In the News

I’m proud and happy to announce I’ve been named one of the

Cape & Plymouth Business 2012 40 Under 40!

Thank you to everyone who nominate me!

 

 

Extra Extra! Just some Nice things people have said about me. Thanks Y’all!

 

Falmouth Patch pegged me as one of Falmouth’s Movers & Shakers!

Falmouth resident Alecia Jean (A.J.) Orsini Lebeda wears many hats: not only is she a co-owner and founder of Good Natured Dog Productions and a part-time host at the Woods Hole-based public radio station WCAI, she’s also an active member of the Falmouth Chamber of Commerce, the Falmouth Young Professionals, and the Geek Girl Educational Training Center. But wait… there’s more! LINK to the Article

I just want to pass on what a fabulous job Alecia Lebeda is doing for you – she just produced two PSA’s for us, and from start to finish she was a consummate professional, very customer-service friendly, and created a fabulous end product using ingredients that were challenging to sort through. She made it all come together with her skill and style and we are thrilled! Many thanks for having her provide this valuable service to the non-profit community. Warmly, Melissa P.S. You have full permission to quote me!”

Melissa Roberts Weidman, Director of Communications and Community Outreach
Hospice & Palliative Care of Cape Cod

New England Multimedia

New England Multimedia: Next up for our “Thanks for engaging on our wall!” is Alecia Lebeda, known on Facebook as AJ Orsini Lebeda, she of [Upsetness]GoodNaturedDog Productions. Their info page says “THIS Fan Page is for YOU to share your UPSETNESS, or Tenderness if your in that mood.” This girl is funny! Go to her wesbite, check out her YouTube Channel and look for “The Typist.” New England Multimedia Alecia, time to put on your thinking cap!!

1) Name someone who inspires you right now, and tell us how they do so.
2) Name something you did once, but would never do again.
3) If time or money were no object, what would you do this weekend?
4) What’s the most frightening thing you’ve ever done?
WOW! Okay..here we go!

1. I have a dear friend who started REVOLUTION OF REAL WOMEN™ and she’s just amazing! She’s empowering women to feel the best about who THEY
are. It’s important message, not just for young girls, but all of us and I really admire that. (She’s not so bad at the Social Media thing too!)

‎2. Uhh…well this is tough. I make TONS of mistakes..and try to chalk them up to experience and move on.. BUT okay: I will never throw my wedding/
engagement ring..again. Once in a fit of anger at my dear husband Scott Lebeda, I threw my ring while in a fight behind our place of work at the time, (a run down tavern..) it rolled under a dumpster. Needless to say I really hurt him that day, and I will NEVER do something out of anger like that again. (The ring is fine,..no diamonds were harmed…) ;)

‎3. I would put my family on a plane to Dublin, and we’d spend the weekend making music and drinking fresh Guinness.

‎4. I once stood on a 40foot ladder, in the rain to hang a huge sign on a Score Board as a Production Designer for a movie. That was scary. It really hit me that if I fell, I was not going to walk away from it.. I try not to scare easy. OOH! OOH!? WAS THAT A GHOST??? DID YOU SEE THAT????

Making a Music video with Gamble & Burke in Falmouth

 

Designing Medway Women are with “BoyBand”



By Bob Tremblay
GHS

MEDWAY–Folks who see the new film “BoyBand:Breakin’ Through in ’82″ can thank two Massachusetts residents fro the movie’s retrograde look. Leg warmers, anyone?

As production designer, Alecia Orsini lebeda was in charge of creating the film’s look. “That means coordinating the costumes, the props and the locations,” she says. “It’s pretty much creating the entire world the film is going to take place in.

“Since the film takes place in 1982, we wanted to stay really true to the year. We wanted to get authentic ’80s stuff. But we’re also working with an indie budget so we did a lot of Dumpster diving, Salvation Army hunting and pulling stuff out of people’s basements. If we came across a Members Only jacket, it was a good day.”

In the costume department, Krysten Trindade was responsible for getting the cast and extras into their outfits and making sure those outfits didn’t change in between shoots. Ah, the joys of continuity. “It wasn’t just making sure that everybody was wearing the same clothes from scene to scene, it was making sure they were wearing them the same way and that that clothes stayed clean.”


And what kind of clothes were the filmmakers looking for to capture that authentic 1980s look? “A lot of really brightly colored anything,” says Trindade. “I’ve never been more excited over such a horrible look in my life.”

To recreate 1980s home decorating, the filmmakers found people who offered the use of their domiciles. These included a resident whose living room featured carpeted walls and a turntable placed inside of the walls.

“We went into one woman’s house and she had a pink and blue bathroom,” recalls Orsini Lebeda. “And I put my foot into my mouth. I said, ‘This is disgusting. I love it.’ The woman looked at me and was kind of offended. So I added, ‘No, no. You don’t understand. This is really perfect.’ It taught me to approach this a little differently.”

Shot entirely in the Massachusetts communities of Worcester and Leominster during a five-week span in the summer of 2008, the film is a teen comedy about a high school quarterback who quits the team to turn his heavy metal band into the first-ever boy band. Written and directed by Jon Artigo, “BoyBand” stars Michael Copon, E-Knock and Lorenzo Hooker III.

“BoyBand” marks Orsini Lebeda’s eighth film. Her resume includes working as a production assistant on “Shutter Island.” She also served as the production designer on “A Woman Called Job,” now in post-production.

When not making movies, Orsini Lebeda, 26, works as the production coordinator at Falmouth Community Television. The daughter of Bill and Kate Orsini of Medway, she lives in Medway with her husband, Scott Lebeda. She graduated from the Savannah College of Art and Design in 2006 with a bachelor of fine arts degree in film and television.

Trindade makes her film debut in “BoyBand.” In addition to working in the costume department, she was an extra for a day. “It’s a lot of waiting,” she says of the extra work. “you wait eight hours to get on film for five seconds, but it was fun.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

“I just loved getting to work with the people,” Trindade adds. “And working together. We’d have a 15-hour shoot and have to get up at 5 the next morning, drive somewhere else and try to cooperate with everybody. People would be cranky. They hadn’t had their coffee or breakfast yet. But if things went wrong, we worked through it. We found solutions rather than finding someone to blame. It was hard work, but worth it. It’s about being able to work toward a concrete goal. And I now have something to show for all the hours I put in.”

Trindade, 19, who graduated from Medway High last year, is now a freshman at Framingham State College. She hasn’t decided on a major yet. The daughter of Glenn and Debora Trindade of Medway, she works part time at Victoria’s Secret in the Natick Collection.

For her work on “BoyBand,” Orsini Lebeda was paid–the amount wasn’t revealed. Trindade “started off unpaid, but (the filmmakers) liked her so much, they gave her a stipend,” says Orsini Lebeda.

Like Trindade, Orsini Lebeda says she enjoyed her experience on the film even if it did entail climbing a 40-foot ladder in the rain to put up a sign or the film’s fictional high school. “That was one of the scariest moments in my life, ” she admis.

She’s particularly proud of the effort she made to make sure the star’s football team had the appropriate “heroic colors” of blue and gold. Allotted about $5,000 for football and cheerleader uniforms-the film’s overall budget was $750,000–filmmakers eventually found a Worcester company willing to help them get the uniforms they wanted.

“It wouldn’t have been the same film if we had the uniforms in green or red–which we used tor the opposing teams,” she says. “We knew what we wanted and we were going to fight tooth and nail to get it. You got to convince somebody that they’re going to love it as much as you love it.”

“I’m really proud of this film, ” Orsini Lebeda continues. “The people I worked with are like family and it’s the most fun I’ve ever had on a film. The the people watching it, it may not change their lives, but it changed our lives making it. To be given this kind of responsibility–production designer is high up on the totem pole–it’s kind of like playing God by creating your own world. And I miss that world now. I drive down the street and I see a 1982 Nova and I want to go ask the diver if he wants to be in the movie even though the movie has already been shot.”

Alecia J. Orsini Lebeda served as the movie’s production designer and Krysten Trindade worked in its costume department.

“I picked up a Members Only jacket yesterday. I don’t need a Members Only jacket, but there it was. I thought ‘This is the coolest thing in the world.’ I appreciate things a lot more.”

“BoyBand: Breakin’ Through in ’82″ has its local screenings extended, and will now be shown today through June 17 at the Showcase Cinemas North, 135 Brooks St., Worcester, and starting Friday at Showcase Cinemas Revere, 565 Squire Road, Revere.