Living with spina bifida 2nd draft

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Living with Spina Bifida 2nd draft Written By Dayna Crawford Log Line: The inside story of a girl coping with Spina Bifida and how she copes with it day in, day out. Synopsis: Interviews with Alice and her family about how she has coped with the disease over her life, what shes overcame, what shes been through for the last17 years.

Transcript of Living with spina bifida 2nd draft

Page 1: Living with spina bifida 2nd draft

Living with Spina Bifida 2nd draft

Written By

Dayna Crawford

Log Line: The inside story of a girl coping with Spina Bifida and how she copes with it day in, day out.

Synopsis: Interviews with Alice and her family about how she has coped with the disease over her life, what shes overcame, what shes been through for the

last17 years.

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Documentary starts off with archive footage of Alice as a child learning to walk, music plays in the background.

Ext: Outside Alice's house - a suburban, semi detached house. Recently painted - egg shell white exterior with baby blue painted windowsills. A shot of the garden. Wooden, painted gates and clean cut grass with flowers growing in well looked after plant pots either side of the doorstep. Shot turns to the driveway. Her mums and her car is parked in the jet washed, clean drive way. The shot gives the audience a feel for what the house she lives in and the environment she has grown up in is like.

VOICE OVER:

Alice lives with an illness called Spina Bifida but still manages to carry on with her day to day life and inspires people along the way. Alice is 17 years old and lives with

Spina Bifida but accomplishes to become a competitive swimmer and somehow manages to climb 30ft poles and jump off them on a national citizen service. Alice is a young woman proving her disability wrong and overcoming a number of

obstacles every day.

Cut to: Int: Sitting Room - DAY(Talking heads shot)

Camera flicks to Alice, sitting in her sitting room on her sofa. Curtains open, light beaming through the windows and onto the clean, white washed walls. a modern fireplace in the centre of the room along one of the other walls, Trophies on the fireplace and pictures of the family hanging from hooks in the walls. Sofas are clean with light coloured cushions and prestige cleaned carpets.

INTERVIEWER:

Alice can you describe what its like to have Spina Bifida and how have you managed to cope so well with having such a

disability?

ALICE:

Alice responds with her thoughts on living with Spina Bifida, explains the illness, what it entails and how she

manages to cope with it in her everyday life.

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Cut away, Camera jumps to objects in her sitting room and the cat, perching in her windowsill. Small, sentimental objects from other countries that they have collected over many years surround the cat on the windowsill as if they are small people watching the giant cat sleep. The audience gets a feel of the sitting room and feels as if they are sitting in the sitting room with the interviewee.

INTERVIER:

Have you had many operations growing up? what have you had done in the past and is there any more that you are

scheduled to have in the future?

ALICE:

Alice talks about the operations shes had as a child and what operations shes had done and why. She also talks about if she knows she has to have any more soon and if so, what

operations she need to have.

INERVIEWER:

So, have you got any Role models that cope with the same disease as you that make you able to overcome problems you face aswelll or do you just push yourself through every

obstacle that comes your way?

ALICE:

Alice talks about whether she has any role models and how she copes with her illness in the eyes of her role

models.

Camera jumps to images of her heroes or role models if she has any. Camera shows images of role models if

Alice has any that are hanging up or are stuck in her room or around her house.

INTERVIEWER:

Has having Spina Bifida stopped you from accomplishing anything that you have wanted to do or any dreams you have wanted to have when you were younger or these days.What did you want to be as a child and what do you want to be when

you are older these days?

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ALICE:

Alice talks about what she wanted to be as a child and whether of not that has changed as shes gotten older and if that's because of her disability or whether its just because

shes changed her mind.

Int. kitchen - Day

Camera jumps to shots of the kitchen and Alice's parents. Mum and dad both sitting at the kitchen table. Light beaming through the windows onto the light coloured, mahogany table. a bowl of fruit is sitting in the middle of the table and aromas of the dinner cooking fills the room.

INTERVIEWER:

What was Alice like as a child? Was she very courageous and determined or has that just developed over the last couple

of years?

MUM AND DAD:

Alice's Mum and dad talks about how they feel about how far Alice has come as a person and how proud of her they are.

INTERVIEWER:

So, I hear that Alice has had quite a few operations; How many operations has Alice had over the years? do you feel as

if she has coped well with them?

MUM AND DAD:

Alice's mum and dad talk about how many operations they can recall Alice having and how they feel shes coped

with them and if they are proud of her.

INTERVIEWER:

What has Alice achieved over the years? Do you feel as if she achieved much over the last 17 years?

MUM AND DAD:

Alice's mum and dad discuss how they see Alice's achievements and whether they feel she has done much

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over the last 17 years.

Int. Emi's bedroom.

Camera cuts to Emi's bedroom. Curtains slightly pulled with the blinds rolled slightly up, the light peeping through the bottom of the blinds but enough to give the red coloured walls a hint of light and shine. The bed, neatly made, pillow fluffed and propped up straight against the wall and other cuddly animal toys filling up whatever space found on the bed that day. The desk, filled to the brim of books - school exercise books and reading material, some history books, some fictional. Posters and maps fill the walls full of pictures of boy band members and different countries Emi and the family want to visit and where they have in the past.

INTERVIEWER:

So Emi, how do you feel about living with your sister? Do you like living with her?

EMI:

Emi talks about how she feels about living with Alice and how she feels about everything that comes with living and helping out with someone that deals with Spina Bifida.

INTERVIEWER:

Do you get on with your sister very well? Are you very close to Alice?

EMI

Emi talks about how close she is to her sister and if she gets on well with her or not.

The camera cuts back to Alices parents, still sitting in the kitchen, the food still cooking, the water nearly boiling over the top of the pot, the vegetables steaming away and the aroma of cooking food fills the air.

INTERVIEWER:

So, when did you find out that Alice had Spina Bifida?

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How did you feel when you found out?

ALICES MUM:

Alice's mum talks about when and how she found out that Alice would have Spina Bifida and how she felt when she heard. She talks about the first scans and at what scan

they found out that Alice was going to have Spina Bifida.

INTERVIEWER:

So,(Alice's Dad)Did you get scared from hearing these things? Did it make you worry at any point as to whether

Alice would survive to this point?

ALICES DAD:

Alices dad talks about how scared and worried he was when he found out, his first reactions to finding out about the

condition.

INTERVIEWER:

Did you ever think about having an abortion? Did it ever run through your mind?

ALICES MUM AND DAD:

Alices mum and dad discuss whether they ever thought about having an abortion and whether it ever ran through their mind to put Alice through her misery and stop her from having to deal with the condition throughout her life.

INTERVIEWER:

Who helped you guys get through the pregnancy? Did you have anyone helping you out with dealing with the thought of

Alice having Spina Bifida?

ALICES PARENTS:

Alices parents then talk about Shine and the charity and how they helped Alices parents through the pregnancy and how they have helped Alice and Emi since Alice and Emi were

born.

Ext.Garden - Early evening.

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Alice is sat outside in her back garden in her wheelchair. Flowers grow next to the fence either side of the garden . The grass is a light green colour and has been freshly cut and trimmed. It hasn't rained in a few days so the grass is dry to the touch. Alice looks at home and looks at peace in the garden admiring the nature and environment. (Talking head shots)

INTERVIEWER:

So Alice, you taught yourself to walk despite the doctor telling you that this wouldn't be possible. How hard was it

on you to hear that you wouldn't be able to walk? What pushed you to want to be able to walk?

ALICE:

Alice talks about how she felt when the doctor told her that she wouldn't be able to walk and what pushed her to prove

him wrong.

INTERVIEWER:

What operations have you had in the past can you describe them to us in more detail?

ALICE:

Alice talks about her operations in more detail, using her hand to describe the operations gesturing what they did to her feet and her spine in order to help her to be able to

walk.

INTERVIEWER:

Do you ever wish you didn't have this condition or has having Spina Bifida helped you to see things more clearly, helping you to live life to the full?

ALICE:

Alice talks about if she ever wished that she didn't have the condition or whether shes glad to have such a condition or order for her to be able to see past the disability and to continue living life to the absolute full proving that although you may such a condition, that you can still do lots of stuff; if not most stuff if you have the charisma

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and determination to go out and do it.

INTERVIEWER:

Thank-you so much Alice for letting us interview you and your family and letting us see the house in which you have grew up and lived in to turn out to be such an inspiration

to so many people out there.Ext. Alice's house. Front of the house.

Camera cuts to outside the front of the house. The shot zooms out onto the look of the house finishing the documentary with another shot of the house and the location of the family home. Quiet, soft music plays in the background.

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