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Native sound production company dubs Lakota language for Disney+ Marvel Studios film

Ray Taken Alive, left, Grace Draskovic, Ruby Shoe String and Myron Uses Arrow translate 2012 "The Avengers" script from English to Lakota-Dakota. More than 60 people participated in Grey Willow Music & Production Studio collaboration with Disney+ Marvel Studios. PHOTO CREDIT/Lawrence Archambault Ray Taken Alive, left, Grace Draskovic, Ruby Shoe String and Myron Uses Arrow translate 2012 "The Avengers" script from English to Lakota-Dakota. More than 60 people participated in Grey Willow Music & Production Studio collaboration with Disney+ Marvel Studios. PHOTO CREDIT/Lawrence Archambault

Grey Willow Music Studio & Productions worked with area Lakota-Dakota language speakers to dub "The Avengers" 2012 film, expected release is in April

Grey Willow Music Studios & Production is quickly rising as a leading studio sound production company that works directly with major studios across the nation. Located on Standing Rock Sioux Nation land, Grey Willow’s business leaders produce sound and music in the entertainment world.

One day, the Grey Willow sound production team sat in their studios in Fort Yates, N.D. and thought aloud about about what could be. “It would be cool to have “The Avengers” in Lakota,” Lawrence “Larz” Archambault told Buffalo’s Fire. “It was a joke.” Initially said in jest, it’s now a reality with the Lakota version scheduled for release in April.

“Mark Ruffalo was a huge help in introducing us to Disney-Marvel Studios,” said Archambault, founder and president of Grey Willow. “When we started talking, we said we wanted everything — our language recordings, translations and our actors – to be ‘By Natives, For Natives.’ That’s our motto.”

Lawrence “Larz” Archambault (center), Cyril “Chuck” Archambault (left), and Xavier Archambault lead the Grey Willow Music & Studio Production team on Jan. 22. PHOTO CREDIT/Breanne Luger

It took about 15 months for the Grey Willow team to dub 2012’s “The Avengers” from English to the Lakota-Dakota language. The local sound creatives hired 62 Lakota-Dakota language speakers to help translate and record the script.

Archambault, Hunkpapa Lakota, was born on the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, treaty land that straddles both the North Dakota and South Dakota border. He carries the name Seven Elk, Hehaka Sakowin. After high school, his passion for music led him to attend the Musicians Institute of Technology, MIT, now named the College of Contemporary Music in Hollywood, Calif.

He later returned home to Standing Rock in 2017 and realized there were no job opportunities for someone who wanted to do studio production work. “I know music. I know business. I know production,” he said. “I am going to start a studio.”

He founded Grey Willow in April 2017. He has since achieved film industry recognition as a leading ADR, or Automated Dialogue Replacement, company. “Funny title actually, there is nothing really ‘automated’ about it at all,” said Archambault. “A great actor helps tremendously in the ADR world. The actor must not only recreate their performance on the set but also get near-perfect lip sync with the film.”

Marvel Studios hat sits atop Hulk head in Grey Willow studio in Fort Yates, N.D. PHOTO CREDIT/Lawrence Archambault

Archambault gives all credit to his younger brother Cyril “Chuck” Archambault for making the connection with Ruffalo. He also gives props to Ray Taken Alive and Dallas Nelson – men Lawrence Archambault takes as his brothers — for the idea of making ADR film dubs in Lakota.

The Grey Willow production team includes Archambault’s son and brother, respectively. Xavier L. Archambault serves as head engineer and Chuck Archambault leads marketing and public relations. “You don’t see any studios that are 100% Native-family owned and operated throughout the country and Canada in the ADR-Film world,” said Archambault. “We are the first of its kind that’s all Native and we’re proud of our work.”

Archambault’s team perfected their skills by shadowing the legendary Disney Studio sound engineer Doc Kane, a 30-plus-year industry veteran with more than 500 film credits in his portfolio. “Lawrence and Xavier at Grey Willow Studios, absolutely great to work with,” Kane wrote in an email.

“Mark Ruffalo was a huge help in introducing us to Disney-Marvel Studios. When we started talking, we said we wanted everything — our language recordings, translations and our actors – to be ‘By Natives, For Natives.’ That’s our motto.”

Lawrence Archambault- Hunkpapa Lakota, founder and president of Grey Willow

“I see the passion they have in this industry. Huge future in this industry with them as I am behind them every step of the way. I am very proud of their accomplishments and the relationship we have here at Studio B with them,” he wrote.

For Archambault, “It was a dream come true meeting and working directly with Doc, the knowledge he shared with Xavier and I cannot be measured. Plus the stories of his experiences over the years being at Disney Studio B and working with Brett Voss. The history of Studio B was such a beautiful vibe.”

Archambault said the most rewarding and satisfying aspect of his work centers on helping talented musicians in the community create something extraordinary. He’s worked closely with the local organizations on audio projects, including the Lakota Language Reclamation Project.

Left to right, Lawrence Archambault, founder of Grey Willow Studios, Brett M. Voss, Doc Kane, audio engineers Disney Studio B, and Xavier Archambault in Fort Yates, N.D. sound studio on Dec. 14, 2023. PHOTO CREDIT/Dawn Biro

“The amount of care and detail they put into the translation to remain true to the Lakota language was amazing to see,” said Alan Hayslip, Deluxe Studios senior sound editor, English dubbing. “We look forward to working with them on future projects.”

Grey Willow operates in a 1,800-square-foot studio in Fort Yates, N.D. attributes its audio post-production and ‘voice-over’ success to open communication with clients and creating workflows that meet the specific needs of each project. “When we do that, we become a partner that delivers predictable and consistent results on time and on budget,” said Archambault.

The Standing Rock-based company offers its services in North Dakota and South Dakota, as well as the film industry at large, including post houses, film companies, and video producers. Grey Willow has also collaborated with Lionsgate Films to provide sound for the world-class motion picture and television conglomerate’s “Two Sinners and a Mule” handling all the ADR for actor Chantelle Albers now on streaming platforms. Lionsgate houses the popular franchises of John Wick, The Hunger Games, and Twilight.

Sunshine Archambault dubbed the Lakota-Dakota language for the Black Widow character in “The Avengers” 2012 Disney+ Marvel Studios film. Cyril Archambault, marketing and public relations director, oversees the audio cut on April 11, 2023. PHOTO CREDIT/Breanne Luger-Sitting Bear

In addition, Archambault’s production team joined forces with the drum group Showtime Singers to provide the soundtrack for “Sacred Dog,” an ESPN E60 documentary about Indian Relay Racing. The film debuted on Dec. 24 and was selected as “Best Showcase Documentary at the Soho International Film Festival.

Meanwhile, even though all the Lakota dubbing is complete for “The Avengers” 2012 film, a plan exists for some special recordings with Grey Willow. Robert Downey Jr., Scarlett Johansson, Chris Evans, Jeremy Renner, Chris Hemsworth, and Ruffalo plan to act in a scene in which they speak their lines in Lakota. Those recordings are scheduled for early February in California.

Wade Chamberlain, senior mixer, English dubbing at Deluxe Studios has worked on the Lakota ADR dubbing. “As a mixer, one thing I really appreciate is working with well-recorded material. The first thing I noticed when I started working with tracks from Grey Willow Studios was how great the raw unmixed recordings sounded. I realized that their quality of work stems from their passion for what they do.”

Sourcing & Methodology Statement:

Behind the story: Email quotes from film industry experts Doc Kane, Wade Chamberlain and Alan Hayslip were shared by Lawrence Archambault with Buffalo’s Fire.

Dateline:

BISMARCK, N.D.

Jodi Rave Spotted Bear

Jodi Rave Spotted Bear is the founder and director of the Indigenous Media Freedom Alliance, a 501-C-3 nonprofit organization with offices in Bismarck, N.D. and the Fort Berthold Reservation. Jodi spent 15 years reporting for the mainstream press. She's been awarded prestigious Nieman and John S. Knight journalism fellowships at Harvard and Stanford, respectively. She also an MIT Knight Science Journalism Project fellow. Her writing is featured in "The Authentic Voice: The Best Reporting on Race and Ethnicity," published by Columbia University Press. Jodi currently serves as a Society of Professional Journalists at-large board member, an SPJ Foundation board member, and she chairs the SPJ Freedom of Information Committee. Jodi has won top journalism awards from mainstream and Native press organizations. She earned her journalism degree from the University of Colorado at Boulder.