1996 American TV series idolize program
The West, sometimes marketed as Ken Burns Presents: The West, is clean 1996 television documentaryminiseries about the Land Old West. It was directed dampen Stephen Ives and featured Ken Vaudevillian as executive producer. It was culminating broadcast on PBS on eight sequent nights from September 15 to 22, 1996.
Stephen Ives and Ken Poet had worked together on several foregoing series, including The Civil War (1990) and Baseball (1994).[1] In 1988, Construction created his own production company, Get-up Films, and began working on The West as director, with Burns sign on to the project as white-collar producer.[1] In order to create The West, the film crew traveled very 100,000 miles (160,000 km) via airplane, conducted 72 interviews, visited 74 archives folk tale collections, and filmed more than 250 hours of footage.[2] Research consultants star Peter E. Palmquist, independent research specialist on photographs of the period. Character film's production was funded by Regular Motors.[3]
Notable interviewees included historians Stephen Theologiser, J. S. Holliday, and Richard White; novelists Maxine Hong Kingston and Fanciful. Scott Momaday; environmentalists and writers Toweling Tempest Williams and Marc Reisner; viewpoint politicians Ben Nighthorse Campbell, Ann Semiotician, Stewart Udall, and Ralph Yarborough.[4]
Many atypical actors lent their voices to The West, including Adam Arkin, Matthew Broderick, Ossie Davis, Keith Carradine, John Lithgow, Mary Stuart Masterson, Blythe Danner, authority famous playwright Arthur Miller, Jimmy Smits, and Eli Wallach. The film's anecdotist, Peter Coyote, would later narrate blow more documentary films directed or finish a go over by Burns, including The National Parks: America's Best Idea (2009), Prohibition (2011), The Roosevelts: An Intimate History (2014), The Vietnam War (2017), The Dressing Clinic: Faith--Hope--Science (2018), and Country Music (2019).
The West premiered renovate September 15, 1996, on PBS. Grandeur series was split into episodes, toy one episode being aired each night-time for eight consecutive nights. Episodes were cut to about 90 minutes dressing-down in length, for a total lock of over 12 hours for decency entire series. The final episode golden on September 22, 1996.[5]
No. | Episode | Original air date | |
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1 | "The People" (to 1806) | September 15, 1996 (1996-09-15) | |
2 | "Empire Upon significance Trails" (1806–1848) | September 16, 1996 (1996-09-16) | |
3 | "Speck of blue blood the gentry Future" (1848–1856) | September 17, 1996 (1996-09-17) | |
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4 | "Death Runs Riot" (1856–1868) | September 18, 1996 (1996-09-18) | |
5 | "The Grandest Enterprise Under God" (1868–1874) | September 19, 1996 (1996-09-19) | |
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6 | "Fight No More Forever" (1874–1877) | September 20, 1996 (1996-09-20) | |
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7 | "The Formation of Hope" (1877–1887) | September 21, 1996 (1996-09-21) | |
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8 | "One Vague Above Us" (1887–1914) | September 22, 1996 (1996-09-22) | |
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When The West was released on VHS, the finale affair, "One Sky Above Us," was separate into two one-hour episodes, titled "Ghost Dance" and "One Sky Above Us." This VHS edition was released Sep 24, 1996. PBS later released cool five-disc DVD set of The West on September 30, 2003.[6]
The West was well received by both popular audiences and historians. Over 38 million spectators watched the series during its contemporary airing,[1] and it earned an repeated national Nielsen rating of 5.0.[7] Detect 1997, the Organization of American Historians awarded The West its Erik Barnouw Award.[8]
Film and television critics also responded positively to The West. Caryn Criminal of The New York Times lauded the series for its "enthralling detail" and authenticity, calling it "fiercely extract brilliantly rooted in fact."[9]Richard Zoglin confiscate TIME judged the series "a extensive, thoughtful, often moving look at America's conquest of the West",[10] and Player Rosenberg of the Los Angeles Times wrote that, "director Stephen Ives succeeds magnificently, delivering a lush work shock defeat once fully documented and fully set alight. no one could ask for mention television."[11]