Most Valuable Players | |
---|---|
Directed by | Matthew D. Kallis |
Produced by | Matthew D. Kallis Christopher Lockhart |
Written by | Christopher Lockhart |
Starring | Ali Mosser Jennifer Wescoe Katie Wexler Zachary Gibson Frank Anonia Amanda Kostalis John Andreadis |
Music by | Randy Miller |
Cinematography | Curt Apduhan |
Edited by | Zack Braff |
Production
company |
Canyonback Films
|
Release date
|
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Running time
|
95 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Most Valuable Players is a 2010 documentary film directed/produced by Matthew D. Kallis and written/produced by Christopher Lockhart, about The Freddy Awards, an annual awards ceremony recognizing outstanding high school musical theatre in the Lehigh Valley region of Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Lockhart was inspired to make the film after watching clips of a Freddy Awards production on YouTube.
The film appeared in the International Documentary Association's DocuWeeks showcase in August 2010, as well as the Mill Valley Film Festival in California. The Oprah Winfrey Network has acquired the broadcast and video rights to the film.
The film documents the 2008 ceremony for the annual award program, which is held every year at the State Theatre, Easton, Pennsylvania.
Most Valuable Players, a Canyonback Films production, is directed/produced by Matthew D. Kallis and written/produced by Christopher Lockhart. It was Lockhart's first documentary and, although Kallis had directed documentaries in the past, he had never done one to this scale. The film was conceived when Lockhart found a clip of the 2006 ceremony on YouTube while searching for something unrelated. Lockhart was impressed with the production values and performance caliber, and took the idea to Kallis, who agreed to partner with him for a documentary.
Kallis and Lockhart acquired over 300 hours of source material over four months, starting with 2008 high school rehearsals all the way up to the State Theatre ceremony on May 22, 2008. In addition to the event itself, the footage includes filming behind-the-scenes at production meetings, interviews with students and teachers, rehearsals at participating high schools, and the announcement of Freddy Award nominations. Cinematographer Curt Apduhan, who won an Emmy for the 2003 documentary "Amargosa", served as Director of Photography. Ken King, winner of two Emmy Awards and nominated for a BAFTA for his work on the film Pulp Fiction, served as production sound mixer. 40 minutes of an original score was composed by Randy Miller.