|
Ken Burns
has been making documentary films for more than thirty
years. Since the Academy Award nominated Brooklyn
Bridge
in 1981, he has gone on to direct and produce some of the
most acclaimed historical documentaries ever made. Stephen
Ambrose, the historian, has said of Ken's films, "More
Americans get their history from Ken Burns than any other
source."
Mark
Twain, a two-part, four-hour portrait of one of America's funniest and most popular writers, was
co-produced with Ken's long-time collaborator Dayton Duncan
and aired on PBS in January, 2002. In January, 2001, JAZZ,
the third in Ken's trilogy of epic documentaries, which
began with The Civil War and continued with Baseball, was
broadcast on PBS. Co-produced with Lynn Novick, this
19-hour, ten-part film explored in detail the culture,
politics and dreams that gave birth to jazz music, and
follows this most American of art forms from its origins in
blues and ragtime through swing, bebop and fusion. Jack
Newfield of the New York Post said: "JAZZ is the best
American documentary film I have ever seen. Period."
NBC’s Tom Brokaw wrote: "JAZZ is a masterpiece of
American television." John Carmen of The San Francisco
Chronicle wrote: "JAZZ informs, astonishes, and
entertains. It invites joy, tears, toe-tapping, pride, and
shame and maybe an occasional goose bump." JAZZ
premiered on PBS in January of 2001.
Not For
Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and
Susan B. Anthony, winner of the prestigious Peabody Award,
was co-produced with Paul Barnes and aired on PBS in
November 1999. This dual biography tells the story of the
two women who almost single-handedly created and spearheaded
the women's rights movement in
America
, changing for the better the lives of a majority of
American citizens. As Bob Herbert of The New York Times
stated: "The latest splendid effort from...Ken Burns is
about two women who barely register in the consciousness of
late-20th century
America
, but whose lives were critically important to the freedoms
most of us take for granted." The 2000 Peabody Award
citation for the program reads: "Remarkable...It is an
inspiring story of hopes, dashed dreams and dogged
determination...NFOA...brings heart, soul and considerable
poignancy to the stories of these two leaders of the women's
suffrage movement."
Frank
Lloyd Wright, co-directed and produced with Lynn Novick,
premiered at the Sundance Film Festival in January 1998, and
aired on PBS in November of that year. The film, which tells
the riveting story of
America
's foremost architectural genius is, according to Janet
Maslin of the New York Times, a "towering
two-and-one-half-hour(s)...sure to have a high profile
because of the turbulent, colorful life of the architect and
the austere magnificence of his work, which is thoughtfully
assessed." Kenneth Turan of the Los Angeles Times said
the film "...has the unbeatable combination of
exceptional interview material and beautiful architectural
photography put at the service of an astonishing life."
In 1999, it won the Peabody Award.
In
November 1997, Lewis and Clark: The Journey of the Corps of
Discovery was released to critical acclaim and garnered the
second-highest ratings in PBS history. This four-hour film,
co-produced with Dayton Duncan, chronicles the corps'
journey westward on the first official expedition into
uncharted spaces in United States History. Tony Scott of
Weekly Variety called the film "...a visually stunning
account...Striking photography, superb editing, informative
reportage and little-known anecdotes characterize the latest
fine documentary work from Burns," and Don Heckman of
the Los Angeles Times wrote: "...superb...a vast
landscape that, even on the television screen, underscores
the sense of awe reported by Lewis and Clark in their
journals."
Thomas
Jefferson, a three-hour portrait of our third president,
aired in February 1997. This film explores the
contradictions in the man who was revered as the author of
the most sacred document in American history and condemned
as a lifelong owner of slaves. Walter Goodman of the New
York Times said: "...Thomas Jefferson is a considerable
accomplishment, a thoughtful and affecting portrait of the
intellectual who captured the essence of a new nation's
hopes in phrases that continue to resound around the
world." And George Will, in the Washington Post, said:
"...Ken Burns presents a timely corrective, a visually
sumptuous and intellectually judicious appraisal of
Jefferson."
In the
fall of 1996, The West, an eight-part, twelve-hour film
series on the American west was released. The West is the
story of one of the great crossroads in human history, a
place where, tragically and heroically, the best of us met
the worst of us and nothing was left unchanged. Ken Burns
was executive producer and creative consultant for this
highly praised series, directed by Stephen Ives, which won
the 1997 Erik Barnouw Prize.
Ken Burns
was the director, producer, co-writer, chief
cinematographer, music director and executive producer of
the PBS series Baseball. Four and a half years in the making
and eighteen-hours in length, this film covered the history
of baseball from the 1840's to the present. Through the
extensive use of archival photographs and newsreel footage,
baseball as a mirror of our larger society was brought to
the screen over nine nights during its premiere in
September, 1994. It became one of the most watched series in
PBS history, attracting more than 45 million viewers. David
Bianculli of the The New York Daily News said,
"[Baseball]...resonates like a Mozart symphony."
Richard Zoglin of Time wrote, "Baseball is rich in
drama, irresistible as nostalgia, and…an instructive
window into our national psychology." Baseball received
numerous awards, including an Emmy, the CINE Golden Eagle
Award, the Clarion Award, and the Television Critics Awards
for Outstanding Achievement in Sports and Special
Programming.
Ken Burns
was the director, producer, co-writer, chief
cinematographer, music director and executive producer of
the landmark television series The Civil War. This film was
the highest rated series in the history of PBS and attracted
an audience of 40 million during its premiere in September
1990. The New York Times said that Ken Burns "takes his
place as the most accomplished documentary filmmaker of his
generation." Tom Shales of The Washington Post said,
"This is not just good television, nor even just great
television. This is heroic television." Columnist
George Will said, "If better use has ever been made of
television, I have not seen it and do not expect to see
better until Ken Burns turns his prodigious talents to his
next project." The series has been honored with more
than 40 major film and television awards, including two Emmy
Awards, two Grammy Awards, Producer of the Year Award from
the Producer's Guild, People's Choice Award, Peabody Award,
duPont-Columbia Award, D.W. Griffiths Award, and the $50,000
Lincoln Prize, among dozens of others.
In 1981,
Ken Burns produced and directed the
Academy
Award-nominated
Brooklyn
Bridge
. He has gone on to make several other award-winning films,
including The Shakers: Hands to Work, Hearts to God; The
Statue of Liberty, also nominated for an Oscar; Huey Long,
the story of the turbulent Southern dictator, which enjoyed
a rare theatrical release; The Congress: The History and
Promise of Representative Government; Thomas Hart Benton, a
portrait of the regionalist artist; and Empire of the Air:
The Men Who Made Radio. Ken Burns has also produced and
directed two films, William Segal and Vezelay, which explore
the question of search and individual identity through the
work and teachings of philosopher and painter William Segal.
Ken was
born in Brooklyn
,
New York
in 1953. He graduated from
Hampshire
College
in Amherst,
Massachusetts
in 1975 and went on to be one of the co-founders of
Florentine Films. He resides in Walpole,
New Hampshire.
|