'Miss You Can Do It' documentary debuts June 24 on HBO
Press release from
HBO:
One special weekend every year, the small Illinois town of Kewanee
(population 12,916) turns into a place of celebration and delight, as
the annual Miss You Can Do It pageant spotlights young girls with
disabilities from around the country. Abbey Curran, Miss Iowa 2008,
started the pageant in 2004 to offer these girls, who like herself have
special needs, the opportunity to be celebrated for their inner beauty
and spirit.
Directed and produced by Ron Davis (“Pageant”), MISS YOU CAN DO IT
tells Curran’s story and follows eight heroic young girls with physical
and mental disabilities as they participate in the pageant when it
debuts MONDAY, JUNE 24 (9:00-10:15 p.m. ET/PT), exclusively on HBO.
Other HBO playdates: June 27 (11:30 a.m.) and 30 (8:30 a.m.), and July 2 (1:30 p.m.) and 6 (3:00 p.m.). HBO2 playdates: June 26 (8:00 p.m.) and 28 (5:15 p.m.), and July 9 (11:35 p.m.), 25 (7:40 a.m.) and 27 (8:40 a.m.).
HBO Documentary Films presents another weekly series this summer,
debuting provocative new specials every Monday, June 10 to Aug. 12.
Other films include: “Pussy Riot: A Punk Prayer” (June 10); “Love,
Marilyn” (June 17); “Gideon’s Army” (July 1); “Gasland Part II” (July
8); “The Crash Reel” (July 15); “The Cheshire Murders” (July 22); “First
Comes Love” (July 29); “Casting By” (Aug. 5); and “Americans in Bed”
(Aug. 12).
Diagnosed with cerebral palsy at age two, Abbey Curran never accepted
her physical limitations. She admits her disability comes with lifelong
challenges, but none that hold her back, playing sports (she “just
falls more”) and driving a car with a special steering wheel and brake.
Curran’s resilience and determination to pursue her dreams led her to
become the first woman with disabilities to compete in the Miss USA
Pageant® in 2008.
MISS YOU CAN DO IT highlights the extraordinary work Curran is doing
with the pageant she founded. Curran and a team of enthusiastic
volunteers give participants a chance to be celebrated for all they are
inside, not just defined by what the world sees on the outside. For one
special weekend the young girls, along with family and friends, some who
have traveled far distances, spend time in an oasis of fun, femininity
and celebration.
No one leaves the pageant empty-handed, with each girl receiving a
special award. The real winners of the pageant might be the families and
friends, who proudly cheer them on from the audience.
Among the girls and families profiled are:
Five-year-old Tierney, who gleefully zips around in a powered
wheelchair in excited anticipation of the pageant, while her mom
explains that she’s never walked and will progressively lose movement
throughout her body. Tierney has spinal muscular atrophy type II, a slow
deterioration of all muscles.
Natasha, 14, who was born with cerebral palsy and suffers from
seizures, and Kenna, her younger sister, who has intellectual
disabilities. Despite these challenges, “they are a happy-go-lucky
family,” according to their proud parents.
Precocious six-year-old Ali, who has four best friends, one
mischievous and imaginary, and three in their 60s: Judy, Judy and Rock,
who enjoy watching Ali’s physical therapy sessions on a horse, which
helps with her balance. Ali was born with spina bifida, a hole in the
spine that caused paralysis of her lower body.
Teyanna, a smart and creative preteen, whose mother says that after
she was born, a nurse suggested they put her in an institution, but they
refused and raised her at home. Teyanna has speech difficulty due to
cerebral palsy.
Seven-year-old Daleney, whose parents say her biggest frustration is
her lack of independence. Still, she never shows it, even if she takes
15 minutes to tie her shoelaces. Daleney is a quadriplegic with a
spastic form of cerebral palsy, causing her to have too much muscle tone
and making her limbs cross her midline when she walks.
Tiny Meg, who is shy, except when she’s with her brothers. Wanting
Meg to have a sister to connect with, her parents adopted Alina, a girl
from Ukraine. Both Meg and Alina have Down syndrome.
MISS YOU CAN DO IT celebrates the heroism of their parents and
families, who openly describe how the heartbreak of learning that their
child was different quickly gave way to loving patience, dedication and a
new appreciation for the joys and challenges of raising a child with
special needs.
Says Curran, “I hope that my Miss You Can Do It girls leave this
pageant knowing that, okay, we might fall down, or someone might stare
at us, but I just did something amazing. Something that not very many
people get to experience.”
Pageant volunteer Jan Selman adds, “Miss You Can Do It is not about
what’s wrong with these girls. It’s about celebrating what’s right with
them.”
Ron Davis began his filmmaking career at the New York Film Academy,
where his first two short narrative student films, “The Business
Traveler” and “The Garden,” earned him a top-ten finalist spot in the
2004 Esquire Magazine Celluloid Style film competition. His first
documentary, “Pageant,” garnered ten film festival awards.