The Disruptors - fundraiser for ADHD NZ
Join us at our premier screening of The Disruptors documentary to celebrate ADHD Awareness Month and help raise money for ADHD NZ.
You, your family, partner, friends and colleagues are warmly invited to watch The Disruptors documentary as it navigates the challenges and triumphs of families living with ADHD. And you'll hear from numerous innovators, entrepreneurs, CEOs, Olympic athletes, and award-winning artists who have recently disclosed that their ADHD, managed effectively, has played a vital role in their success. |
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Where:
Book online now for your tickets to see this documentary at: The Vic Devonport 48-56 Victoria Road Devonport Auckland 0624 |
Date: Tuesday 25 October
Times:
Price: $30 per person (includes ticket and one free wine, beer, popcorn, ice cream, confectionery or non-alcoholic drink).*
* All profits go to ADHD NZ so we can advance the ADHD community by providing practical information and support.
Times:
- 7.30 pm: meet the team from ADHD NZ, buy a raffle, and get your movie snacks and drinks
- 8 pm: welcome from ADHD NZ; movie starts, and
- 9.40 pm: the movie ends.
Price: $30 per person (includes ticket and one free wine, beer, popcorn, ice cream, confectionery or non-alcoholic drink).*
* All profits go to ADHD NZ so we can advance the ADHD community by providing practical information and support.
About the director: Stephane Soechtig
Intending to create films that educate and inspire, Stephanie Soechtig is an award-winning writer, producer, and documentary film director. Stephanie graduated cum laude, from NYU, with a degree in Journalism and a minor in Cinema Studies. She began her career producing documentaries for 20/20 and Primetime Live. Since then, she has covered the 2000 presidential elections for Good Morning America and produced Planet Earth, hosted by Leonardo DiCaprio, with ABC. In a previous film, Under the Gun, she received a prolonged standing ovation when it premiered at the 2016 Sundance Film Festival. Lionsgate and Epix acquired the award-winning film, which critics called "masterfully crafted" and "the best film on firearms since the 2002's Oscar-winning doc Bowling for Columbine." |