Aaron Burns, director of the upcoming film Jimmy, had always loved Jimmy Stewart the way most people do — through the movies. It was a Guideposts article, written by Stewart himself, that stopped him cold. The man who played George Bailey had flown 20 combat missions against the Nazis, left Hollywood behind for three years to serve his country, and carried a flight log in his own handwriting marking the planes of his fallen comrades. The prayer in Martini's Bar in It's a Wonderful Life, it turns out, was not just a scene. It was the beginning of something real.
Timeless storytelling, the faith woven into Hollywood's most beloved film, and what it means to tell stories that outlast your own life: Aaron shares how Jimmy Stewart's daughter Kelly Stewart Harcourt came on board as executive producer, brought her father's personal journals and wartime flight logs to the production, and even lent them Jimmy's actual Oscars for filming. He also opens up about Frank Capra's mysterious visitor who told him he was worse than Hitler for wasting his gifts, why Aaron's team asked "What would Capra do?" on set every day, and the pre-production journey of his next film, Hudson and Maria, about missionary Hudson Taylor's radical integration into Chinese culture and his courageous stand against both the British and Chinese empires to carry the gospel where no one else would go.
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