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“Run Free: The True Story of Caballo Blanco,” as feature-length documentary about ultra-running legend Micah True will premiere at the Stargazers Theatre and Events Center in Colorado Springs on Thursday, April 30 at 7:30 p.m. The one-night-only event is sponsored by the Pikes Peak Road Runners.

Micah True, better known as Caballo Blanco – the White Horse – was the focal character of Christopher McDougall’s 2009 best-selling book “Born to Run: A Hidden Tribe, Superathletes and the Greatest Race the World Has Never Seen” about the Tarahumara Indians of northern Mexico. Also known as the Rarámuri, or Running People, they are some of the best long-distance runners in the world.

Caballo Blanco was an enigmatic visionary who lived and ran with the Tarahumara after moving to remote Copper Canyon in the 1990s, and who created the fifty-mile Copper Canyon Ultra-Marathon to honor their running traditions and aid in their sustainability. Now in its thirteenth year, the race attracts hundreds of local Tarahumara to the village of Urique to compete alongside some of the best runners in the world. All race finishers receive five hundred pounds of corn, which the international runners traditionally donate to the local Tarahumara, commemorating the spirit of sharing, or “kórima,” which is a way of life among the natives of Copper Canyon.

The documentary is directed by Sterling Noren, a filmmaker from Seattle who met Micah True in 2009. Most of the material for the film was recorded in the weeks leading up to the 2012 race. Shortly after that race, Micah True disappeared in the Gila Wilderness of New Mexico during his daily run, prompting ultra-runners from all over the country to drop everything and join in the search. His body was recovered several days later, found on a trail in a deserted canyon by some of his friends.

“Micah’s vision lives on and his legacy is honored in this film,” said Noren, of Seattle. “The film shares Micah’s compelling message of love, hope and kórima with the world while helping sustain the people and culture that meant so much to him. We’re honored to be part of this project and are committed to keeping Micah’s mission alive.”

“Micah’s genuine passion for honoring the sacred running traditions of the Tarahumara people was the essence of his being,” said Maria Walton, executive producer of the film and Micah True’s girlfriend at the time of his death. “We made this film to share Micah’s vision of hope for the Tarahumara culture and empower people everywhere with his joy of running.”

The ninety-minute film, told through the eyes of Caballo Blanco, is sponsored by Saucony, which will host the world premiere of the film in April with shows in New York City and in Boston during this year’s Boston Marathon. A special premiere of the film was held during this year’s Copper Canyon Ultra-Marathon in Urique and the film’s nationwide tour of the film will begin on April 21 in Los Alamos, New Mexico. Another special premiere in True’s hometown of Boulder, Colorado, is scheduled for May 28.

The film recently won the 2015 Bud Greenspan Memorial Film and Video Award, presented by the Track & Field Writers of America. It also has been entered in several international film festivals.

A percentage of the film’s profits, including from DVD sales, will go to benefit Norawas de Rarámuri (Friends of the Running People), the non-profit agency founded by Micah True to preserve traditional Tarahumara culture. Norawas de Rarámuri works to provide maize, non-GMO seed corn, and cash awards for participating Tarahumara runners, both men and women alike. On this way, the organization offers Tarahumara families nutrition during drought and support for a tradition of small farms necessary to both physical and cultural survival.

Tickets for the event are $11 in advance at www.imathlete.com/events/runfree or $15 at the door the night of the show. The Stargazers Theatre and Events Center is located at 10 South Parkside Drive in Colorado Springs.

The Pikes Peak Road Runners club is dedicated to promoting the sport of running, personal fitness, and community through organizing and managing running events, providing education and training, and creating venues for social and volunteer opportunities in the Pikes Peak region. It believes that running, training, and goal-setting enhances physical and emotional health. The club encourages participation in running events for people of all ability levels and acknowledges that volunteer participation is a foundation upon which Pikes Peak Road Runners exists. For more information, go to www.pprrun.org.

For more information about the film, go to www.runfreemovie.com.

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