed the importance of the services provided at the site. “We all know that this property has been Greek’s creation and his life’s work. This application, however, is not about the Greek or about money. If this was about business, I would sell it to a local builder that has offered me $12 million,”Mittman said. According to traffic engineer Frank Miskovich, representing Greek, there arethree issues that pertain to the property: access, circulation and adequacy of parking. The site was originally designed to handle 70 landscaping trucks a day pulling in and out of the property, he said, adding that thearea can accommodate vehicular traffic coming and going from events at the banquet facilities.

Miskovich explained that the circulation works well with one way in at the south of the property and one way out on the north end.  “From a traffic engineering standpoint, it really is a safe operation,”Miskovich said. Since a prior unsuccessful application, the
facility’s seating and maximum number of people permitted on the property were reduced from 1,000 to 890. Because Monroe’s ordinance doesn’t have a requirement for parking at a banquet facility, Miskovich described the property as an auditorium or meeting room without fixed seating, as opposed to a restaurant. For the 890 seats, 223 parking spaces would be required; the site has 384, he said.Also, he said it is unlikely that there would ever be 890 people on the property at the same time, since it would require all three banquet rooms to be used at maximum capacity simultaneously. “The three facilities are rarely, if ever, used at the same time,” said Mittman’s attorney, Timothy Hiskey.

Engineer and planner Michael Geller acknowledged that the facility is charitable and promotes cultural and recreational benefits for the public good, but the banquet facility, he said, is not a beneficial use, and financial liability can’t be used to support a use variance for something that is charitable. “We can’t run the charity if no one is supporting it,”Mittman said in response. Geller also argued that the reduction in square footage and seating were only minor changes and not enough to resolve the issues. The Mahal Gardens room had a net reduction of 3,000 square feet since the last application, he said. To achieve that, the covered walkway was reduced by 1,300 square feet, and the banquet room was reduced by 1,740 square feet. The number of seatingwent from 700 to 490, he noted. “It doesn’t correlate to me. You’re just saying you’re putting a lower number of seats in almost the same area,” Geller said.

Drainage conditions were also addressed since they have been an issue between Greek and neighbor Ted Gaydos for years, because Gaydos has argued that water from the adjacent property runs onto his land. Greek presented a slide show of photos of the drainage for the zoning board to get a better understanding of the property, and Geller
did the same for Gaydos’ property. “To get an approval, you not only have to prove the positive criteria, you have to prove the negative criteria, which is that it will not have an adverse impact on the community and adjacent property owners,”Niemann said in arguing Gaydos’ case. The attorney argued that the topic at hand was a use variance application, but there was discussion of intensifying the property’s nonconforming use, and that is different than if the applicant was seeking approval from the beginning.
“Policing these conditions for your municipality is practically impossible. Your police are burdened, your zoning office is burdened, my client is always complaining. You have reports of others. As a practical matter, it has not been enforced,” Neimann said. “The applicant has never honored any promises she has ever made to you, and what makes you think it will be any easier to policeor any more realistic that this applicant will honor her promises to this board?”

Gaydos’other concernwas the noise coming fromthe property.With the request of extending the hours of operation to midnight, Gaydos was worried that late-night disruptions would continue to be an issue. Gaydos has complained numerous times in the past about the sound during weddings at the banquet facility. Although a sound engineer was not in attendance at the meeting, prior testimony has been made that a custom sound system was professionally installed with 100 small speakers that cut down on sound traveling distance, instead of the powerful loud speakers that are normally used by entertainment companies, Greek said.All entertainment vendors are required
to plug into this customized system in order towork at the Garden Falls/Mahal Gardens banquet facility.

Board attorney Karl Meyertons agreed. Klein apologized and assured the board that it was merely to get the proper information on the case. The application was approved, with board members Carol Damiani, Dhaval Patel, Vincent LaFata,Marino Lupo, Joseph Gurney and Stephen Dalina voting in favor and Bernice Tepper abstaining.

The approval includes stipulations of an 890-person maximum with 49 tables and 384 parking spaces. If any conditions are violated, the owner would forfeit all present and existing programs and lot consolidation. “This is the most important thing in my life, and now I know it could go on forever,” Greek said in an interview. Greek extended his gratitude to all the board members and those who spoke out on his behalf, some of whom, he said, he had never met. “It brought a tear to my eye,” he said. “It’s nice to know that they appreciate what I have been doing all these years.”The Stone Museum is set to reopen in May, and the banquet facility will be preparing to reopen as well, under the direction of Mittman and Patricia Ciecko.

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YouTube Concept Concert

Mary Gauthier w/Virtual Concert Series
10/29/2010

In celebration of National Adoption Month, the acclaimed singer and adoptee will premiere a series of performance videos throughout the month of November on YouTube. Based on her sixth album, The Foundling, the 10-part virtual concept concert series will chronicle the album’s narrative tale of Gauthier’s trials and ultimate triumph as an adopted child herself.

By Blurt Staff

Filmed and produced by Jack Ballo at Ultravision, this is the first video series of its kind to premiere on YouTube. The original album itself was written and recorded over the course of two years and was produced in Toronto by Michael Timmins of Cowboy Junkies, of whom Gauthier notes, “Mike understood my story and was able to create a musical landscape that captures the nuances of the narrative.” Of the album’s genesis, Gauthier adds, “I envisioned writing a song cycle about relinquishment and adoption, but for years the songs I was trying to write didn’t have an emotional center. When I found my mother, I found the emotional center of the album, as well as the explanation for the ‘orphan feeling’ I’d lived with since I was a child. It turns out that this feeling is universal, and hearing other people’s stories, adopted or not, has made me realize that this was the record I was born to make.”

The first video, for “The Foundling,” is available here:

www.youtube.com/user/thefoundlingfilms

THE FOUNDLING VIRTUAL CONCERT SERIES
Available Now “The Foundling”
November 1 “Mama Here, Mama Gone”
November 4 “Goodbye”
November 8 “Sideshow”
November 11 “Blood is Blood”
November 15 “March 11, 1962″
November 18 “Walk in the Water”
November 22 “Sweet Words”
November 25 “The Orphan King”
November 29 “Another Day Borrowed

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The Foundling Channel

Singer songwriter, Mary Gauthier, recently released a concept album that tells the story about her experiences with being adopted. We filmed a live performance of the entire album at Joe’s Public Theatre in NYC. We then made a YouTube channel dedicated to that album and Mary’s story.

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Elio film a finalist in Pulitzer Center contest.

Published March 9, 2010

Donte Donald, Pulitzer Center
The instructions for the first round of Project Report video contest were to film a day in the life of an inspiring person, and the participants answered the call with compelling stories. The top 10 semi-finalists come from a group of 148 qualified entrants. With topics that run the gamut from environmental responsibility to healthcare inequities, this year’s crop of entrants approached the assignment from multiple angles that brought their subjects to life.

With such a strong field it wasn’t easy choosing the 10 best. We hope you’ll view all the entries, at youtube.com/projectreport—and remember, make your own selection to choose the Community Award winner from among the entries on the site. The 10 semi-finalists submitted films that told inspiring and unique stories. From a pilot who volunteers his time and aircraft to transport sick people to distant hospitals to a compassionate elderly woman who sews pillows for those serving in the armed services, the subjects lead daily lives that should be shared.

Emmanual Elan Gepner’s sense of living in a global community was influenced by his frequent travels as a child. Though born in Minneapolis, Minnesota he grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania with frequent summer trips to Switzerland to visit his mother’s family. He continues to live in Philadelphia where he works as a performer in a theater company. Channeling his love for both theater and youth advocacy, Gepner also created a nonprofit that seeks to give youths creative means of stress relief and decrease incidents of violence in public schools. His video, “The People’s Painter,” speaks to this desire to use art to create a higher good as all of the artwork focuses on healing and sharing human stories.Gepner said he entered the contest because “I am a big proponent and supporter of positive media. I would like media to share stories that actually empower people.”

Jack Ballo’s “Elio” chronicles Elio Madonia and his organization’s work to provide adequate housing for the many homeless people in the Dominican Republic. Ballo often offers his expertise and time to nonprofit organizations that do not have the means to make videos to raise awareness. He said he knew Project: Report would be a great opportunity to help Elio raise awareness of his organization to a large group of people in the Dominican Republic and beyond. “YouTube is changing the world as for as communication goes,” Ballo said. “I love that you can say so much in just three minutes. You can tell big stories in only three minutes!”

Alex Rozier, a third year student at the University of Missouri, knew this competition was the perfect opportunity to apply everything he has learned studying broadcast journalism. He also knew he had the perfect story to tell. In his video, Rozier documents a day in the life of Amanda McDaniel, a teen who suffers from childhood bone cancer yet still manages to cheer for her high school sports teams. “That prompt was written for this girl,” he said.
“I always try to find stories that are uplifting to counter the sad news that saturates the media. The journey that this girl has taken is such an inspiration. Sitting with Amanda reminds me how lucky I am to have another day here.”

Patrick Aviles chose his subject, Santos Camacho, after using his recycling center for the last four years. He and his former college roommate and production partner, Robert Knauf, both heard about the competition through the Media Art Center, a San Diego nonprofit for which they both work. “It was a great opportunity to feature someone and make it look great,” Aviles said.
Knauf said he and Aviles both prize the opportunity to tell stories not conventionally covered in the mainstream media. “Journalism is becoming more of a people’s medium,” he said. “It is no longer up to major companies to decide what to put on the air, but more about citizen journalism.” As a full-time student at Northwestern University and a licensed commercial pilot,

Takayuki Ono appropriately chose to profile a pilot who volunteers his time to fly patients and others in distress. “I always wanted to do a piece on this organization, Angel Flight, and thought this was a great opportunity,” Ono said. As for his thoughts on the competition, he said: “I think it was really amazing how creative people were with their story ideas and I’m thrilled to be among the semi-finalists.”At Northwestern’s Medill School of Journalism, Ono is a student of Beth Bennett, who made the Round 1 assignment a course requirement for her students. “The students were so enthusiastic about this project,” Bennett said, “especially because it felt like they were playing for real stakes. Many of my students did enterprise stories especially for the contest and put in hours and hours of shooting and editing work.”

Paul Franz chose to study multimedia journalism at the University of Miami because he knew he would need to acquire a variety of skills to make a career in journalism. “If I were going to survive in this industry, I would need a jump-start,” he said. His experience in the competition allowed him to work with a really high-end camera for the first time while also sharing the story of a 2009 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, Dr. Pedro Jose Greer, a physician devoted to the care of low-income patients. “In school, we are looking into issues of poverty in Miami, and Dr. Greer was a good face to put on the issues both locally and nationally,” Franz said.

Richgail Enriquez, originally from the Philippines, immigrated to the United States when she was 15. She now lives in San Francisco, where she works as a marketing and publication assistant while freelancing for online websites.
She jumped at the opportunity to enter Project: Report. “I always loved documentaries, and this was a great way to learn, get my work out there, and grow,” she said. “I was really excited!” She found her subject by asking all her friends for suggestions for “untold [s]heroes.” Upon meeting Lolita Kintanar, she was fascinated by her work with the homeless and knew her greatest challenge would be to tell it in under three minutes.
One would find few similarities between Samantha Danis, a senior at the University of Maine, and her subject, Alice Fogg. But upon closer examination it is easy to see that the broadcast journalism student shares the same vibrancy as her 82-year old subject. “Alice is probably the best subject and one of the best people I’ve ever met,” Danis said. The video details Fogg’s mission to sew pillows for those serving in the armed services. “Alice is really one of a kind and so full of life,” she said. “It was really humbling to meet her and an honor to be able to tell her story.”

Mark Jeevaratnam is set to graduate from Davidson College this spring with a degree in economics and experience on the school wrestling team. He dreams of being an ethnographic documentary filmmaker and journalist. Jeevaratnam made films in high school but found it hard to continue producing films while staying abreast of his undergraduate coursework. “It was not until I traveled to the Philippines to produce a documentary last summer that I was really drawn back into it,” he said. Project:Report allowed him to reconnect with his love of filmmaking. He learned of the competition just days before the deadline. “I had already finished all the work I had due before spring break, and Sharon Hill is a phenomenal person,” he said, referring to the cafeteria worker who became his subject. “I have gotten to know Sharon Hill over the course of my stay at Davidson because she works in Commons where we all eat. When I saw the premise of the contest, I knew Sharon was someone the rest of the world needed to meet.”

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