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September 8, 2008
Ocracoke’s Marcy Brenner, breast cancer survivor, is the subject of a documentary
By SUNDAE HORN

Ocracoker Marcy Brenner is a musician, a mom, and a writer. She’s
also a cancer survivor and the subject of a documentary film about her
experience with advanced breast cancer. Ray Schmitt of Real Earth
Productions was inspired to make a film about Brenner after hearing her
original song, “Dead Girl Walking,” and he gave his film
the same title.
The first public screening of “Dead Girl Walking,” will be
on Friday, Sept. 12, at 7:30 p.m. at Deepwater Theater on Ocracoke. The
event is free and refreshments will be served.
Brenner was diagnosed with breast cancer at the age of 34, just after
her mother died of ovarian cancer. She went through two bouts with
breast cancer and was treated with high-dose chemotherapy and
radiation, had a mastectomy, and also underwent a bone marrow
transplant. Today, Brenner is in remission, but continues to be a
support person for people facing a cancer diagnosis. She was the
keynote speaker at the 2000 and 2008 Outer Banks Relay for Life
fundraiser for the American Cancer Society.
Brenner says that cancer gave her backhanded gifts.
“If I was offered a deal to go back in time and live my life
without cancer, and all I would have to give up were the insights,
experience and purpose that have come to me as a result,” she
says. “I wouldn’t make that bargain. My cancer experience
was a wakeup call to life.”
In the film, Brenner describes how having cancer taught her to live
while she’s alive, and to ask herself what she really wants to be
doing with her life. She met her husband, Lou Castro, while she was
still undergoing treatment for cancer and says it was “a miracle
to fall in love again when I didn’t dare dream of a future.”
Together they moved to Ocracoke and became the musical duo Coyote. They
are regulars at the Ocrafolk Opry and the Ocrafolk Festival, and have
their own Coyote show with Hatteras singer-songwriter Noah Paley on
Friday nights during the summer at Deepwater Theater. Castro also plays
with Ocracoke’s Molasses Creek and travels with them when they go
off the island. Brenner and Castro, along with David Tweedie and Gary
Mitchell of Molasses Creek, have been playing Sunday nights at the
Jolly Roger Pub this year and will continue through September. 
Coyote has recorded three CDs: “Coyote Live on the Outer
Banks,” “Home to Me,” and “Another Year
Blooms.” Brenner is also writing a memoir about her cancer
experience.
Brenner opened her keynote address at Relay for Life with an original
song “Another Year Blooms,” which she wrote for her
“two Charlottes.”
The first is her mother, Charlotte Brenner, and the second is her
daughter, Charlotte Castro, whom she and Castro adopted at birth last
year. “Another Year Blooms” is a loving tribute to
Brenner’s mother and a bittersweet song of hope, perfectly
captured in the line, “Even still now, without you, in spite of
winter’s gloom, another year blooms.”
The “Dead Girl Walking” film includes interviews with Brenner and Castro, home
video footage of Brenner during her illness, and lots of music
including the songs “Dead Girl Walking,” “Another
Year Blooms,” and others inspired by Brenner’s wake-up call
to life.
FOR MORE INFORMATION
To view a trailer of “Dead Girl Walking,” click here:
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=--dbO20CoQI
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