Saint Misbehavin' : The Wavy Gravy Movie

http://theragblog.blogspot.com/2009/03/film-saint-misbehavin-wavy-gravy-movie.html

The Saints Go Marching in Downtown Austin

Wavy Gravy's evolving persona as poet, storyteller, merry prankster, 
jester and clown reveals a deeply spiritual and resourceful man who 
has used his gifts of humor and wit in dangerously charged situations 
to defuse tension, prevent violence, turn the tables and achieve 
positive, constructive outcomes.

By Susan Van Haitsma
The Rag Blog
March 23, 2009

This spring break week in Austin, the SXSW music, interactive and 
film festivals converged to make Austin an absolute epicenter of the 
creative arts. What a fabulous week! The city literally hummed.

My partner and I gravitated to the documentary films and took in as 
many of the offerings as we could at the festival. Notable among them 
was the premiere screening of "Saint Misbehavin', The Wavy Gravy 
Movie," produced and directed by Californian, Michelle Esrick. Making 
the film was a 10-year project for Esrick, and her commitment has 
achieved a first-rate visual biography of the 60's icon, 
interspersing recent interviews with footage from Wavy Gravy's 
Woodstock and Hog Farm bus tour days, including remarkable scenes 
from the group's trek across Europe through the Middle East and Asia in 1970.

Wavy Gravy's evolving persona as poet, storyteller, merry prankster, 
jester and clown reveals a deeply spiritual and resourceful man who 
has used his gifts of humor and wit in dangerously charged situations 
to defuse tension, prevent violence, turn the tables and achieve 
positive, constructive outcomes. Through his own stories, 
recollections from his closest family and friends and accompanying 
film vignettes that show Wavy Gravy in action, we are shown how 
nonviolence actually works. And, in typical Wavy Gravy fashion, he 
transforms even this kind of work into play. His long-time projects 
involve teaching children nonviolence, meditation and performance 
techniques (at his legendary Camp Winnarainbow in Northern 
California), and supplying medical services to restore vision to 
cataract patients in underserved parts of the world (through the SEVA 
Foundation he co-founded 30 years ago with several colleagues, 
including his wife, Jahanara Romney and his good friends, Ram Dass 
and Dr. Larry Brilliant, who are also featured in the film).

My partner and I attended the Saint Misbehavin' premiere on the first 
Saturday of the SXSW film festival and were so taken with the story 
that we returned for the final showing the following Saturday with a 
friend who was in town to visit. Wavy Gravy was present at each 
venue, answering questions with characteristic aplomb.

And the compassionate clown gave Austin even more. Earlier in the day 
of his final film showing, Wavy Gravy became the somewhat impromptu 
grand marshal of the Million Musician March for Peace that marked the 
6th anniversary of the beginning of the invasion of Iraq. Organized 
by the local musicians' group, Instruments for Peace, the march was a 
colorful, family-oriented New Orleans-style parade led by musicians 
through downtown Austin, past SXSW venues, beginning at the Texas 
state capitol and winding up at Austin's City Hall plaza for a 
concert where some of Austin's finest musicians performed for the marchers.

At the head of the parade, Wavy Gravy and Michelle Esrick were 
ensconced in a festively decorated pedicab, the perfect peace convoy, 
leading us in tye-dyed, bubble-blowing style.

We CodePink folks were also on hand with eye-catching fuzzy peace 
signs made by our own Heidi Turpin. Heidi presented Wavy Gravy with 
one of the multi-colored peace signs that matched his attire to a T.

I hope Michelle Esrick's fine film is distributed and reaches a wide 
audience. If its warm reception in Austin is an indication, the film 
will indeed carry the Wavy Gravy message forward: Put your good where 
it will do the most. Then, you will have fun doing it!

.


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