Coventry Telegraph

Celebratin­g the end of a memorable season

MAN OF FAITH MARK WAHLBERG TELLS GEMMA DUNN HE HOPES TO INSPIRE OTHERS WITH HIS PASSION PROJECT AND TALE OF REDEMPTION, FATHER STU

- Popular BBC CWR presenter

ATTENDING the Coventry City End of Season Awards event last Saturday, was just what the doctor ordered.

My wife Steff, and I, had a blast celebratin­g the end of a memorable season, at a packed ceremony in the Coventry Building Society Arena.

The night was made extra special with the supporters in attendance for the first time in three years, due to the pandemic.

Together with our good friends, John & Celeste Clarke, it was also wonderful to sit on a table right next to the players and watch the love and support they have for each other, as the winners for each category were announced.

The night was hosted by Cov City legend, ‘Harry’ Roberts, and following a delicious meal, auction and a special Sky Blues edition of Head & Tails, it was time for the main event.

Gustavo Hamer was voted Player of the Season, in an award which was voted for by supporters. He beat off stiff competitio­n from leading scorer, Viktor Gyokeres and fellow star midfielder, Callum O’hare, to win the prestigiou­s award. Other awards included City supporters choosing Jordan Shipley’s thunderous strike at home against QPR as their Goal of the Season.

Players’ Player of the Year was awarded to Viktor Gyokeres. It was a good night indeed for the 23 year-old Swedish striker, who also won the Top Goalscorer prize, taking his tally to an impressive 18 goals following last Saturday’s 1-1 draw at Stoke, in the final match of the season.

The prize for Young Player of the Year for a City player aged under 23, and decided by the coaching staff, was given to a delighted Ian Maatsen. They also chose the Developmen­t Squad Player of the Year, which was won by Fabio Tavares.

Captain, Liam Kelly, didn’t walk away empty-handed after winning the prize for the Community Player of the Year.

With the fans singing the players’ terrace songs and the atmosphere absolutely buzzing, if that night was anything to go by, the spirit and energy in the room will spur Coventry City onto even greater things next season.

MARK Wahlberg is used to being pitched all manner of film ideas, but he was caught off guard by the proposal for Father Stu.

It was six years ago when the topic of the biographic­al drama film, which marks one man’s improbable journey from boxer to priest, first came up.

“I was sitting at a restaurant in Beverley Hills with two priests (from my parish)”, begins the 50-year-old A-lister, a practising Catholic.

“It was a Saturday, they had just done lots of confession­s and one priest just wanted to eat, have a glass of wine and go back to the rectory and go to bed,” he recalls. “And the other priest was adamant about pitching me a movie he wanted to make with me.

“I’m thinking, you do your job and I’ll do mine. I wasn’t there to find the next script. I was looking for the things I needed to stay on a path in the direction of spiritual growth.”

But something about the clergyman’s story stuck with him.

Based on real life events, the passionate pitch detailed the life of Stuart Long, a Montana-born-andraised former boxer who moves to LA following an abrupt end to his amateur career in the ring.

Dreaming of stardom, yet working in a supermarke­t, he meets Carmen (Teresa Ruiz), a Catholic Sunday school teacher who was all but immune to his charms.

Determined to win her over, he starts attending church, but life is soon flipped on its head when surviving a terrible motorcycle accident leaves him wondering if he can use his second chance to help others by becoming a Catholic priest.

“The more I heard about Stu, the more convinced I was that I had to get this movie made,” says Mark, who takes the title role and also produces.

“I’ve always felt like, OK, what am I supposed to be doing? Because I am a man of faith and I feel like I’ve been very blessed and very fortunate, but what do I do with that? How do I utilise that for the greater good of God?

“And then it just dawned on me, this is a movie that will change people’s lives and bring people closer together and reaffirm their faith,” asserts the Ted star.

He asked his priest “to tell me the story again from the beginning, and from that point on it was my mission to produce the film”.

Joining the Boston-born actor in the movie are Academy Award Winner Mel Gibson and Academy Award Nominee Jacki Weaver, who play Long’s sceptical, estranged parents.

Friend and fellow Catholic filmmaker Mel, 66, not only proved a source of strength for Mark (“I wanted to talk to him about getting his film The Passion of the Christ

made, which had really inspired me”), it also led him to land the feature’s screenwrit­er – and eventual director – in Rosalind Ross, Gibson’s longtime partner.

“The film looks like she’s done it a hundred times, and it’s the first time!” Mel says proudly. “And she had 30 days to do it, which is not much, and she did it competentl­y and intelligen­tly. She’s a very talented young woman.”

What was it about this story that resonated? “It was a real story about real people,” answers the Braveheart star.

“They swear, they drink, he chases girls... He was just a regular guy, and it was just interestin­g to see how people like us relate to tragedy or infirmity and how they overcome that.

“His personal choice was to divorce himself from his own ego and realise there was something greater than him and gain humility. So it’s a pretty good message!”

Mark was equally moved by the redemptive narrative. The father-offour spent time in jail for assault when he was 16 and within 10 years was winning acclaim as an actor, and saw parallels between his own life and Long’s.

“I’ve always looked for roles that have a personal connection for me,” he explains.

“I transition­ed from running the streets as a teenager and young adult to finding my faith. I now realise that my purpose is to help others growing up in situations like mine.” The one-time rapper-turned Oscar-winning producer is now the founder of the Mark Wahlberg Youth Foundation, a charitable organisati­on dedicated to improving the quality of life for inner-city youth.

It’s never too late for redemption, he says, having quoted his Catholic faith as “the most important part” of his life.

“It’s a huge disservice for us to turn our backs on people or to put ourselves on a soapbox and judge somebody else, that’s not our place. “Nobody is beyond redemption, so we’re not going to give up on people, we’re going to support them and encourage them to do the right thing. “Even with this movie, you see Father Stu was on a path of destructio­n until he found his calling, and then he turned his life around in a way that he affected so many people in such a short amount of time,” he reasons. “I know Stu is challengin­g me now every day, to continue to echo his message: how am I going to step up and do more to help people? If people know that they are loved and that they’re supported, it’s a very powerful thing.” And seeing it played out on the big screen can only be a good thing, he adds.

As for the passion in bringing this vision to life, from cast and crew alike, “you don’t get that in all these other actor-for-hire movies,” he observes. “This is something that’s really special and doesn’t come around that often.”

Can he see himself doing more of the same genre in future?

“I am interested in doing a lot more in the faith-based space and just making more meaningful content that has substance and that I think could be helpful.

“But I’ll still make movies that are comedies and senseless movies that will make people laugh and escape for two hours,” he smiles. “I want to do it all, but I always feel drawn to especially true stories and movies that have meaning. This by far is the most personal and, I think, the most important, so here we are.”

Father Stu is opening in cinemas on Friday

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 ?? ?? Wahlberg plays a boxer who later found God
RELIGIOUS ANGLE: Mark Wahlberg says his latest project was a very personal film
Wahlberg plays a boxer who later found God RELIGIOUS ANGLE: Mark Wahlberg says his latest project was a very personal film
 ?? ?? Mark Wahlberg saw some of himself in Stu’s story
Mark Wahlberg saw some of himself in Stu’s story
 ?? ?? Mel Gibson and Rosalind Ross
Mel Gibson and Rosalind Ross

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