Just in time for National Bible Week (starting next Sunday) comes word of an ambitious project involving some high profile vocal talent:
Once Jesus signed on, it was easy to enlist King Solomon and Moses.
Jim Caviezel (Jesus), Malcolm McDowell (King Solomon) and Richard Dreyfuss (Moses) were among hundreds of actors who lined up to create “The Word of Promise Audio Bible,” all 98 hours and 79 CDs of it.
The nearly four-year project, released last month,was the inspiration of Carl Amari, a Chicago-area producer behind “Twilight Zone Radio Dramas,” “Mystery Theater” and other radio programs.
“I always thought it would be cool to do a radio drama of the Bible,” said Amari, who grew up “not real religious” in the Catholic Church. “You’re dramatizing the greatest story ever told. It’s God’s word. How can you make God’s word lift off the page? With great actors, great sound effects and music.”
Amari pitched the concept in early 2006 to Thomas Nelson Inc., a Nashville-based publisher of Christian books, software and videos. He was an admirer of the company’s 1982 modern translation of the King James Bible.
When Amari projected that the venture would cost $4 million, the entire Thomas Nelson board of directors “looked at me,” he recalled. It would be a leap of faith, given that the company’s previous audio Bibles had cost at most $17,000 to produce. Then again, just 20,000 copies constituted a bestseller.
Amari assured the directors they could sell millions of his audio Bibles if he had the resources to hire household-name actors and back them up with an original score and feature-film quality sound effects.
(Plague of frogs? Just imagine the sound of raw chicken breasts being smacked on the ground.)
Performing the Bible verbatim from Genesis to Revelation was a huge undertaking, involving more than 1,000 actors, technicians and musicians.
How’d they do it? Continue here.
H/T New Advent