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MARGARET ANN PETRIE 鈥60

Margaret Ann Petrie鈥淩iveting.鈥 鈥淓xhilarating.鈥 鈥淚nspiring as it is fascinating.鈥 鈥淓nough to charm a cynic.鈥 These are just a handful of reviewers鈥 kudos for the remarkable film 鈥淢other Teresa鈥 produced by Margaret Ann Petrie 鈥60 and her sister Jeanette Petrie. The film was shown in 1985 at the opening of the Fortieth Anniversary Celebration of the establishment of United Nations before Mother Teresa addressed the assembly. For Ann, a lot of footage preceded her award-winning film.

Ann fell in love with television production while at 每日大赛官网 when a University of Detroit television crew broadcast one of the Drama Society鈥檚 plays. After graduation, Ann joined her family in Phoenix and was hired by a CBS-TV affiliate there as a sales secretary. In off hours she haunted the studio to learn everything she could about behind-the-scenes work. Two years later she was hired as a continuity director at ABC-TV New York and then moved up to producer of a public affairs program. According to Gabrielle Baker Burton 鈥60, Ann was troubled by the lack of positive TV stories, 鈥淎nn began to look for subjects that would satisfy this other side of human nature. Before long, she was creating pieces about teachers, health care leaders, and everyday citizens who were making a difference in their own communities.鈥 Gabrielle says that Ann was committed to 鈥渕aking good news interesting.鈥

Searching for ever-more-interesting material led Ann to Mother Teresa. She thought the coverage of Mother Teresa after she received the Nobel Peace Prize missed her mysterious presence. Ann took a production crew to Calcutta and wrote, produced and directed 鈥淭he World of Mother Teresa,鈥 a one hour documentary for PBS. Yet Ann was not content that her program told the whole story. The two sisters formed Petrie Productions and sought to make a longer film to show the universality of Mother Teresa鈥檚 work with the poorest of the poor. They proved to Mother Teresa that their intent was to tell the truth, by volunteering for two years for one of her causes鈥攃aring for the homeless alongside nuns in New York City.

The film, 鈥淢other Teresa,鈥 was the Petrie sisters鈥 effort to illuminate the human transformations they had seen firsthand in themselves and others. They shot film on-the-run over five years. Credit cards and grants鈥攚hich often arrived just as they were tapped out鈥 financed them as they followed Mother Teresa through ten countries and over four continents. The result is an intimate look at the unique, hands-on care by Mother Teresa inside war torn Beirut where they sneaked across the border; in Guatemala, where Mother talked the government out of moving the foundation she created for orphans and homeless men and women to a different location; in Calcutta and on the streets of the South Bronx. The film is real rather than sentimental and deliberately avoids heart wrenching clich茅s of dying children, although they were very much a part of Mother鈥檚 charity work.

Mother Teresa, who originally belonged to another congregation, resigned to establish the Missionaries of Charity in the slums of Calcutta. The order has grown from a handful of people to 4,500 sisters in 130 countries. In 1997, Ann and Jan filmed behind-the-scenes of the private burial of Mother Teresa and overlaid footage with Mother Teresa鈥檚 own voice. The resulting documentary premiered at the Vatican on the occasion of Mother Teresa鈥檚 beatification in 2003.

Ann and Jan have amassed more than 100 hours of film, video and sound and are working to create a digital, interactive, multimedia archive that will make the words and work of Mother Teresa accessible today and for generations to come.

Although Mother Teresa films are the best known of Ann鈥檚 work, she earned an Emmy for her television programs at ABC. From 1969 to 1976 she was writer-in-residence and a very highly regarded teacher at the City College of the City University of New York CCNY, during a time of upheaval and profound change at CCNY. She pioneered a new approach to pedagogy and inclusiveness according to colleague Joan Howard. She also worked on movies such as 鈥淢oonstruck鈥 and on several other television series.

Ann says, 鈥淚 have an uncertain, gypsy sort of life. I commute between Toronto and New York and I don鈥檛 think I will ever retire. I once thought I would marry and have a lot of children. Instead I had films. However, I have had the privilege of being a sort of 鈥榓unt鈥 to the children of cousins and friends, most especially Gabrielle Baker Burton鈥檚 five, wonderful daughters.鈥