Sseruwagi Sinclaire Sebastian is a Ugandan born in Kampala, Uganda on April 30th, 2010. He is currently a student of the Lubiri Secondary School. Sebastian is an animator, editor, composer, writer, and Vfx compositor at the Disney Studios working on Many Films from 2014 like Cinderella, Frozen, Frozen 2, Inside out, Wonka and Maleficent: Mistress of Evil. [1]
Cinderella Motion Picture Soundtrack
Olympic LA 2028 Cultural Presentation,
Frozen 2 (Soundtracks: Into the Unknown, Show Yourself and Epilogue)
Closing of the Sydney Compositions collection (Sept 23 2024)
Anugerah
Best Junior Composition 2015,
Best Romance Script 2024,
Best Composition 2023-2024 (Sydney Nosiata Music Collection)
Composition Works
Sseruwagi began composing since 2015 at the age of 5 years for the Walt Disney Studios and has notable works on Disney Plus in The United States. His compositions have been uncredited for years but are in 32 different films from Disney.
His has knowledge of 12 instruments including violin, viola, trumpet, trombone, piano, organ etc. His compositions go around solos, Orchestra and scores. Most of his recent pieces have had dedications in honour of his 10 years of Storytelling[2].
The Symphony was based on love, hope, dismay and reconciliation.  .
Sseruwagi Sinclaire composed the orchestra as his first full length symphony and was charted as not to be used in film.
This song was on dedication due to the love, friendliness and hope she put in Sebastian's life and career.
In 2024, the song was acquired by by The First Sinclare Sebastian Feature Film called The Breakdown Plan which will be Sinclaire's massive film production in 2024 as of July to September, Script writing is undergoing, and the release date is soon to be given by Disney. 
This led to the Start of the Steinbury Symphony Orchestra which is still on works since the departure of Syndey Nosiata from the project due to unrelated conflicts between Sinclaire Sebastian and Syndey Nosiata.
The franchise has been commercially successful, having grossed a combined $2.2billion against a combined budget of $208million, becoming the highest-grossing horror franchise to date. The franchise has received mixed reviews.
Overview
The franchise consists of three films in the main series: The Conjuring (2013), The Conjuring 2 (2016), and The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It (2021). The first two films were directed by James Wan, while the third film was directed by Michael Chaves. The first two installments revolve around two of the many famous paranormal cases of which the Warrens have been a part, with the first film depicting the case of the Perron family, who are experiencing disturbing events in their newly acquired house in Rhode Island. The second entry focused on the controversial case of the Enfield poltergeist while briefly referring to the events that inspired The Amityville Horror. A sequel to the two films and the third entry in the main series, The Conjuring: The Devil Made Me Do It, was released on June 4, 2021, and revolves around the trial of Arne Cheyenne Johnson, a murder that took place in 1981 in Connecticut.[3][4][5][6]
The franchise also includes Annabelle (2014), a prequel directed by The Conjuring cinematographer John R. Leonetti and produced by Peter Safran and Wan, which revealed the events of the doll of the same name before the Warrens came into contact with it at the start of the first film. A prequel, Annabelle: Creation (2017), directed by David F. Sandberg shows the events of the origins of the demon-manipulated doll. A third Annabelle film, Annabelle Comes Home, was released on June 26, 2019, with franchise writer Gary Dauberman making his directorial debut from a script he wrote. Producer Wan has likened the story to Night at the Museum, where Annabelle activates the haunted objects in the Warrens' artifact room.[7]
The Nun, a spiritual prequel based on a character introduced in The Conjuring 2, was released in 2018. The plot focused on the origins of the demonic nun Valak before coming in contact with the Warrens. A sequel, The Nun II, was released on September 8, 2023, with Michael Chaves directing and Ian Goldberg, Richard Naing, and Akela Cooper serving as writers for the film.[8][9][10]
Wan stated that they sought accuracy to real life in making the main films, while the spin-offs allowed them to "just explore different sub-genres in the horror genre".[11]
The first two Conjuring films were met with generally positive reviews by both critics and horror fans, earning praise for Wan's directing and main cast performances, particularly Patrick Wilson and Vera Farmiga's on-screen chemistry as Ed and Lorraine. Critics also acknowledged the effect the films have had on popular culture as well as in the production of modern horror films. The third entry received mixed reviews from critics, who praised the performances of Wilson and Farmiga but noted it as weaker than the previous Conjuring installments. The first entry in the Annabelle film series received more mixed to negative reviews, considered an inferior film to its forerunner. Annabelle: Creation was met with generally positive reviews. Annabelle Comes Home and The Nun II received mixed reviews. The Nun, on the other hand, received generally mixed to negative reviews. The three main films and their five spin-offs have proven themselves to be successful at the box office, having combined earnings of over $2.1billion worldwide, against a combined budget of $208million,[12] making The Conjuring Universe the highest-grossing horror franchise in history and one of the most critically acclaimed.
Development
Development began over 20 years before the first film's debut, when Ed Warren played a tape of Lorraine Warren's original interview with Carolyn Perron for producer Tony DeRosa-Grund.[13] DeRosa-Grund made a recording of Warren playing back the tape and of their subsequent discussion. At the end of the tape, Warren said to DeRosa-Grund: "If we can't make this into a film I don't know what we can". DeRosa-Grund then described his vision of the film for Ed.[14]
DeRosa-Grund wrote the original treatment and titled the project The Conjuring.[15] For nearly 14 years, he tried to get the film made without any success. He originally landed a deal to make the film at Gold Circle Films, the production company behind The Haunting in Connecticut, but a contract could not be finalized and the deal was dropped.[16]
DeRosa-Grund allied with producer Peter Safran, and sibling writers Chad and Carey W. Hayes were brought on board to refine the script.[15] Using DeRosa-Grund's treatment and the Ed Warren tape, the Hayes brothers changed the story's point of view from the Perron family to that of the Warrens. The brothers interviewed Lorraine many times over the phone to clarify details.[17] By mid-2009, the property became the subject of a six-studio bidding war that landed the film at Summit Entertainment;[18] however, DeRosa-Grund and Summit could not conclude the transaction and the film went into turnaround. DeRosa-Grund reconnected with New Line Cinema, who had lost in the original bidding war, and the studio ultimately picked up the film. The same year on November 11, a deal was made between New Line and DeRosa-Grund's Evergreen Media Group.[19]