“A Friend Indeed - The Bill Sackter Story” is a newly completed feature length documentary that explores the real life story of a mentally challenged man escaping the bonds of lifelong institutional confinement, who went on to lead a fulfilling life and influence historic changes in society's perception of people with disability, with nothing more than a smile, a harmonica, and a warm cup of coffee.

Bill Sackter's story was made famous through the 1981 made-for-tv movie “Bill”, starring Mickey Rooney, but the real story of Bill Sackter has not been told, until now. This documentary explores Bill's extraordinary life, using photographs, and actual film and video footage of Bill himself, along with revealing interviews with people closest to him.

Barry Morrow, a young college student, became Bill's legal guardian to prevent Bill from having to go back to the institution where he had spent 44 years of his life. He brought Bill to Iowa City, and through the help of Tom Walz, director of the UI School of Social Work, was able to work in his own coffee shop in the University of Iowa School of Social Work, which would soon be known as Wild Bill's Coffee Shop. Through his positive, embracing spirit, Bill was able to impact the lives of many people in our community. By extension through the tv-movie “Bill”, he touched the lives of people around the country, many of which who still remember to this day the character Mickey Rooney played, setting the stage for a large potential audience for the documentary.

Since first meeting Bill Sackter over three decades ago, Barry Morrow's desire has been to create a documentary about Bill. Working with film and video equipment he captured precious moments in his experience with Bill, and while a national audience was given a glimpse into this footage at the end of the TV movie “Bill”, the documentary never got produced. Morrow went on to a successful Hollywood screenwriting career (he won an Oscar for "Rain Man"), and the source material has been in storage ever since.

Nearly three decades later, Barry met award winning documentary filmmaker Lane Wyrick at the Los Angeles premiere of his documentary “The Nazi Drawings” held at the Director's Guild Theater. Having met Wyrick previously, it was at this screening that Morrow passed the torch to Wyrick and chose him to take on this ambitious project. After Wyrick looked the potential of the story and the resources of film, video, photos, and interviews he decided that this production demanded to be treated as a feature length documentary.

The documentary has a deep universal appeal as an exploration of the way we, as a society, have treated people with disabilities (from institutional abandonment to community embrace), and how human compassion and caring can really make a difference. The documentary is an emotional journey with many funny scenes, very touching and emotional revelations and is overall very inspiring. It is appropriate for all ages and especially family audiences. Anyone viewing the documentary, even those that know nothing about Bill himself or the tv portrayal of him, will be left with the feeling that the real Bill Sackter is as close to them as a great friend.

"A Friend Indeed - The Bill Sackter Story" is a 90-minute documentary created by Mid-America Emmy Award winning documentary filmmaker Lane Wyrick, that explores the emotional journey of Bill Sackter's extraordinary life in the context of the sweeping historical changes that he was a part of and helped influence to a large degree.

Photographs and film & video footage of Bill taken by Barry Morrow, Jack Doepke, Tom Walz and others during his life will be mixed with interviews of the people who were closest to him.

A full orchestral score by Hollywood trained composer Peter Bloesch deeply enriches the emotional journey of Bill's struggles and triumphs, at times reinforcing the dialogue and visuals, and at others providing an all encompassing sound bed for visual montage.

When the documentary is finished, the viewer will really have a sense that they know Bill. They will learn of his story, see him in action, and learn how he interacted, cared for, and related to others. They will see how his fate and life journey fit into the larger picture of a tremendously shifting national and international perspective and debate on the treatment of people with disabilities.

It is a visual composite of many different film and video formats, of photographs, of music, of narration, of interviews, but ultimately, it is a story about friendship, compassion and hope.

The 1981 made for tv movie "Bill" was extremely popular. Ask anyone across the US if they remember a movie with Mickey Rooney and Dennis Quaid about a guy with mental disability, and more than likely two out of three will remember the experience, and have very good feelings about the subject. In the disability community, the percentage will probably be even higher.

This has created a potential for huge national audience appeal for this documentary. "A Friend Indeed - The Bill Sackter Story" will be not only important for the disability community, but reaches across all societal barriers, as nearly everyone has at least a remote (if not direct) connection to someone with disabilities. Bill's life not only reflected the changing times and perspectives about people with disabilities, but he also had a direct influence on these changes. The vast appeal of the “Bill” tv movie was due to the universality of the subject, and how someone caring for another person can make a huge difference in what they can bring to the world.

It is a story the whole family can enjoy, and it will help to open discussion between them about the treatment of people with disabilities. It is not just a history lesson. It is the story of an outsider learning how to fit in a world he never knew before he was 50 years old. It is above all a positive story, where the hero breaks through the chains of confinement and instead of being bitter as many in his position would be, he embraces life to its fullest. All this from a man who simply made coffee and played the harmonica.

This documentary finally puts a real face and personality on Bill Sackter, the person who helped change our society for the better and who has become a folk hero for the disability community, and it is an uplifting emotional journey that shows how we have cut across many of the barriers that were prevalent in our recent past, and where we need to go as a society.

Barry Morrow is one of Bill's closest friends. Barry met Bill at a staff Christmas Party at the Minikahda Club in Minneapolis where Bill had been employed as a dishwasher. Immediately a friendship grew, and Barry took Bill around town and out to nightclubs where his friend Jack Doepke performed. Barry began shooting videotape and Super 8 film footage of Bill, finding him to be a great subject for a documentary, but after a bad experience in taking Bill back to the institution for the film, Barry put the project on hold.

After being offered a job in Iowa City, Barry had to leave Bill because Bill was a ward of the state of Minnesota. Shortly thereafter, Bill was hospitalized and it was Barry's job to tell him that he needed to have his leg amputated and to be sent back to the institution. In an unprecedented move, Barry instead petitioned to become Bill's legal guardian and brought Bill with him to Iowa City.

With Barry's help Bill made a full recovery and Bill soon became a celebrity with the help of Barry, Tom Walz and others in the community. Barry's nomination papers for Bill to become Handicapped Iowan of the Year soon turned into a deal to have Bill's life story turned into a made for TV movie “Bill”.

Barry Morrow was honored by winning an Emmy for writing "Bill", and later an Academy Award for writing "Rain Man". Barry has enjoyed a successful career as a writer and more recently, as a producer. Member of the Association of Retarded Citizens , the National Association of Social Workers , and the Austism Society of America , Morrow is a lifelong advocate for the rights of persons with disabilities.

Other notable writing credits include "Bill: On His Own" (1983, TV), "Conspiracy of Love" (1987, TV), "Quiet Victory: The Charlie Wedermeyer Story" (1988, TV), "The Karen Carpenter Story" (1989, TV), "Christmas on Division Street" (1991, TV), GOSPA (1995), RACE THE SUN (1996) and MILOST MORA / MERCY OF THE SEA (2002).

Dr. Tom Walz had been a teacher of the ambitious young Barry Morrow while in Minneapolis, and when Walz was hired as the Dean of the School of Social Work at the University of Iowa, his first thought was to bring Morrow along to add vibrancy to the department. Barry informed Tom that Bill would be part of the package, so Tom pulled strings to allow Bill to work in the department.

Tom's great passion of furniture refinishing provided Bill with his first employment at the University, but after a chemical fire in the building, Tom was forced to find a new position for Bill. Shortly thereafter, he inaugurated Wild Bill's Coffee Shop in an old classroom in North Hall, and Bill found a place behind the counter serving coffee. And then a transformation took place: the man who'd spent his life isolated from society became one of Iowa City's best-loved citizens, and he did it, according to Tom, through "pure kindness." People of all ages and backgrounds sought Bill out for a joke, a word of comfort, or a rendition of the "Too Fat Polka" on the harmonica he kept in his back pocket.

With Tom's help, various disability organizations came to recognize Bill's extraordinary role in the community, and Bill went on to have a made for TV movie about his life and to be invited to the Whitehouse. When Bill died on June 16, 1983, Tom was determined his friend's legacy would live on. He helped convince the University that Wild Bill's Coffee Shop should remain open permanently and employ people with disabilities.

By 2000, Wild Bill's was beginning to outgrow its University confines. Tom had just retired as a full-time professor, and a new dream began to take shape in his mind: a place where disabled individuals could have the freedom to develop their own businesses.

Tom set up the Extend the Dream Foundation to fund this dream - and in September 2001 Dr. Tom Walz saw a long-standing dream come to fruition with the opening of Uptown Bill's Small Mall.

Jack Doepke met Bill through friends Bev & Barry Morrow. Playing guitar 6 nights a week in the 70's with a local 4-piece band, “Denny & The Tornados”, Jack had his days free and started driving Bill around for errands, lunch, matinee movies & visits to friends. As they became closer, Bill would accompany Jack to the nightclub, spend the night at his house and goof around recording music and stories on a reel-to-reel tape recorder.

Eventually, Bill would show up at Jack's family reunions, weddings, vacations – wherever! This guy knew how to fit in. . .

Among his many vocations, Jack has been a rock-n-roll musician, 18-piece jazz band producer, Ronald McDonald & Captain Jocko clowns, choir director, puppeteer, cubmaster, guitar teacher, video producer and songwriter. He's recorded 3 children's CD's for Kid Rhino records, 3 videos with Klasky-Csupo, and is currently developing a new business – “Party Pilots” – tribal family entertainment tributes for anniversaries, weddings & retirements.

Jack's wife Carol is a RN; they have 2 teenage boys and live in a small lake community north of St. Paul, Minnesota (“we hear loons at night”).

Bill & Jeff PortmanJeff is the rabbi of Agudas Achim Congregation in Iowa City. When he met Bill he was also the director of the Hillel Foundation, the Jewish student center at the University of Iowa.

Jeff met Bill through Deb Singer who was then getting a master degree in Social Work at the University. Deb heard that Bill was Jewish and introduced him to Jeff. From then on Bill became a “regular” at Agudas Achim, coming every Saturday to Sabbath services and then having lunch at Jeff and his wife, Gail's house. The standard greeting after services is “Shabbat Shalom” – which means Sabbath peace. For Bill that was became a standard greeting for everyone. In fact on his tombstone it says under his name “Shabbat Shalom.”

 After Barry decided to move to California, Jeff became Bill's legal guardian. It was a time that went very quickly cut off by Bill's untimely death.

 The high point in Jeff's experience with Bill was Bill's Bar Mitzvah. Bill was little past the normal age (13) of having a bar mitzvah, but it was a huge community event. Bill might not have understood all the Hebrew words but he certainly had more spirit and devotion than most people who have their bar or bat mitzvah. It was a wonderful event. Bill did not have a Hebrew name, so Rabbi Jeff gave him the Hebrew name of simcha, which means “happiness” which certainly characterized the most optimistic happy individual that Jeff has ever met.

 
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