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Alumni spotlight: Barbara Bentree

alumna barbara bentree with video camera

College of Music alumna Barbara Bentree is now a documentary filmmaker.

During her career, Barbara Bentree (BME ā€™80) has collaborated with Mouseketeers, her husband and even her high school classmates.

But through it all, the name of a fellow College of Music graduate kept coming up.

ā€œLittle things happened along the way that would bring Dave Grusin into my life. And now, after all these years, Iā€™m very happy to say that we have become friends.ā€

Friends and, for the time being, interviewer and interviewee. Bentree and her husband John Rangel are producing a documentary about the life and career of Grusin (BM ā€™56) with their production company and through their signature brand, Musician-Made Films.

ā€œIā€™m so honored to tell this story,ā€ says Bentree.

Now on her third documentary film, Bentree is also on her third career. After graduating she went to Los Angeles to sing, performing in musical theater and an acapella jazz group. Then came a three-year stint as a music producer on ā€œThe Mickey Mouse Club,ā€ during the era that saw Ryan Gosling, Justin Timberlake, Britney Spears, Christina Aquilera and more launch their young careers.

These days, sheā€™s bringing her unique background and musical chops to the documentary film world.

ā€œI think I have an advantage over some filmmakers because of my background in music,ā€ she says. ā€œStorytelling, composition, variation, form and dynamics apply to all art forms, including film, and I learned about these elements through studying and performing music.ā€

After creating films about womenā€™s reproductive rights and the merits of attending your high school reunion, Bentree says her understanding of music has really come into play as sheā€™s worked with Dave Grusin.

ā€œSometimes you see documentaries about musicians and know that a musician wasnā€™t involved. The content they focus on sometimes doesnā€™t make sense,ā€ she explains. ā€œI think part of why Dave trusted me with this story is because John and I are both musicians and we have the same focus.ā€

The idea to tell the Oscar-winning composerā€™s story on film came when Bentree and her husband were on a road trip.

ā€œWe were listening to Herbie Hancockā€™s autobiography on tape. And we thought, if Herbie has a story about his life then Dave should too.ā€

Since then Bentree says itā€™s been an honor to share Grusinā€™s expertise and experience.

ā€œI donā€™t know how he was able to produce that volume of work at that qualityā€”using the technology the industry had at the time. He was working on several TV shows, scoring films, doing live concerts and starting a record labelā€¦ all at the same time!

ā€œItā€™s going to be an inspiring, uplifting film.ā€

alumni barbara bentree and dave grusin at the piano

Bentree films composer and alumnus Dave Grusin during the making of a documentary about his life.

In his 50-plus years in the music industry, Grusin has scored dozens of films, including ā€œOn Golden Pondā€ and ā€œTootsie.ā€ He won an Academy Award for the score for ā€œThe Milagro Beanfield Warā€ in 1988.

ā€œHe was a part of that incredible evolution in music from pencil and paper to computers. ĢżDave has a wealth of information and reflection to share about ā€˜processā€™ and the state of the industry,ā€ says Bentree.

Bentree says she can see the project turning into a teaching tool as well.

ā€œWe asked him specific questions about technology and technique that might appeal to a more niche audience. Heā€™s a vast resource and as a teacher, I want to know these things, too.ā€

Bentree says the common thread in her patchwork career has been her interest in learningā€”and her education degree from the College of Music.

ā€œMy degree from CU has really been a blessing. In those lean years between incredible ups and downs, I could always get a job teaching music.

ā€œMy life is an example of how amazing it is to have a career in the performing arts. The diversity of skills that you acquire in music serves you well to keep working and have a very interesting life.ā€

Read more about Barbara in the latest edition of Colorado Music Magazine >>