Alumni Spotlight: Film Producer Teddy Kunhardt
Business, art and documentary enthusiasts of the Skidmore College and Saratoga Springs
community came together last Monday evening for the screening of Kunhardt Films and
HBOâs Becoming Warren Buffett. The film, produced by Skidmore alumnus Teddy Kunhardt, puts an unconventional twist
on your average success story. By taking a look into the personal life and humanity
of one of the worldâs richest men, Warren Buffett, the documentary exposes a side
of celebrity life often unseen and unexpected by the general public.
Prior to the screening, several Skidmore faculty and Saratoga community members attended a dinner with Teddy Kundhardt. Among the attendees were Skidmoreâs very own ian Berry and Deb Hall, Kunhardtâs professor during his undergraduate studies in art. Enjoying this reunion with a former student, Hall shared a book of Teddyâs college ceramic work, which encompassed elaborate and large-scale tea pots that he says still remain in his garden today.
After graduating from Skidmore, Kunhardt pursued a degree in the culinary arts and worked under a renowned chef. This experience taught him that cooking was more enjoyable as a passion than a career, so after a year Teddy knocked on his father's door at Kunhardt Films and said he was ready to join the family business.
In addition to the film, one conversation topic included Kunhardtâs appreciation for two new programs, MDOCS and Skidmoreâs Media and Film Studies Program. Media classes were limited during his time at Skidmore. Further discussion revolved around Kunhardt Filmsâ upcoming productions about Martin Luther King Jr. and Ben Bradlee of the Washington Post, two more famous individuals with unexplored pasts. After a warm introduction from MDOCS Director Jordana Dym, the evening was turned over to story and screen.

Audience members gathered in
The Tang for the screening
The screening of Becoming Warren Buffett brought a full house to the Tang Teaching Museumâs Somers Room this March 6. A sight worth seeing, some eager viewers pulled chairs and stools from other areas to fill up the back and aisles of the screening room. In its description of the film, HBO wrote âWith unprecedented access to his day-to-day personal life, Becoming Warren Buffett tells the improbable story of how an ambitious, numbers-obsessed boy from Nebraska became one of the richest, most-respected men in the world." However, Buffettâs story from rags to riches takes a back seat in the film. Through interviews as well as archival and family footage, the dual impact of Buffettâs passion for investing and his eccentric personality on his loved ones prevails as the filmâs true focus. The documentary film succeeds in its intent to evoke emotion and interest in the viewer, a goal later shared by Teddy Kunhardt in the post-screening Q&A session.

Jordana Dym and Teddy Kunhardt
during the Q&A
After the viewing of Becoming Warren Buffett, Jordana Dym and audience members were invited to ask Producer Teddy Kunhardt questions. Several of the eveningâs questions were in regards to Teddyâs career and interest in documentary or relating to the true nature and filming of Warren Buffett. In response, Kunhardt revealed his love for sharing personal narratives and truths via documentary and subject films in which filmmakers and viewers âget inside and live with someone.â He also disclosed that âwhat you see is what you getâ with Warren Buffett, affirming the billionaireâs humble yet closed-off attitude and daily McDonalds breakfast expenses witnessed during unscripted filmmaking and 2â3 hour interviews with the 86-year-old. Although he would happily work on a feature film, Teddy Kunhardtâs work in Becoming Warren Buffett unearths the importance of documentary film as well as its implications on truth and our understanding of the world.
âMary Brimmer â19