Showing posts with label Rob Nugent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rob Nugent. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Coach Nugent Reprises His Act of Shoreman Sportsmanship in Film of Cory Weissman Story


CHESTERTOWN, MD—Shoremen basketball coach Rob Nugent will play himself in the movie version of a dramatic and captivating event that he and his players made possible at Gettysburg College last spring. In a scene that gripped first a gymnasium full of fans, and then the nation, Cory Weissman, a Gettysburg College player who suffered a stroke during his first year on campus, returned to the court for one extraordinary moment in the final minute of the last home game of his senior year. Thanks to the sportsmanship of Coach Nugent and his Shoremen, Weissman had a chance to score the only point of his college career. Weissman’s story will be told in the movie 1,000 to 1: The Cory Weissman Story, which will begin filming on the Gettysburg campus in October.
Read the official movie announcement release below:

"1,000 to 1: The Cory Weissman Story" signs Wizards of Waverly Place star Davis Henrie, Beau Bridges and Jean Louisa Kelly for lead roles.
Independent Film Chronicles True Story of Gettysburg College Basketball Player's Dramatic Return to the Court After Catastrophic Stroke; Production Commences October 2 on Historic Pennsylvania Campus.

Six-Time Grammy® Winner Arturo Sandoval To Compose Score.

GETTYSBURG, PA – David Henrie (Wizards of Waverly Place) will play the lead in 1,000 to 1: The Cory Weissman Story, the true story of a young basketball player who suffered a catastrophic stroke as a freshman at Gettysburg College but through determination and an indomitable spirit returned to the court for one remarkable moment in the last game of his senior year. The chances of his surviving the stroke at all were bleak. The odds of his returning to the court were astronomical. Multiple Emmy® nominee Beau Bridges (Without Warning: The James Brady Story, The Descendants) stars as the Gettysburg College basketball coach George Petrie, and Jean Louisa Kelly (Mr. Holland’s Opus; Yes, Dear) plays Cory’s mother Tina, a physical therapist who became her son’s partner in a long recovery.
Legendary trumpet player and six-time Grammy® Award winner Arturo Sandoval, who won an Emmy for the score to the HBO film of his own life story, For Love or Country (starring Andy Garcia), will compose and record the score for the film.
1,000 to 1: The Cory Weissman Story is produced by former longtime Disney executive Bruce Gordon and Bob Burris (Growing Pains), who also wrote the script, and will be directed by Michael Levine (Nowhere Man). The film is a production of Gettysburg Great Productions, LLC, a subsidiary of Gettysburg College.
1,000 to 1 tells the inspiring true story of Weissman, a 1,000-point high school basketball star, who suffered a catastrophic, life-threatening stroke at the end of his freshman year leaving him paralyzed on the left side. Three years later, in the last game of his senior year, improbably, even impossibly, Cory returned to the basketball court. Gettysburg basketball coach George Petrie's plan was simple. Non-playing, still-recovering, Co-captain Cory Weissman would be a starter, would hear his name announced and then, to avoid any possibility of injury, would be immediately removed from the game after the opening tap.
When Cory's name was announced and he walked to the center circle the crowd erupted. When a beaming Cory was quickly replaced the cheering intensified: a raucous celebration of the triumphant climax of one extraordinary young athlete’s s utterly unlikely journey and the impact he had made on his family, his team, his school, even the teams he played against.
With Gettysburg up by a commanding lead, Coach Petrie made the fateful decision to put Cory back in for the game’s remaining seconds. But for opposing Washington College coach Rob Nugent, the story was not yet complete. Nugent instructed his players to deliberately foul Cory Weissman. In his last season, in his last game, Cory Weissman finally had a chance to score the first – and only – points of his collegiate basketball career. What happened next rivals the most emotional moments in sport.
Cory’s moment was covered by dozens of national media outlets including ESPN, NPR, Sports Illustrated, and The New York Times.
“For all those who still see sports as a worthwhile pursuit, a metaphor for life, and who sometimes find in our college athletes those qualities we all aspire to… Cory Weissman’s story of personal determination and the sportsmanship exhibited by his coach, his teammates and the opposing team will make for a remarkable movie experience,” say producers Bruce Gordon and Bob Burris.
“That was the most confident shot of my basketball career,” Cory said later of that final moment. “I thought to myself: ‘After three years of hard work and all I’ve been through, there’s no way this ball’s not going in.’ ”


Tuesday, April 17, 2012

KICK Film Festival to Screen Documentaries "Play Again," "Hoop Dreams" and Kolaja's "Season in D3"


CHESTERTOWN, MD—Chestertown’s first KICK Film Festival will bring two award-winning documentaries and a new video series on Shoremen basketball to the Garfield Center for the Arts Sunday, April 22. Sponsored by the Chestertown Spy, Washington College Department of Athletics, and the Echo Hill Outdoor School, this year’s inaugural KICK Festival aims to inspire students and community members alike with stories about dedicated athletes and the value of sports and outdoor play.
The Festival will kick off at 2:30 Sunday with the award-winning documentary Play Again, which explores the increasing loss of outdoor “playtime” for American children and its impact. The Play Again screening is sponsored by Echo Hill Outdoor School and has special meaning for the School’s associate director, Andrew McCown. “For forty years Echo Hill Outdoor School has been exploring nature with children, and Play Again confirms our belief in the importance of maintaining a human connection to the natural world,” he says. “It is about the value of spending time outside and what may be lost if we do not.”


That evening at 7:30, the focus will turn to basketball, with the award-winning documentary Hoop Dreams, which critic Roger Ebert praised as “one of the best films about American life that I have ever seen.” The movie (view the trailer here) tells the stories of two African-American teenagers recruited to play for a predominantly white high school with an outstanding basketball program. The two young men take 90-minute commutes to school, enduring long and difficult workouts and practices, and adjusting to a totally new social environment. The film raises a number of important issues concerning race, class, economic division, education and values in contemporary America.
“We selected Hoop Dreams as our first film because it remains the gold standard of what a sports documentary is all about,” says Bryan Matthews, director of athletics at Washington College. “I think it will be as meaningful to our college students as it will be for the students at Kent County High. It shows, in very dramatic ways, how the life of the body intersects with the life of the positive mind.”
Washington College men’s basketball head coach, Rob Nugent, who recently gained national headlines for his team’s sportsmanship, will introduce the film. As a bonus with strong local ties, Chestertown-based filmmaker Kurt Kolaja, whose 2010 documentary on the Kent County Marching Band won top honors at the Chesapeake Film Festival, will screen selections from his latest, an online documentary series on DIII basketball. Kolaja and his camera followed the Washington College Shoremen through a full season of practices and games to create a portrait of the coaches and scholar-athletes that personify Division III sports.

Students at Washington College and Kent County High School will be admitted to all films for free. All other adults are asked to make a donation at the door ($10 suggested). The Garfield Center for the Arts is located at the Prince Theatre, 210 High Street, downtown Chestertown. Click here to reserve tickets. For more information, visit the Garfield Center website or call the box office at 410-810-2060.