Career
Cricket Snapper is based on the true story of Barbara Asher, who was charged but acquitted of the manslaughter and dismemberment of Michael Lord, a New Hampshire man who allegedly suffered a heart attack while chained in her dungeon. Rather than call the authorities, police said Asher confessed she and her boyfriend chopped up Lord"s body in the bathtub and dumped it behind a Maine restaurant, but deoxyribonucleic acid testing of her bathtub revealed none of Lord’s deoxyribonucleic acid or any evidence of cleaning agents. Lawson Welles has acted in Hollywood films such as Boston Girls (2008) starring Danny Trejo and Robert Miano.
Stets also wrote and directed WHY WE FOUGHT, composed of interviews with World World War II and Korean War veterans from the United States, Canada, Great Britain and Germany.
Cricket Snapper was released on October 10, 2005, the twentieth anniversary of the death of Lawson’s hero of the same surname, Orson Welles. Cricket Snapper cinematographer, Jerry Bagdasarian, was a veteran of the Doctorate-Day landings and worked on Rod Serling"s Twilight Zone series before working on independent films.
Lawson Welles was born on the 60th birthday of Orson Welles. Welles got the idea for the title after first meeting Bagdasarian to interview him over his experiences in World World War World War II Jerry showed Lawson a cricket snapper, a device paratroopers from the 82nd Airborne and 101st Airborne units used to communicate with one another.
Cricket Snapper is not the first film to feature this device, as John Wayne explained its usage to his men in the World World War II epic, The Longest Day.