Orchestrating Change, a runaway leader in audience votes, is a perfect fit for the Stigma Breaker Award given that the very mission statement of the Me/2 Orchestra is to break the stigma surrounding mental illness. This powerful documentary paints an intimate portrait of Ronald Braunstein, a world-renowned conductor who lost his career due to a bipolar manic episode, his wife Caroline Whiddon, a musician struggling with anxiety, and their plan. Their plan is to create an orchestra where they can celebrate their love of music in a stigma-free zone. Thus was born Me/2, the first orchestra for people living with mental illness.Soon the orchestra becomes a much larger force than the couple had envisioned, and they find themselves performing in venues from subways to concert halls. Ronald also finds himself playing the role of mentor to young musicians struggling with their mental health. Orchestra members heal and change their lives by bonding with others through both music and mental illness. Co-directors Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin trail some of the orchestra’s most well-known long-term members and collect personal stories of struggles from a colorful cast of characters that are all too relatable. The filmmakers strike a delicate balance, not shying away from some of the uglier episodes of mental illness but also portraying characters who have experienced troubling incidents as gentle, resilient, and talented individuals. Through its depiction of so many interesting and creative people living with mental illness, struggling at times but conquering setbacks and finding success, Orchestrating Change humanizes a misunderstood topic and breaks stigma beautifully.
NAMI Ask the Expert: The Me2/Orchestra: Using Music as Part of the Recovery Journey
Oct. 21, 2021, 4–5:30 p.m. ET
NAMI Ask the Expert welcomes the Me2/Orchestra, an orchestra of people with and without mental illness working side-by-side in a supportive atmosphere. Their mission is to erase mental health stigma one concert at a time.
The Me2/Orchestra was co-founded by Ronald Braunstein and his wife Caroline Whiddon in 2011. A Juilliard graduate, Braunstein was conducting major orchestras all over the world until he disclosed his diagnosis of bipolar disorder. After being shunned by the classical musical community, he created an orchestra for people like himself.
Their concerts challenge audiences to reconsider their preconceptions about what it means to live with a mental illness. This groundbreaking orchestra is a transformative model for any organization seeking to create a stigma-free environment where people with and without mental health diagnoses can work successfully together.
The Me2/Orchestra was featured in the documentary “Orchestrating Change,” broadcast on PBS stations across the U.S. in Fall 2020. Join our discussion of this empowering model for change.
After the presentation, NAMI’s Chief Medical Officer Dr. Ken Duckworth will moderate a Q&A session. This session will be recorded and posted to our website one or two days after the webinar. A typed transcription of the audio will also be provided within one week of the webinar.
Ronald Braunstein is the Music Director and Co-Founder of the Me2/Orchestra. He received his musical background at the Juilliard School, Salzburg Mozarteum, Fontainbleau and the Tanglewood Music Center. After his graduation, he won the Gold Medal in the Herbert von Karajan International Conducting Competition and spent the following four years mentoring with von Karajan in Berlin. He has conducted the San Francisco Symphony, Oslo Philharmonic, Auckland Philharmonia, Israel Sinfonietta, Tokyo Symphony and Stuttgart Radio Orchestra, among others. Braunstein was diagnosed with bipolar disorder in 1985. This led him to launching Me2/Orchestra, the world’s only classical music organization dedicated to erasing the stigma surrounding mental illness. He currently conducts the organization’s orchestras located in Boston, Mass., and Manchester, N.H., while providing the artistic vision for all of the Me2/ orchestras, ensembles and affiliate programs.
Caroline Whiddon
Caroline Whiddon is the Executive Director and Co-Founder of the Me2/Orchestra. Whiddon previously served as the Executive Director of the Vermont Youth Orchestra Association. During her 13-year tenure, the organization nearly tripled its student enrollment, completed a successful $2.1 million capital campaign, made its Carnegie Hall debut with an innovative program featuring all-living composers, and toured internationally. Whiddon has served as the Chair of the Youth Orchestra Division of the League of American Orchestras, providing leadership in her field at the national level. She is a graduate of the Snelling Center for Government’s Vermont Leadership Institute. She received her bachelor’s degree in Performance from the Eastman School of Music, where she studied French Horn with Verne Reynolds. She was diagnosed with depression, anxiety disorder and panic attacks in her early 20s.
Carole Furr
Carole Furr is a resident of Richmond, Vt. She is a graduate of Harvard College with a degree in physics and works as an accountant. She is an experienced French Horn player, sings alto in the Vermont Symphony Orchestra Chorus and enjoys English country dancing. She is a former treasurer and board member of NAMI Vermont. Furr is a charter member of the Me2/Orchestra, having taken part since its founding in 2011.
Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin
Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin are both EMMY award-winning producers with years of non-fiction television experience. They have produced shows for CBS, NBC, ABC, HBO, Showtime, Lifetime, HGTV, Disney Channel and others. Their previous films have aired on PBS, including the prestigious series “Independent Lens.”
A number of public television stations across the country, including the major markets of New York, Dallas and Los Angeles, are planning broadcasts of “Orchestrating Change” in May to celebrate Mental Health Month 2021. Please check the Broadcast schedule on this website for dates and times. Screening “Orchestrating Change,” the story of the world’s only orchestra fighting Mental Health Stigma is a great way to mark the importance of Mental Health Month.
Mental Health Month has been celebrated in May in the United States since 1949. Started by the Mental Health Association of America, each year has a specific theme. The 2021 theme, Tools 2 Thrive, focuses on solid actions you can take to improve your own mental health. Topics include adapting after trauma and stress, dealing with anger and frustration, processing big changes and radical self-acceptance.
“The COVID-19 pandemic has had a profound impact on the mental health of people of all ages. Now, more than ever, it is critical to reduce the stigma around mental health struggles, because that stigma often prevents individuals from seeking help.” – MHA website
Wishing everyone a safe and Happy New Year. We’re proud to share a highlight reel edited together by UMass MIND program following a recent panel discussion after a private screening of “Orchestrating Change”
Watch it here: https://youtu.be/jqVmsOxSDZc. The film is available on public television and for private virtual screenings and discussions.
What are you doing next Friday? How about something uplifting for a change? Reminder: One week left to register for this special “Orchestrating Change” Live Zoom Event Hosted by Mass Humanities Friday, June 26 from 7:00-8:15pm (ET) /4:00-5:15(PT)
“Orchestrating Change” is the feature documentary that tells the inspiring story of Me2/Orchestra, the only orchestra in the world created by and for people living with mental illness that’s truly changing lives. The film premieres on public television stations this fall! View preview clips, engage in a panel discussion with Margie Friedman & Barbara Multer-Wellin (the filmmakers) , Ronald Braunstein (Music Director), Caroline Whiddon (Executive Director) and Sandy (flutist). Your chance to ask questions! Here’s the link: Click to register! https://lnkd.in/g529vhp # Of course, feel free to share this with friends who you think might like to join.
What does an orchestra do when they cannot physically get together to rehearse? Me2/Orchestra’s Maestro Ronald Braunstein and Executive Director Caroline Whiddon have been holding virtual meetings via Zoom to keep spirits up. Thanks to Caroline for sharing this image with www.orchestratingchangethefilm.com
Studies show that listening to classical music can have a calming and healing effect. Here’s a wonderful list of orchestras that are live streaming concerts during this stressful time. Stay safe and enjoy some beautiful music. https://www.classicfm.com/…/live-streamed-classical-music-…/
Stockbridge, MA–July 27, 2021–The Austen Riggs Center is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2021 Austen Riggs Erikson Prize for Excellence in Mental Health Media: Executive Producers/Directors Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin for their documentary Orchestrating Change, a film about Me2/Orchestra the world’s only orchestra created by and for people living with mental illness and those who support them.
Austen Riggs Center Medical Director/CEO Eric M. Plakun, MD, stated, “Orchestrating Change is a remarkable film that fights stigma by showing people struggling with mental and substance use disorders as, above all, quite simply human, with areas of competence in addition to areas of struggle and challenge. The film demonstrates the value of relationships and of belonging to a community as part of achieving resilience.”
Friedman remarked, “We are honored to receive the Erikson Prize. Me2/Orchestra’s mission is to defeat mental health stigma. They have created a transformative organizational model that erases stigma through inclusion and compassion.” Multer-Wellin added, “We share their mission and hope the film challenges audiences to reconsider preconceived notions of what it means to live with a mental illness and provokes much-needed dialogue.”
The Austen Riggs Center will hold a virtual event later this year to honor the 2021 prize recipients. For more information about the film, visit: orchestratingchangethefilm.com
Past recipients of the prize have included Alison Bechdel, Kiese Laymon, Neal Shusterman, Andrew Solomon, the Boston Globe Spotlight Team, NPR’s Hidden Brain, and many others.
About the Prize
The Austen Riggs Erikson Prize for Excellence in Mental Health Media recognizes a select group of media professionals, including journalists, writers, and others who create exemplary work that contributes to a deeper understanding of and greater public awareness about mental health issues and carries an award of $3,000.
About the Austen Riggs Center
The Riggs Center is a leading psychiatric hospital and residential treatment program that has been serving adults since its founding in 1919. Within an open setting, patients participate in an intensive treatment milieu that emphasizes respectful engagement. Individual psychodynamic psychotherapy is provided four times a week by doctors on staff. The Erikson Institute for Education, Research, and Advocacy of the Austen Riggs Center studies individuals in their social contexts through research, training, education, and outreach pro
Stockbridge, MA–July 27, 2021–The Austen Riggs Center is pleased to announce the recipients of the 2021 Austen Riggs Erikson Prize for Excellence in Mental Health Media: Executive Producers/Directors Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin for their documentary Orchestrating Change, a film about Me2/Orchestra the world’s only orchestra created by and for people living with mental illness and those who support them.
Austen Riggs Center Medical Director/CEO Eric M. Plakun, MD, stated, “Orchestrating Change is a remarkable film that fights stigma by showing people struggling with mental and substance use disorders as, above all, quite simply human, with areas of competence in addition to areas of struggle and challenge. The film demonstrates the value of relationships and of belonging to a community as part of achieving resilience.”
Friedman remarked, “We are honored to receive the Erikson Prize. Me2/Orchestra’s mission is to defeat mental health stigma. They have created a transformative organizational model that erases stigma through inclusion and compassion.” Multer-Wellin added, “We share their mission and hope the film challenges audiences to reconsider preconceived notions of what it means to live with a mental illness and provokes much-needed dialogue.”
The Austen Riggs Center will hold a virtual event later this year to honor the 2021 prize recipients. For more information about the film, visit: orchestratingchangethefilm.com
Past recipients of the prize have included Alison Bechdel, Kiese Laymon, Neal Shusterman, Andrew Solomon, the Boston Globe Spotlight Team, NPR’s Hidden Brain, and many others.
About the Prize
The Austen Riggs Erikson Prize for Excellence in Mental Health Media recognizes a select group of media professionals, including journalists, writers, and others who create exemplary work that contributes to a deeper understanding of and greater public awareness about mental health issues and carries an award of $3,000.
About the Austen Riggs Center
The Riggs Center is a leading psychiatric hospital and residential treatment program that has been serving adults since its founding in 1919. Within an open setting, patients participate in an intensive treatment milieu that emphasizes respectful engagement. Individual psychodynamic psychotherapy is provided four times a week by doctors on staff. The Erikson Institute for Education, Research, and Advocacy of the Austen Riggs Center studies individuals in their social contexts through research, training, education, and outreach programs in the local community and beyond. For more information, visit www.austenriggs.org.
World Bipolar Day is celebrated to bring awareness to mental health disorders and eliminate social stigma. Why March 30th? It’s the birthday of Vincent Van Gogh and many mental health experts believe he lived with bipolar disorder. That’s also the mission of Me2/Orchestra and “Orchestrating Change,” the acclaimed documentary about their transformative work.
Bullfrog is pleased to announce that the documentary Orchestrating Change is now available with public performance rights for educational use and community screenings.Directed by Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin, the film tells the inspiring story of Me2/Orchestra, the only orchestra in the world created by and for people living with mental illness and those who support them.Co-founded by Ronald Braunstein, once a world-renowned conductor whose career was shattered when his own diagnosis of bipolar disorder was made public, the mission of the orchestra is to erase the stigma surrounding mental illness one exhilarating concert at a time. Available now on DVD and streaming with public performance rights. Streaming previews for purchase evaluation are available for qualified customers.#musictherapy#mentalhealth#mentalhealthawareness#classicalmusic#performingarts#documentary#bullfrogfilms#orchestratingchange
“Terrific…A moving and richly informative film…Orchestrating Change provides a gentle, sober, and realistic look at the ways that mental illness shapes lives, and the ways that music can provide a community and a chance to build something beautiful together.”Joseph Straus, Professor of Music Theory, The Graduate Center, CUNY
A film by Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin 85 minutes| SDH Captions | Scene Selection
ORCHESTRATING CHANGE tells the inspiring story of Me2/Orchestra, the only orchestra in the world created by and for people living with mental illness and those who support them. Co-founded by Ronald Braunstein, once a world-renowned conductor whose career was shattered when his own diagnosis of bipolar disorder was made public, the mission of the orchestra is to erase stigma one exhilarating concert at a time. As they rehearse, perform and prepare for a major concert, these extraordinary musicians have no idea how much the orchestra will change their lives in poignant and powerful ways.
With compelling characters, striking animation, even humor, ORCHESTRATING CHANGE addresses many of the myths about mental illness by showing what living with a mental illness is really like—with both setbacks and accomplishments.
The orchestra’s performances offer a two-fold opportunity. Musicians living with mental illness have a safe place to do what they love without encountering the stigma usually found in society. And the audience witnesses wonderful musicians for who they are—everyday people who love to make music.
The film culminates in an extraordinary concert that is a triumph—for Braunstein, the musicians, their families and the audience.
Please join UCLA’s Friends of the Semel institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior and the Resnick Neuropsychiatric Hospital Board of Advisors for an Open Mind/#WOW screening and discussion of the new documentary film, Me2/Orchestra. This powerful film tells the story of the Me2/Orchestra, the only orchestra in the world created by and for people living with mental illness and those who support them. The Me2/Orchestra creates a stigma-free environment of compassion and acceptance for musicians and audiences and performs exhilarating, beautiful, professional level classical concerts for mainstream audiences.
Our program will feature clips from this groundbreaking documentary interspersed with conversations featuring:
Ronald Braunstein, Music Director and Maestro of the Me2/Orchestra Caroline Whiddon, Executive Director of the Me2/Orchestra Sandy Bartlett, flutist with Me2/Boston Mark Jude Tramo, M.D., Ph.D. , Associate Clinical Professor of Neurology, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA; Associate Adjunct Professor of Integrative Biology & Physiology, UCLA College of Letters & Science; Lecturer, Dept of Musicology, UCLA Herb Alpert School of Music; Director, The Institute for Music & Brain Science; Co-Director, University of California Multi-Campus Music Research Initiative (UC MERCI) Margie Friedman, Filmmaker, Orchestrating Change, Barbara Multer-Wellin, Filmmaker, Orchestrating Change
Read the wonderful article by Jane Brody, Personal Health columnist for the New York Times about Me2/Orchestra and our documentary “Orchestrating Change.”
PERSONAL HEALTH
A New Film Looks at an Orchestra for People With Mental Illness
Music “gets the cognitive part out of the way and gets the intuitive part engaged, the part of the brain that is not damaged,” one therapist says.
Ronald Braunstein was destined for a sterling career as a classical music conductor when it was abruptly derailed by mental illness. A graduate of the Juilliard School, Mr. Braunstein had made his debut at Lincoln Center at age 20 and three years later became the first American to win the prestigious Herbert von Karajan International Conducting Competition, the so-called Olympics of conducting.
The prize led to invitations to conduct major orchestras, and at first everything he did “turned to gold,” he said. But it all came crashing to a halt when his emotional life crumbled.
As he recalls in “Orchestrating Change,” an inspiring new documentary about his work with musicians living with mental illness, he realized as a young boy that something inside him was not right. “I would get very excited and then very, very sad,” he said. But not until age 30, when a crippling emotional crisis led to a diagnosis of bipolar disorder, did he know what his problem was.
“It was a very dark time, and I had no one to help me,” Mr. Braunstein said of the period following his diagnosis. “Everyone in the business abandoned me.” Yet he was determined to conduct, and eventually was hired by Caroline Whiddon, then executive director of an orchestra in Burlington, Vt., whose own career as a French horn player had been sidelined by disabling panic attacks, anxiety and depression.
didn’t last a year on the job before he again unraveled emotionally. Once stabilized medically, he proposed that instead of being judged and discriminated against, he form his own orchestra where he could be himself and recruit people like him, said Ms. Whiddon, who by then had become his wife. Together, they created a performance vehicle — the Me2/Orchestra he instructs and conducts — that provides unstinting support and a new lease on life for mentally ill young men and women who play instruments. Several participants have been able to move on to more conventional careers in music.
“I never knew an orchestra could be such a vehicle for change,” Ms. Whiddon said.
The orchestra, which anyone with or without mental illness can join, now has three branches, one in Burlington, another in Boston, and a third in Manchester, N.H., in addition to two chamber music ensembles in Portland, Ore., and Portland, Me. The expansion required hiring additional personnel who share Mr. Braunstein’s philosophy, among them a conductor for the Burlington orchestra, Kim Diehnelt, who received a diagnosis of autism after many years of wondering why she never fit in. The groups perform by invitation in diverse venues, including schools, hospitals, recovery centers and prisons, as well as in Boston’s South Station on Bach’s birthday.
In addition to performance fees, the Me2 groups are supported by contributions from individuals, corporations, foundations and the Massachusetts Department of Mental Health, Ms. Whiddon said.
The depiction of Mr. Braunstein’s life and the rewarding work he now does with otherwise marginalized people is a poignant message that people with mental illness should not, in effect, be thrown under the bus. Rather than confine them to a very restricted, heavily medicated existence that drains them and their families of any hope for a rewarding life, creative ways are needed to engage them in activities that capitalize on their talents.
Mr. Braunstein and Ms. Whiddon were invited to describe their work to a national meeting of the Kennedy Forum, founded in 2013 by Patrick J. Kennedy, a son of Senator Edward M. Kennedy, to promote better treatment, policies and programs for people with mental illness and addiction. Mr. Kennedy, a former Rhode Island congressman who left politics after a diagnosis of bipolar disorder and addiction, told the forum that the message Me2 had created through its orchestra was “the sort of powerful message that we need for society to change their attitudes towards these illnesses and the people who are suffering from these illnesses.”
Rick Soshensky, a music therapist in Kingston, N.Y., who plays instruments with people with serious mental health problems, described how Mr. Braunstein’s approach can help the mentally ill. Unlike verbal communication, he told me, “music involves a different part of the brain and a different way to interface with the world. It’s outside the cognitive realm. It gets the cognitive part out of the way and gets the intuitive part engaged, the part of the brain that is not damaged.”
To the performers in the Me2/Orchestra, Mr. Braunstein is much more than a conductor. He’s a friend and a mentor, as well as a living example of what can happen when a person with mental illness is accepted unconditionally and treated with dignity and respect.
This approach to people with mental illness, Mr. Soshensky said, can foster growth and self-esteem that can carry over to other aspects of a person’s life and foster a fuller life experience. “It helps others start to see a whole other dimension of the person that wasn’t there before,” he said. “We all need to feel, ‘I’m good at this’.”
It is just this kind of musical magic that Mr. Braunstein offers to the members of the Me2/Orchestra. For example, Dylan, a double bass player featured in the film, said that before joining the orchestra he hadn’t left the house for months. He’d also spent weeks alone in the woods where he was hearing voices. Though given a diagnosis of schizophrenia, he told people he was a drug addict because he thought that was better accepted than mental illness.
His mother, Ann, said that being in the orchestra “has changed his life. It’s given him a lifeline. He didn’t have one before.” Among other accomplishments, it gave Dylan the confidence he needed to be an erstwhile street performer.
As William Congreve wrote in a poem in 1697, “Music has charms to soothe a savage breast.”
Still, the orchestra is by no means a cure. As Dr. Braunstein told another Me2 member in the film, Marek, a clarinetist who shares his diagnosis, “We can’t cure bipolar, but we can manage it.” From time to time, some members lose their emotional footing and may end up in the hospital or even jail. But as Marek, who strayed temporarily into dangerous and debilitating self-medication, said, “It’s nice to know the orchestra is waiting for me when I can make it back to rehearsal.”
The documentary, produced by Margie Friedman and Barbara Multer-Wellin, will be premiering on public television stations across the country this fall in partnership with PBS station KTWU in Topeka and American Public Television. The broadcast schedule can be found at www.orchestratingchangethefilm.com. It is also available on PBS streaming.
Jane Brody is the Personal Health columnist, a position she has held since 1976. She has written more than a dozen books including the best sellers “Jane Brody’s Nutrition Book” and “Jane Brody’s Good Food Book.”