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Filmmaker's Book Reveals What Really Happened To Montana Skydiver Known As Beagle Boogie Babe
Rain City Cinema announces the publication of Filmmaker Paul Gorman's true story "Running Down a Dream: The making of a film", through Amazon as an Audible audio book.

BriefingWire.com, 11/18/2024 - Filmmaker Paul Gorman's book tells the remarkably true story of making his 2014 award winning documentary film, "Ride The Sky" about pioneering skydiver Joan Carson.

"In 1973 I was managing a rock band in Seattle and they sent me to San Francisco to land some gigs. That's when I wound up staying with Carson and had the dream," said Gorman. "She had gone skydiving and didn't come home that night; In my dream she was fatally injured."

Eight years later, Gorman's dream would come true when Carson perished in a skydiving accident in Lost Prairie, Montana when both of her parachutes failed to open.

Fast forward nearly thirty years and Gorman began having dreams about Carson's demise again. It was then that he decided to make a documentary film about her in the hope it would unlock the mystery of his dream. "I just had a gut feeling that she wanted me to tell her story," says Gorman. "It was a gamble, but a risk I felt worth taking."

His gamble paid off. Gorman's book tells how he retraced Carson's nomadic life from the time of her death in 1981 back to her childhood. With wanderlust in her blood and skydiving the love of her life, she pursued her skydiving passion at dropzones across three western states. Finally settling in Montana, she built her own dropzone in the wilderness. Ironically, she would die there a year after it opened. She was 30 years old at the time.

Prior to filming, Gorman managed to track down two family members of Carson and eleven skydivers who at one time or another had jumped with her. "I was amazed that people still remembered her," said Gorman, after all, it had been almost thirty years since she had died, and some of the skydivers hadn't jumped with her in nearly forty years."

Revered and loved at Beagle Sky Ranch in Medford, Oregon and at her dropzone in Lost Prairie, Montana, she was tormented by a painful event from her teenage years. "Skydiving is what kept her going," says Gorman. "It eased her pain. When she was in the air, she didn't care about anything else."

During the course of interviewing Carson's brother, her secret was finally revealed, and for Gorman it was the answer to the meaning of his dream. He finally understood what drove her to jump out of airplanes and keep doing it after suffering two serious accidents. "The essence of Joan had been found and her spirit was alive in that room when her brother so eloquently explained her past," says Gorman in his book.

Returning to do more filming in Montana, Gorman would learn of possible nefariousness as to the cause of Carson's double parachute malfunction, encounter hostility, and finally receive recognition with the film winning awards and appearing at nine film festivals in North America and Europe.

Newspaper articles about the film appeared on the Internet, and not long afterwards he would get a most uncanny email reconnecting the past with the present in a most surprising and emotional way. "That call convinced me that I had met Joan for a reason,” says Gorman in his book, "and that was to someday tell her story. I merely opened the bottle and her story gushed out."

As to Gorman's decision to write the book, he said, “As great as the film is, I wrote the book because I thought my experience making the film might be even more interesting than the film.”

Gorman recently submitted "Ride The Sky" to the 2025 Flathead Lake International CineFest in Polson and is awaiting word on its inclusion, where it appeared in 2014. According to Gorman, the ending of the film has been revised to include the recent developments in Joan's story.

 
 
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