โWildโ author Cheryl Strayed mourns death of husband Brian Lindstrom
Brian Lindstrom, a filmmaker whose documentaries shined a light on societyโs underdogs and inspired social change, has died. He was 65.
Lindstromโs wife, author Cheryl Strayed, confirmed the news on Instagram Friday.
โBrian Lindstrom died this morning the way he lived โ with gentleness and courage, grace and gratitude for his beautiful life,โ she wrote. โOur children, Carver and Bobbi, and I held him as he took his last breath and we will hold him forever in our hearts. The only thing more immense than our sorrow that Progressive Supranuclear Palsy took our beloved Brian from us is the endless love we have for him.โ
According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, PSP is caused by damage to nerve cells in areas of the brain that control thinking and body movements. The rare neurological disease progresses rapidly.
Strayed, who penned the bestselling memoir โWild,โ which was later adapted for the big screen and starred Reese Witherspoon, announced just weeks ago that Lindstrom had been diagnosed โwith a serious, fatal illness.โ
Lindstrom was born Feb. 12, 1961. The son of a bartender and a liquor salesman, he was raised in Portland, Ore. โ which he and his family still called home.
He was the first member of his family to attend college, which he paid for by taking out student loans, landing work-study jobs and working summers in a salmon cannery in Cordova, Alaska. During a 2013 TEDx Talk, Lindstrom said that after heโd exhausted all the video production classes at Portlandโs Lewis & Clark College, his professor Stuart Kaplan gave him a gift certificate to a class at the Northwest Film Center. There, Lindstrom made a short film about his grandpa that landed him a spot in the MFA program at Columbia University.
It was a train trip with his grandpa that inspired Lindstrom to tackle challenging topics with a lens that restored dignity to his subjects. His grandpa was a binge-drinker, and on day three of the trip, he woke up with a hangover and was missing his dentures. Lindstrom, only 5 at the time, noticed the way other passengers treated him and his grandpa differently.
โI think what my films are about is that search for my grandfatherโs dentures, the humanizing narrative that bridges the gap between us and them and arrives at we,โ he said.
Lindstrom said he returned to Portland after film school and โdid several projects with the Northwest Film Center that had me putting a camera in the hands of kids on probation, homeless teens, newly recovering addicts, hard-hit people who had hard-hitting stories to share.โ
โThose projects taught me so much about the transformative power of art, and they gave me permission I felt in my personal films to ask people if I might follow them, so that an audience could better understand what they were going through, and by extension, better understand themselves,โ he said.
Lindstromโs 2007 award-winning cinรฉma-vรฉritรฉ-style film, โFinding Normal,โ followed long-term drug addicts as they left prison or detox and tried to rebuild their lives with the help of a recovery mentor.
โWhat Iโm most proud about is that โFinding Normalโ is the only film to ever be shown to inmates in solitary confinement at Oregon State Penitentiary, and not, I might add, as a punishment,โ Lindstrom said.
In 2013, he released โAlien Boy: The Life and Death of James Chasse,โ a documentary that illuminated the life of a man who grappled with schizophrenia and examined his death, which happened in police custody. Discussing the film with LA Progressive in 2018, Lindstrom said that he doesnโt make films for audiences.
โI make them for the people in the film. It is my small way of honoring them,โ he told the outlet. โThat doesnโt mean I donโt delve into dark areas or that I ignore that personโs struggles. Iโm much more concerned with trying to achieve an honest depiction of that personโs life than I am with any potential audience reaction.โ
Lindstromโs work aimed to inspire empathy and humanize those suffering in the margins of society, but it also catalyzed policy change. His acclaimed 2015 documentary, โMothering Inside,โ followed participants in the Family Preservation Project (FPP), an initiative helping incarnated moms establish and maintain bonds with their children.
Midway through filming the documentary, the Oregon Department of Corrections announced it planned to nix funding for the FPP. Lindstrom hosted early screenings of the film, which inspired grassroots advocacy that reached then-Gov. Kate Brown, who subsequently signed legislation that restored funding. The filmโs release also helped make Oregon the first state in the U.S. to pass a bill of rights for children of incarcerated parents.
Partnering with Strayed, Lindstrom made the documentary short, โI Am Not Untouchable. I Just Have My Period,โ for the New York Times in 2019. The film highlighted the experience of teen girls in Surkhet, Nepal, and the menstrual stigma they faced. Most recently, the filmmaker released, โLost Angel: The Genius of Judee Sill,โ which examined the folk-rock singerโs life from her traumatic childhood and drug-addled adolescence through her rise in the Laurel Canyon music scene and untimely death.
Lindstrom, discussing โJudee Sillโ and his style as a filmmaker, told Oregon ArtsWatch, โItโs the chance to kind of focus on the question: What does it mean to be human? The person that the film is about, what can they teach us, what can we learn from them? What can they learn from themselves?โ
In 2017, Lindstrom received the Civil Liberties Award from the American Civil Liberties Union of Oregon for his work advancing civil rights and liberties. That same year, he received the Distinguished Alumni Award from Lewis & Clark College.
In Strayedโs post announcing Lindstromโs death, she described their more than 30-year partnership as a stroke of โtremendous luck.โ
โWe loved each other and our kids with deep devotion and true delight. He was a stellar husband. He was the most magnificent dad. He was a man whose every word and deed was driven by kindness, compassion, and generosity,โ she wrote. โHe saw the goodness in everyone. He believed that we are all sacred and redeemable.
โHis work as a documentary filmmaker was dedicated to telling stories of people who, as he put it, โsociety puts an X through.โ He erased that X with his camera and his astonishing heart.โ
Strayedโs memoir โ which followed her as she hiked 1,100 miles along the Pacific Crest Trail in the wake of her motherโs death, a battle with drug addiction and divorce from her first husband โ concludes with a happy ending. She finished the months-long hike and sat on a white bench near the Bridge of the Gods, a stoneโs throw from the spot where, she writes, sheโd marry Lindstrom four years later.
โHis greatest legacy is Carver and Bobbi, who embody everything good and true about their father. Their extraordinary grace, courage, and fortitude during this harrowing time was unfaltering and grounded in the undying love Brian poured into them every day of their lives,โ she wrote. โWe do not know how we will live without him. Weโre utterly bereft. We can only walk this dark path and search for the beauty Brian knew was there. It will be his eternal light that guides us.โ