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PBS to Air Ken Burns's 'THE WAR,' a New Seven-Part Epic Documentary About World War II, in September 2007

   THE WAR intertwines vivid eyewitness accounts of the harrowing realities of life on the front lines with reminiscences of Americans who never left their home towns and tried their best to carry on with the business of daily life while their fathers and brothers and sons were overseas. Pictured: Two soldiers in Gaich, Germany, pause for a cigarette behind a tank on December 11, 1944. (PRNewsFoto/PBS, National Archives)

ARLINGTON, VA UNITED STATES
   THE WAR filmmaker Ken Burns. (PRNewsFoto/PBS)

ARLINGTON, VA UNITED STATES
   PBS logo. (PRNewsFoto/PBS)

ARLINGTON, VA UNITED STATES
 Burns to Show Highlights at the World War II Conference in New Orleans on
                             November 16, 2006
 Promotion for the Film to Begin this November to Coincide with Two Nights
                  of Military History Around Veterans Day

    ARLINGTON, Va., Nov. 6 /PRNewswire/ -- PBS (Public Broadcasting
Service) announced today that it will air the new Ken Burns documentary
series, THE WAR, in September 2007. The seven-part documentary series,
directed and produced by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, explores the history
and horror of the Second World War from an American perspective by
following the fortunes of so- called ordinary men and women who get caught
up in the greatest cataclysm in human history.
    (Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20061106/DCM029-a )
    (Photo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20061106/DCM029-b )
    (Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20061106/DCM029LOGO-c )
    Plans call for THE WAR to air over two weeks beginning on Sunday,
September 16 (four nights the first week and then three nights the second
week) from 8:00 p.m. to 10:00 p.m. In addition to the national broadcast on
PBS, THE WAR will also air simultaneously on PBS High Definition Channel
with surround sound. PBS will repeat each episode the night it airs, stage
marathon viewings on the weekends, and launch the film as a weekly series
after its first two-week run. The series will also be rebroadcast on PBS's
World Channel following the original broadcast. A web page dedicated to THE
WAR will also be launched this week at pbs.org/thewar.
    Burns will show highlights of the film at the International Conference
on World War II at the National World War II Museum in New Orleans. (The
conference dates are November 16 - 19, 2006.) Participants will include:
former war correspondent and legendary CBS newsman Walter Cronkite; WWII
bomber pilot and former senator George McGovern; war correspondents Andy
Rooney and Richard C. Hottelet; James Bradley, author of Flags of Our
Fathers; and former Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, who will discuss
the liberation of Eastern Europe and the Cold War; British author Sir Max
Hastings; and noted World War II historian, Donald L. Miller. Burns will
show highlights from THE WAR at a dinner event on November 16. (For more
information on the conference visit http://www.ww2conference.org/)
    Six years in the making, this epic 14-hour film, reminiscent in scope
and power of Burns's landmark series THE CIVIL WAR, focuses on the stories
of citizens from four geographically distributed and quintessentially
American towns -- Waterbury, Connecticut; Mobile, Alabama; Sacramento,
California; and the tiny farming town of Luverne, Minnesota. These four
communities stand in for -- and could represent -- any town in the United
States that went through the war's four devastating years. Individuals from
each community take the viewer through their own personal and quite often
harrowing journeys into war, painting vivid portraits of how the war
dramatically altered their lives and those of their neighbors, as well as
the country they helped to save for generations to come.
    "The Second World War was so massive, catastrophic and complex, it is
almost beyond the mind's and the heart's capacity to process everything
that happened and, more important, what it meant on a human level," said
Burns. "Every person in the country was deeply affected by this war,
whether in battle, at home, at work, or in the case of Japanese-Americans,
in internment camps. By focusing on the personal stories of ordinary
Americans who had extraordinary experiences, the film tries to bring one of
the biggest events in the history of the world down to a very intimate
scale. And in the end, we all begin to see, I think, that there are no
'ordinary' lives."
    "PBS has a deep and abiding respect for the history, drama and tragedy
of war," said John F. Wilson, Senior Vice President, PBS Programming. "It's
critical that we capture the stories of the generation that fought and
lived through World War II before they are lost to us forever. Serving our
mission to educate and inform, PBS's goal for THE WAR is to reach into
every home and classroom -- so together we can better understand what we as
a nation experienced in those difficult years and what we as a nation
accomplished."
    Accompanying the series will be a companion book, written by Geoffrey
C. Ward and introduced by Ken Burns, that will be published by Alfred A.
Knopf; Ward and Burns collaborated previously on the unexpected bestseller
The Civil War. PBS Home Video is producing a complete DVD box set that will
feature "making of" footage and an interview with Burns and others involved
in the film. The soundtrack will be released in September 2007 by Sony BMG
Legacy Recordings. As with all of Burns's films, there will be an extensive
educational outreach component and an interactive Web page that provides
more information on the film, the battles and related issues.
    "THE WAR is a stunning achievement in filmmaking," said Sonny Mehta,
Chairman and Editor-in-Chief of the Knopf Publishing Group, "and possibly
the most complete rendering of war ever captured by a documentarian. It is
an honor to be working with Ken and Geoffrey once again on this very
special book, which promises to be a landmark publishing event." Knopf is
announcing a first printing of 750,000 copies for the book, which will go
on sale nationwide August 21, 2007.
    PBS will begin promoting THE WAR on November 8 between the broadcast of
three productions from Thirteen/WNET New York that deal with World War II:
SECRETS OF THE DEAD: DOGFIGHT OVER GUADALCANAL, a modern investigation of
the legendary World War II showdown between an American and Japanese pilot,
using restored vintage planes and computer-generated recreations (November
8, 2006, 8:00 - 9:00 p.m. ET); WARPLANE, the story of the evolution of air
power (November 8 & 15, 2006, 9:00 - 11:00 p.m.); and SECRETS OF THE DEAD:
BOMBING NAZI DAMS, a profile of one of the strangest missions of World War
II, the dropping of the bouncing bomb on Nazi dams (November 15, 2006, 8:00
- 9:00 p.m. ET).
    In addition to Keith David's narration, THE WAR features first-person
voices read by some of America's greatest actors. Tom Hanks reads the voice
of Al McIntosh, the editor of the Rock County Star-Herald in Luverne,
Minnesota, whose weekly columns poignantly tried to explain the
unexplainable to his neighbors. Other voices include Josh Lucas, Bobby
Canavale, Samuel L. Jackson, Eli Wallach, Robert Wahlberg, Carolyn
McCormack, Adam Arkin and Kevin Conway.
    THE WAR is a production of Florentine Films and WETA Washington, D.C.,
directed and produced by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick, written by Geoffrey C.
Ward, produced by Sarah Botstein, co-producers Peter Miller and David
McMahon, episode editors, Paul Barnes, Erik Ewers and Tricia Reidy,
cinematography Buddy Squires and narrated by Keith David.
    Corporate funding is provided by General Motors and Anheuser-Busch.
Major funding is provided by Lilly Endowment, Inc.; Public Broadcasting
Service; National Endowment for the Humanities; the Corporation for Public
Broadcasting; and The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations. Additional funding
is provided by The Pew Charitable Trusts; The Longaberger Foundation; and
Park Foundation, Inc.
    For more information and photos go to pbs.org/pressroom.
    About PBS
    PBS is a private, non-profit media enterprise that serves the nation's
354 public non-commercial television stations, reaching nearly 90 million
people each week through on-air and online content. Bringing diverse
viewpoints to television and the Internet, PBS provides high-quality
documentary and dramatic entertainment, and consistently dominates the most
prestigious award competitions. PBS is the leading provider of educational
materials for K-12 teachers, and offers a broad array of other educational
services. PBS's premier kids' TV programming and Web site, PBS KIDS Online
(pbskids.org), continue to be parents' and teachers' most trusted learning
environments for children. More information about PBS is available at
pbs.org, one of the leading dot-org Web sites on the Internet.
    Contact:  Dan Klores Communications
              Dave Donovan/Alex Dudley/Cassin Donn/Brian Moriarty
              212.685.4300


SOURCE PBS




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Related links:
  • http://www.pbs.org
  • http://www.ww2conference.org
    Photo Notes:http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20061106/DCM029-a
    http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20061106/DCM029-b
    http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20061106/DCM029LOGO-c
    AP Archive: http://photoarchive.ap.org AP PhotoExpress
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    CONTACT:
    Dave Donovan, Alex Dudley, Cassin Donn, or
    Brian Moriarty of Dan Klores Communications, +1-212-685-4300, all
    for PBS