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Awards Press Release

 

70th ANNUAL CHRISTOPHER AWARD WINNERS HIGHLIGHT

EMPATHY, FAITH, AND LOVING YOUR NEIGHBOR

 

Creators of films, TV programs and books to be honored on May 23rd

 

NEW YORK, April 9, 2019 - Mark Wahlberg’s pro-foster parenting comedy Instant Family, Season Two of Returning the Favor, Mike Rowe’s Facebook series celebrating community volunteers, and The Sun Does Shine, Anthony Ray Hinton’s memoir about being an innocent man sentenced to death row, are among the 20 winning feature films, TV/Cable programs, and books for adults and young people that will be honored at the 70th annual Christopher Awards in New York City on May 23, 2019.
 

            The Christopher Awards were created in 1949 to celebrate writers, producers, directors, authors and illustrators whose work “affirms the highest values of the human spirit” and reflects the Christopher motto, “It’s better to light one candle than to curse the darkness.”
 

            “The stories we’re honoring move us toward getting in touch with ‘the better angels of our nature,’ to use Abraham Lincoln’s term,” said Tony Rossi, The Christophers’ Director of Communications. “They highlight the power of community and common purpose, the positive difference that love and perseverance can make in the lives of the lost or lonely, and the struggle to find God’s presence and light, even in the darkest of circumstances.”

 

Winners in the various categories are:

TV & Cable

 

            ABC News 20/20: One Way Out: Thailand Cave Rescue dives into the death-defying teamwork and courage it took to successfully save the lives of 12 boys and their soccer coach trapped in a complex network of flooded caves last summer. When an armed, mentally ill young man entered a Georgia school in 2013 and threatened to kill all the children, the school’s empathetic bookkeeper used kindness to convince him to surrender peacefully in the riveting dramatization Faith Under Fire: The Antoinette Tuff Story (Lifetime). The Homeless Chorus Speaks (PBS) chronicles the life-changing work of San Diego musicians Nina Deering and Steph Johnson, who formed a choir made up of homeless people, giving them a sense of fellowship and hope. Blending historical narrative with contemporary patient stories, The Mayo Clinic: Faith, Hope, Science (PBS) details the partnership between the Mayo family and the Sisters of St. Francis in 1883 that led to the creation of an institution world-renowned for medicine, compassion, and spirituality. Mike Rowe highlights America at its best as he travels throughout the country to profile and reward volunteers who are working to impact their communities in positive ways in Returning the Favor: Season Two (Facebook Watch).

 

Feature Films

            A mother’s unyielding commitment to saving her 19-year-old son from the scourge of opioid addiction is tested when he returns home from rehab, only to face unexpected temptations and dark elements of his past in Ben is Back (Lionsgate). Inspired by writer/director Sean Anders’ own experience, Instant Family (Paramount Pictures) comedically explores the joys and heartaches faced by a couple who take in three foster children as they slowly bond and come to love each other. As Nero persecutes and executes all Christians in Rome, Saints Luke and Paul courageously struggle to live out the Gospel of Jesus in ways that model forgiveness and love that stems from a divine source in Paul, Apostle of Christ (AFFIRM Films/Sony Pictures). Won’t You Be My Neighbor? (Focus Features) documents the enduring lessons of kindness, empathy, and respect that former Christopher Award winner Fred Rogers embodied and passed on to children through his PBS series Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood for more than 30 years.

 

Books for Adults

            In Everything Happens for a Reason: and Other Lies I’ve Loved (Random House/Penguin Random House), 35-year-old Kate Bowler struggles to make sense of her diagnosis with incurable cancer and comes to a new understanding of the ways that God can be found in life’s brokenness. David W. Blight’s Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom (Simon & Schuster) presents the definitive biography of the escaped slave whose writings and orations about the evils of slavery turned him into an influential champion of human liberty. With humor and honesty, the overly self-reliant Jennifer Fulwiler learns to embrace the chaos and joy of raising six kids, pursuing career goals, and accepting help from the people God puts in her life in One Beautiful Dream (Zondervan/Harper Collins) . In The Strange Case of Dr. Couney (Blue Rider Press/Penguin Random House), Dawn Raffel reveals the unknown story of the man who set up incubators at sideshows in Coney Island and Atlantic City in the early 1900s, saved the lives of thousands of premature babies, and revolutionized neonatal care. In The Sun Does Shine (St. Martin’s Press), Anthony Ray Hinton (with Lara Love Hardin) chronicles the racism that sent him to death row for 30 years for a murder he didn’t commit, the spiritual transformation that led him to become a force for good for his fellow inmates, and how he was finally exonerated in 2015.

 

Books for Young People

            In the competitive world of talking school supplies, where Pencil and Glue get all the glory, Eraser feels unappreciated until she realizes her critical role in creating second chances in Eraser by Anna Kang, illustrated by New Yorker cartoonist Christopher Weyant (Preschool and up, Two Lions/Amazon Publishing). As they enjoy the great outdoors and a trip to the zoo, a brother and sister come to appreciate God’s blessings in the beauty of creation and simple wonders of the world in The World is Awake by Linsey Davis with Joseph Bottum, illustrated by Lucy Fleming (Kindergarten and Up, Zonderkidz/Harper Collins). Inspired by author Jessica Kensky’s experiences after the Boston Marathon bombing, Rescue and Jessica, co-authored by Patrick Downes and illustrated by Scott Magoon (ages 6 and up, Candlewick Press), explores the special friendship that forms between a young woman, who is a double amputee, and the service dog who reignites her joy for life.

 

            Olivia wishes she could fix her brother Jacob’s autism, but adventures involving an ostrich named Ethel and a search for a missing toy lead her to see him and their relationship in a different light in The Ostrich and Other Lost Things by Beth Hautala (ages 8 and up, Philomel Books/Penguin Young Readers Group). To the Moon by Jeffrey Kluger with Ruby Shamir (ages 10 and up, Philomel Books/Penguin Young Readers Group) revisits the thrilling story of Apollo 8 and the teamwork, courage, and human ingenuity it took to send a crewed spaceship around the moon for the first time. When a comic book-loving sixth grader is goaded into illegal activities by a new friend, he looks to his heroes, both real and fictional, to help him deal with peer pressure and do what is right in Tight by Torrey Maldonado (young adult, Nancy Paulsen Books/Penguin Young Readers Group).

 

The 2019 special Christopher Awards announced.

 

The Christophers, a nonprofit founded in 1945 by Maryknoll Father James Keller, is rooted in the Judeo-Christian tradition of service to God and humanity. The ancient Chinese proverb—“It’s better to light one candle than to curse the darkness”— guides its publishing, radio, and awards programs.  More information about The Christophers is available at www.christophers.org.  [Editors: A complete list of winners is available on request.]

 

 

70th ANNUAL CHRISTOPHER AWARD Winners

TV & CABLE

 

ABC News 20/20: One Way Out: Thailand Cave Rescue

(ABC News)

Producers: Gail Deutsch, Marc Dorian, Ed Lopez, Andrew Paparella, Kim Powers, Joe

Rhee, Jeff Schneider

Field Producers: Chris Kilmer, Tami Sheheri, Susan Welsh

Senior Producers: Colleen Halpin, Janice Johnston, Matthew Lombardi, Muriel Pearson

Correspondent: Matt Gutman

Executive Producer: Terri Lichstein

Senior Executive Producer: David Sloan

 

 

Faith Under Fire: The Antoinette Tuff Story

(Lifetime)

Director: Vondie Curtis Hall

Writers: Laura Harrington, Stephen Kay

Based on the book “Prepared For a Purpose” by: Antoinette Tuff

Producer: Larry Rapaport

Co-Producer: David Manzanares

Executive Producers: T.D. Jakes, Derrick Williams, Craig Baumgarten, Toni Braxton,

Judith Verno

 

 

The Homeless Chorus Speaks

(PBS)

Director/Producer: Susan Polis Schutz

 

The Mayo Clinic: Faith, Hope, Science

(PBS)

Directors: Ken Burns, Erik Ewers, Christopher Loren Ewers

Writers: David Blistein, Ken Burns

Producer:  Julie Coffman

Co-Producers: Erik Ewers, Christopher Loren Ewers

Producer for WETA: Jim Corbley

Executive Producer: Ken Burns

 

 

Returning the Favor: Season 2

(Facebook Watch)

Field Producers: Sarah Yourgrau, Steven Sims, Brent Lerash

Senior Producer: Lucien Delabruere

Supervising Producer: Calvin Collins

Co-Executive Producer: Jenna Levine

Executive Producers: Michael Rourke, Christopher Spry, Jacob Huddleston, Mike Rowe,

Mary Sullivan

 

 

70th ANNUAL CHRISTOPHER AWARD WINNERS

FEATURE FILMS

 

Ben is Back

(Lionsgate/LD Entertainment/Roadside Attractions)

 Director/Screenwriter: Peter Hedges

Producers: Nina Jacobson, Brad Simpson, Teddy Schwarzman, Peter Hedges

Co-Producers: Dianne Dreyer, Joseph Reidy, Margaret Chernin

Executive Producers: Daniel Steinman, Micah Green, Dan Friedkin, Ben Stillman,

Michael Heimler, Jane Evans, Mickey Liddell, Pete Shilaimon

 

Instant Family

(Paramount Pictures)

Director: Sean Anders

Screenwriters: Sean Anders, John Morris

Producers: Mark Wahlberg, Stephen Levinson, Sean Anders, John Morris, Marc Evans

Executive Producers: Helen Pollak

 

Paul, Apostle of Christ

(AFFIRM Films/Sony Pictures)

Director: Andrew Hyatt

Screenwriter: Andrew Hyatt

Story by: Andrew Hyatt, T.J. Berden

Producers: T.J. Berden, David Zelon

Executive Producers: Jim Caviezel, Eric Groth, Tony Hyler, Rick Jackson,

Harrison Powell

 

Won’t You Be My Neighbor?

(Focus Features)

Director: Morgan Neville

Producer:  Caryn Capotosto, Nicholas Ma, Morgan Neville

 

 

70th ANNUAL CHRISTOPHER AWARD WINNERS

BOOKS FOR ADULTS

 

Everything Happens For a Reason (and Other Lies I’ve Loved)

(Random House/ Penguin Random House)

            by Kate Bowler

 

Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom

 (Simon & Schuster)

            by David W. Blight

 

One Beautiful Dream: The Rollicking Tale of Family Chaos, Personal passions, and Saying Yes to Them Both

(Zondervan/Harper Collins)

            by Jennifer Fulwiler

            

The Strange Case of Dr. Couney: How a Mysterious European Showman Saved Thousands of American Babies

(Blue Rider Press/Penguin Random House)

            by Dawn Raffel

 

The Sun Does Shine: How I Found Life and Freedom on Death Row

(St. Martin’s Press)

            by Anthony Ray Hinton with Lara Love Hardin

 

70th ANNUAL CHRISTOPHER AWARD WINNERS

BOOKS FOR YOUNG PEOPLE

 

Preschool and up

Eraser

(Two Lions/Amazon Publishing)

            by Anna Kang, illustrated by Christopher Weyant

Kindergarten and up

The World is Awake: A Celebration of Everyday Blessings

(Zonderkidz/Harper Collins)

            by Linsey Davis with Joseph Bottum, illustrated by Lucy Fleming

Ages 6 and up

Rescue and Jessica: A Life-Changing Friendship

(Candlewick Press)

            by Jessica Kensky and Patrick Downes, illustrated by Scott Magoon

Ages 8 and up

The Ostrich and Other Lost Things

(Philomel Books/Penguin Young Readers Group)

            by Beth Hautala

Ages 10 and up

To the Moon: The True Story of the American Heroes on the Apollo 8 Spaceship

(Philomel Books/Penguin Young Readers Group)

            By Jeffrey Kluger with Ruby Shamir

Young Adult

Tight

(Nancy Paulsen Books/Penguin Young Readers Group)

            by Torrey Maldonado

Contacts:

David Reich - david@reichcommunications.com                

Jeanne Byington - jeanne@jmbyington.com   

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