selling
the real thing
local filmmaker made the pitch for granny d
by c. leslie bothwell (a thinly-veiled disguise)
Asheville-based
Producer/Director Rebecca MacNeice knew she had a problem when she
took on U.S. Senate candidate Doris “Granny D” Haddock
as a client. In fact, there were three problems: a slim budget; not
much time; and a well-funded incumbent with enormous name recognition
and bipartisan support. Former New Hampshire Governor and current
Senator Judd Gregg was running for his third term. By any politics-as-usual
measure, the 94-year-old Granny D’s campaign was doomed from
the start.
“It
was completely impossible,” MacNeice laughs. “It was irresistible.”
Children’s
Crusade
MacNeice
was no stranger to political campaigns. Earlier in the year she had
produced a Web commercial for Dennis Kucinich, condensing a 30-minute
stump speech Kucinich had delivered in Asheville’s City/County
Plaza into a 3 1/2 minute highly stylized montage. That commercial
garnered 687,351 hits in its first week on the Web.
Nor
was MacNeice unused to travel to pursue her work. “I’m
lucky that my profession isn’t place-dependent,” she said,
“So I can live where I want to live. But, on the flip-side,
living in Asheville means that a lot of my work will always be elsewhere.
I shoot all over the country.”
“With
Doris, I was working with an out-of-state candidate who I had already
filmed in Asheville and in Boston, during the Democratic National
Convention. That was the normal part. But she was also a candidate
who wouldn’t take money from corporations or PACs, who had walked
coast to coast for campaign finance reform when she was 90, and whose
campaign staff included dreamers and zealots,” MacNeice remembers.
“It was a children’s crusade led by a grandmother. How
could I refuse?”
An
anti-candidate required an anti-commercial and Joe Trippi, mastermind
of the Howard Dean Internet tsunami, signed on as an advisor. The
brainstorming began and the diverse team cooked up and discarded a
handful of potential concepts before settling on the final approach.
MacNeice notes, “A political spot normally needs to be seen
four to five times to make an impression on the viewer, but with their
broadcast budget we absolutely needed to make our point and brand
our candidate the first time. We needed to show her in a favorable
light without giving her opponent an opening for attack. And
I knew we had to use film, not video. Film is emotional and it does
a better job at catching light and color.
Connection:
Asheville
MacNeice
had a history with Granny D, starting with Rolling Thunder/Asheville
in May, 2003. Granny flew in from a speaking engagement in Michigan
to address the event while MacNeice was shooting it for Bill Moyers
Now. The filmmaker shot a lengthy interview with the activist and
they hit it off. Later, when GrannyD stopped through Asheville as
she crisscrossed the country registering working women, she stayed
with MacNeice.
“We
really clicked,” MacNeice recalls. “I’ll never forget
the night I took her to dinner on my motor scooter, zooming through
downtown Asheville, laughing and shouting.”
In
July, when the filmmaker traveled to New England for the Democratic
Convention, she crashed on Granny’s sofa. Later, MacNeice and
Haddock shared an air mattress in an overcrowded residence in Boston.
By then, Granny D had jumped into the U.S. Senate race and she soon
enlisted MacNeice to produce a fifteen minute video, composed from
earlier footage, for fund-raising house parties.
Winging
It
October,
back in New Hampshire to shoot the commercial, and after days of planning
and various setbacks, MacNeice received a call from Cleveland, Ohio.
Kucinich was now running for reelection to Congress and wanted TV
spots ASAP, in case his comfortable poll numbers began to slide. MacNeice
lived on caffeine and junk food in a Cleveland production studio for
the next four days before jetting to Washington, D.C. There she collected
equipment and then drove back to New Hampshire to film the Granny
D ad.
Fading
Candidate, Fading Light
On
the day of the shoot, Granny D was all over New Hampshire, delivering
three speeches around the state while the crew prepped. “These
two strapping young men were sent off on the strange mission of rummaging
in her closet for outfits the right color,” recalls MacNeice,
“And when Granny arrived, she was clearly weary. But she dashed
into the camper to change her clothes and hurried out to jump into
a canoe. She was still putting on make-up while those young men towed
her upstream.” The nonagenarian hadn’t canoed in 30 years,
but, somehow, there she was, gamely plunging her paddle into reflected
autumn colors as the crew shouted, “Hurry! We’re losing
light!”
It
was the magic hour, an October sunset on a golden pond and there was
no time on the calendar for a remake. The crew towed the canoe upstream
again. And again. And in the end there was enough light and just enough
film to shoot a seconds-long head shot to use beneath the legally
mandated message, “I’m Doris Granny D Haddock, and I approved
this ad.”
Granny D didn’t win her race, though she polled 36 percent,
but MacNeice remains a believer. “If politics is ever going
to change, we need candidates like Doris Haddock,” she said.
“We need average citizens who are willing to step up to the
plate. The spot we created was positive and effective. In a world
full of negative campaign ads, we managed to avoid negativity. I am
proud to have been a part of that effort.”
C.
Leslie Bothwell*
is a Mountain Xpress staff writer, former managing editor of that
newspaper and founding editor of the Warren Wilson College environmental
journal Heartstone. He has nabbed national and regional awards for
investigative reporting, humor and criticism, and is currently writing
a critical biography, The Prince of War: Billy Graham’s Legacy
of Aggression. Bothwell lives in downtown Asheville with three cats,
many cacti, and an iMac. His other car is a canoe.
*We assume you guessed this is Cecil? - Ed.