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On the day
Sam Williams was born, he almost died.
"We have a child born with a brain injury," his mother told
his father. "If he survives, we have an altered life."
Sam Williams survived. And, indeed, he alters and changes people. He has
enriched the lives of his family and transformed the perspective of those
who look beyond his disability. Just ask Casper Rice and Lauren Pollock.
The two Northern Illinois University student filmmakers explore the life
of Williams and his family in their award-winning documentary, "Please
Wait to Be Seated." Easter Seals will premiere the film during its
film and photography exhibition, titled "The Power of Family,"
from 5:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 29, at Easter Seals DuPage, 830 S.
Addison, Villa Park. The public is welcome.
"I learned a lot about filmmaking through the experience," says
Pollock, a senior from Peoria majoring in communication. "I learned
a lot more about the abilities of people with disabilities."
Williams, 19, has cerebral palsy, a disorder usually caused by brain damage
occurring at or before birth and marked by muscular impairment. He spends
most of his time in a wheel chair, hence the irony in the documentarys
name. And he speaks with the aid of a computerized speech synthesizer,
not unlike the device used by Stephen Hawking.
Williams has something else in common with the world-renowned thinkertheyre
both smart. Williams this fall began his freshman year at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. The filmmakers met Williams during his
senior year of high school.
"Walking into Easter Seal and trying to communicate with Sam for
the first time was a whole life turner," says Rice, a Sycamore native
who graduated with a degree in communication this summer and now lives
in Geneva.
"Sam has difficulty speaking," Rice says. "At the same
time, his mind is always racing ahead of everyone else. Spending time
with him, you realize hes brilliant, yet most people dont
grasp the fact that hes a normal person."
The documentary project began in the classroom of NIU Communication Professor
Laura Vazquez. Her advanced field production course (COMS 426) requires
students to produce a documentary. A chance encounter between Rice and
Ellie Cummings, public relations director for Easter Seals DuPage, convinced
him to pursue a project for the agency. Cummings recommended Williams
as a possible subject for the feature.
"We spent time in class discussing the issues of creating audience
comfort with an unfamiliar voice and body type," Vazquez says. "The
class made suggestions, which I believe helped Lauren and Casper. To their
credit, they have continued to work on the project even though the class
is over and the grades are in."
Williams father, Jim, a professor at Rush Medical College, and his
mother, Sammy, a physical therapist at Easter Seals DuPage, opened their
lives to Rice and Pollock. The access allowed the student filmmakers to
gain perspective and focus on the person behind the disability.
"They
succeeded in their desire to show that Sam is very much a person, not
just a disability, that he does have hopes, dreams, frustrations and a
wonderful strength," Ellie Cummings says. "Sams family
has a strong spiritual health and wonderful sense of humor. They always
seem to raise the bar for him. And in the documentary, you see that Sams
strength is very much a reflection of the strength of his family."
At one point in the film, Sam explains why he laughs in the face of adversity.
"Humor has allowed me to get through some pretty hard times,"
he says through the voice synthesizer. "You cant be a tight
ass and have cerebral palsy."
"Please Wait to be Seated" won the Best of Festival Award at
the Rock River
Alternative Film Festival in Rockford this summer. The documentary has
been expanded upon for the Easter Seals premiere and now includes footage
of Williams going off to college and of his graduation at York Community
High School in Elmhurst.
The documentary
captures Williams as he practices walking with the aid of a TheraSuita
network of hooks, Velcro and bungee-like cords that help guide muscle
movement. The suit, based on a design for Russian cosmonauts, allowed
Williams to walk across the stage to accept his diploma.
"I was very moved seeing the film, with the grasp and level of understanding
these student filmmakers have of this young mans life," says
Mary Alice DArcy, president of Easter Seals DuPage. "It is
stunning. You leave the film really knowing Sam."
In addition
to the documentarys premiere, "The Power of Family" exhibit
will showcase a collection of more than 30 photographs taken by College
of DuPage students. The photos, each 2 feet by 3 feet, depict the lives
of Easter Seals clients and will be accompanied by audio vignettes.
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