Baba’ s Birthday a journey of the heartPr oject Status Baba’ s Birthday is a 52 minute English television documentary. Seking distribution via DVD outlets and television sales in all territories. Pay-per-view = http://vimeo.com/ondemand/samadhi Log Line Luke, a young Australian follower of spiritual master Meher Baba, makes a pilgrimage to India to appear in the classic play ‘Leila and Majnun’, to celebrate Baba’s birthday . PO Box 1092 Queen Victoria Bld. NSW 1230 Australia [email protected]www.sensoryimage.net ABN: 97 948 032 868 Australian DVD Outlet Meher Baba Film & Video Project 15 Magenta Square Amaroo ACT 2914 [email protected]US Distribution Love Street Bookstore T el: +1 323 730 5281 [email protected]www.lovestreetbookstore.com Bab a’s Bir thd ay a journey of the heartThe tomb of Meher Baba in Meherabad, India Production Team Writer/ Director: Peter Sumner Producer: Michael Ney (Sensory Image Pty Ltd) Orignal Music: Christopher Gordon Orchestra Recording: Simon Le adley (T rackdown Studios) Location Recording: William Bullock Audio Post: Marcus Longfoot (Full Circle Audio) Additional Stills & Video: William Bullock & L ynn Burgos Director of Photography: Michael Ney Editor: Carolina Mitchell Script Consultant: Kris Wyld Assoc. Producer: Lynn Burgos, Tony Foley Produced by page 1
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Brief Synopsis‘Baba’s Birthday’ is a one hour documentary of discovery for young people
looking for true and lasting values in an increasingly stressful and
confusing world.
We follow Luke Sumner to Meherabad, up on the Deccan Plateau in India,
where he is due to rehearse his leading role in the play to celebrate
Meher Baba’s birthday, the Bedouin classic, ‘Leila and Majnun’.
In the following weeks, amidst the rich culture and bustle of India, Luke
visits Meher Baba’s birthplace in Pune, and his home at Meherazad where
he meets and talks with members of Baba’s family and Mandali – men and
women who devoted their lives to serving Baba.
Luke continues with the rehearsals and his demanding role as the
love-crazed Majnun, but nds time to talk with some of the many young men
and women who come to the pilgrim’s centre seeking answers to their
deepest questions. At sunrise on Meher Baba’s birthday Luke joins the
crowd at His tomb, and the big night of ‘Leila and Majnun’ is a huge success
with the musicians, the entire cast and choir rising to the challenge.
The nal images are around ‘the dhuni re’ – a ritual of dedication
and release and an expression of love for God.
Director’s Statement In the West, mainstream religion appears to have failed generations of
youth caught up in the pervasive snare of consumerism, cynicism and
debased values. In their attempts to nd real meaning in life people of
all ages, beliefs and backgrounds have sought answers in the East, from
the many gurus and masters that have always been a part of the spiritual
fabric of India. From out of the endless babble of tongues offering spiritual
salvation and new gods, one clear voice rises, paradoxically from the
Silent Master Meher Baba, who imparts to us a simple and contemporary
explanation of humanity’s relationship with God.But in a world apparently disintegrating into further violence and chaos,
it’s not difcult to understand why people so often succumb to cynicism
and self-indulgence, and turn a deaf ear to a very sweet voice.
However, hope is an antidote, and in this documentary hope and optimism
are among the discoveries our young man Luke makes, as he journeys to
Meherabad in India, listens to wise elders and clear-eyed young men and
women, and makes a success of his role in the play to celebrate
Meher Baba’s Birthday.
Who is Meher Baba?Avatar Meher Baba was known as the Silent Master who devoted His life, notto teaching, but to awakening humanity to His unifying message of Truth and
Love given by the great messengers of the past. His belief that all had been
said was given emphasis by his observing silence for 44 years, from 1925 until
his death in January 1969.
Born in Pune, India in 1894, of Zoroastrian descent, Baba’s mission as Avatar,
the Hindu word for Godman, began in 1921 and developed as a practical
example of his principle message of love. He worked with disciples in
India, Europe, America as well as the poor of India, through free schools,
dispensaries and shelters.
Meher Baba attracted a dedicated worldwide following from all religious
traditions. He said, “I intend to bring together all the religions like beadson one string, revitalising them for individual and collective needs.” Meher
Baba’s followers are simply known as ‘Baba lovers’, following no rites,
The StorylineAfter an introduction to Meher Baba with stills and glimpses of India, our young
Australian Luke arrives at Meherabad to be greeted by his friends.
Luke takes the path up to Baba’s tomb where he pays his respects to the Master
and archival footage gives the background to Baba’s declaration in the 1950’s
that He was the Avatar. God in human form.
The cast gathers at the Meherabad Theatre for their rst rehearsal, where thedirector Alan Wagner and the writer Heather Nadel outline the play and the work
ahead. Luke is playing the young Arab prince Majnun in the classic Arabian story
of ‘Leila and Majnun’.
After rehearsal and costume ttings, the cast take time out for a little volleyball
and lunch in the Pilgrim Centre dining room.
Luke drives to Pune where he visits Baba’s early home and meets Jehangir who
unfolds the story of Baba’s early realization and shows Luke Baba’s room. Lukethen heads into town to pay his respects at the tomb of one of Meher Baba’s ve
Perfect Masters, Hazrat Babajan.
Back at the house he joins Baba’s twin nephews Rustom and Sohrab as they laugh
about Baba’s sense of humour.
After rehearsals a cast member Forest talks about his relationship with Baba,
and onstage, in a scene from the nal production, the animals enter and begin
the story. A young Baba lover Shirin talks about her love for Baba.
Then the pilgrims ride through Ahmednagar in the blue bus out to Meherazad,
Meher Baba’s home compound since the 1940’s. Luke’s narration gives us the
Michael is a skilled camera person, production manager and Final Cut Pro editor
with extensive experience successfully producing creative projects including
videos, web design, multimedia and live theatre events. His early career consisted
of theatre lighting design, photojournalism and audio-visual production.
After studying television production and running his own commercial photography studio
for six years, Michael opened a multimedia company called Virtual Realm Xchange,
working with high prole clients such as The City of Sydney Council and The Sydney
Symphony Orchestra and Westpac Bank. Video production tasks included directing,
scripting, camera and editing. Other creative director activities included digital design,animation, writing and directing voice-overs and special effects.
Michael produced and directed two 20 minute docu-dramas for the Faculty of Medicineat The University of Sydney. He was also responsible for the rst interactive CD-ROM
for Sydney University, promoting all their undergraduate courses and facilities ...
groundbreaking for its early use of QTVR “virtual reality” in an interactive tour.
Michael rebranded his company in 2001 to Sensory Image to focus on lm and
TV projects. More information at http://www.sensoryimage.net/about-michael-ney
In 2002, he directed Youth Matters, an observational documentary about at-risk kids
going through a vocational program at a 5 star hotel in Sydney. In 2003, he shot
The Making of Dark Love Story, a behind-the-scenes documentary for producer
Greg Read and director Jon Hewitt, starring Belinda McClory and Aaron Pederson.
Michael also worked closely with director Vincent Ward (What Dreams May Come,
The Navigator, Map of the Human Heart) to create an animated proof-of-concept trailer
for his last lm River Queen. This DVD accompanied the script for pitches in London,
New York and Hollywood, and helped Vincent to successfully secure production funding.
In 2004, Michael directed a corporate video for Futurebank, and has directed numerous
short lms and other corporate and promotional or educational video productions.
Finally, Baba’s Birthday, produced by Michael (with writer/director Peter Sumner),
was shot in India over 2 months, edited in Australia over several months
and has original music for orchestra composed by Christopher Gordon. The DVD is
available via Love Street Bookstore in USA, and also seeking television sales.
Michael is a founding member of OZDOX – The Australian Documentary Forum,
which has held monthly events since July 2003 (www.ozdox.org) and he has
produced a DVD archive of 30 of these programs for the public.
He also initiated the video archive of Popcorn Taxi, Sydney lmmaker Q&A events,
and has shot nearly all of these events since 1999 with some footage included on
the DVD releases for various lms and online podcasts. (www.popcorntaxi.com.au)
Michael is a multi-talented lm industry professional who gives immense energy,
passion and focus to any project he is involved in. He is currently nishing a
documentary on the Peace Angels - a spiritually based transformational theatre group
The next project, currently in development with writer Stefanie Lasthaus, is an
interactive transmedia documentary shot in Germany and Switzerland called“From Chaos To Calm – a writer’s journey”, about the German author Hermann Hesse.
Baba’s Birthdaya journey of the heart Christopher Gordon
Music Composer Composer Christopher Gordon’s most recent projects include:
* the score for the TNT mini-series of Stephen King’s Salem’s Lot* a piece commissioned by the Sydney Children’s Choir to mark
their fteenth anniversary and;
* a Bass Trombone Concerta commissioned by the Sydney Symphony Orchestra
to receive its premiere performance at the Sydney Opera House in October 2004.
Gordon’s recent lm scores include:
* Master & Commander: The Far Side Of The World
– winner of a Top Box Ofce Award at 2004 ASCAP Film and Television Music Awards,
which he co-composed with fellow recipients Iva Davies and Richard Tognetti;
* When Good Ghouls Go Bad
– winner of the 2001 Australian Screen Music Award for
“Best Music for a Mini-Series or Telemovie”;
* Sydney: A Story of a City (1999)
– an IMAX spectacular from leading Australian director Bruce Beresford.
His score for On the Beach received wide international acclaim; often described
as the best soundtrack of 2000, it won four Australian Screen Music Awards.
His highly praised score for Moby Dick (1998) received three ASM awards while
his music for Sanctuary (1995) was nominated in the Australian Film Institute
Awards and the ASM Awards.
In the concert hall Peace On Earth for Gondwana Voices and the Sydney
Sypmphony Orchestra was a popular success with Christmas audiences in 2001.
He composed the choral work a Song of Hope, incidental music for the ofcial
celebration of the Centenary of the Federation of Australia and wrote and
arranged the music for the opening ceremony of the 2003 Rugby World Cup.
Other recent works include Spin Globe, Spin commissioned by the Sydney
Children’s Choir and Loose Canon commissioned by the Tucana Flute Quartet.
Christopher Gordon conducting the orchestra for “Baba’s Birthday”at Trackdown Studios, Sydney, Australia.
Producer’s NoteThe rich visuals of India, a colourful musical play and the variety of characters
make this documentary a delight to watch. The content, based on Meher Baba, is
intriguing and even perplexing to some... “God in human form - that’s an amazing
concept” says one of the interviewees. In a show of support, long time Baba lover,
Pete Townshend gave permission to use any of his music for the project and we
chose some classics for the trailer. However, when composer Christopher Gordonagreed to write an original score we found the two styles of music so divergent that
we had to pick just one. The orchestral recording was an event in itself and was
satisfying to see the emotional music integrate with the documentary story.