Monday, October 31, 2011

Charlotte’s WWI history comes to life with Veterans Day special, City of Canvas: The Story of Camp Greene

WTVI and Mint Museum of Art host premiere event on November 9

CHARLOTTE, NC (October 31, 2011) – On Veterans Day, November 11, 2011, at 9 p.m., WTVI will bring Charlotte's World War I training camp to life when it airs the locally-produced television documentary, City of Canvas: The Story of Camp Greene.


Completed after more than 20 years of research, this documentary tells the story of an important but somewhat overlooked chapter in Charlotte’s history, drawing parallels to the recent efforts to land the 2012 Democratic National Convention. During World War I, Charlotte was selected as the site of one of 32 training camps to prepare troops for war in France. Camp Greene was built in 90 days on 2,400 acres near uptown Charlotte. The camp later expanded to nearly 6,000 acres. More than 100,000 soldiers from across the country received training at Camp Greene in 1917 and 1918.

The project was written and produced by Jack Dillard, working closely with the WTVI production staff. A team of advisors for the project included Dr. Dan Morrill, professor of history at UNC Charlotte and consulting director of the Charlotte Mecklenburg Historic Landmarks Commission; and Joyce Reimann, manager, and Jane Johnson, librarian, with the Robinson-Spangler Carolina Room, at the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library.

“I first became aware of Camp Greene in 1983 when I wrote a brief history of Home Federal Savings and Loan for its 100th anniversary. As I looked into it, I was surprised that the story wasn’t better known. One thing led to another, and before I knew it, I had taken on the cause of getting the word out,” says Dillard.

Former Charlotte mayor Pat McCrory, whose grandfather served at Camp Greene, opens the film from the Dairy Queen on Wilkinson Boulevard. A highway marker stands near the intersection of Remount Road and Wilkinson Blvd. in western Charlotte to honor the service of the troops at Camp Greene. Just beyond the marker on Monument Drive stands the Dowd House. For a time, it served as the camp’s administrative headquarters. The Dowd House is the only remaining structure of the camp.

The public is invited to a free screening at the Mint Museum of Art on Wednesday, November 9, 2011. The reception starts at 6 p.m., and the screening begins at 6:45 p.m. To set the historical tone, the event will be complete with a WWI re-enactor, Camp Greene artifacts and a local boy scout to play the Call to Colors. R.S.V.P. to 704.372.2442WTVI will air City of Canvas: The Story of Camp Greene numerous times after the initial broadcast on November 11. The entire PBS system will have access to the program across the country. DVD copies are available to any school or educational enterprise. The project is supported in part by the Dowd Foundation and the Charlotte Mecklenburg Library. WTVI completed project funding by raising donations from the public on the Arts & Science Council’s website, power2give.org.


About WTVI, Charlotte’s PBS station
WTVI is an essential community resource that connects people in the heart of the Carolinas. A public television station, WTVI offers a diverse mix of quality programs and services designed to inform, educate and entertain. From award-winning children’s programming to groundbreaking documentaries and original music performances, WTVI offers quality content viewers can trust. WTVI reaches more than 380,000 households in its 13-county area in both North and South Carolina: Mecklenburg, Gaston, Lincoln, Rowan, Iredell, Stanly, Union, Anson, Catawba, Cabarrus, Cleveland in North Carolina and York and Lancaster in South Carolina. http://www.wtvi.org/

Contact:

Jack Dillard
704-301-4317
Jack.dillard@alert-the-media.net

WTVI
Jeff Vawter
704.371.8839
jvawter@wtvi.org

Tuesday, October 11, 2011

PBS ARTS FALL FESTIVAL KICKS OFF OCTOBER 15

CHARLOTTE, NC (October 12, 2011) – Gilbert and Sullivan’s comic nautical romp “H.M.S. Pinafore,” a production of Minneapolis’ Guthrie Theater and Twin Cities Public Television (tpt), opens the nine-part PBS Arts Fall Festival on Saturday, October 15, 2011 at 8:00 p.m. ET on WTVI. “Pinafore” kicks off an exciting line-up of performances that will be broadcast on Saturday nights on WTVI into mid-December, including the broadcast debut of Cameron Crowe’s documentary music film “Pearl Jam Twenty,” dance performance films from Bill T. Jones, Miami City Ballet and San Francisco Ballet, rock and Americana music programs from Cleveland and North Carolina, and a major new opera from LA Opera.

“From the Blue Ridge to San Francisco and from the Great Lakes to Miami, every community across this country possesses its own mosaic of artistic expression, and only PBS stations bring the rich diversity of these stories to the national stage,” says Paula Kerger, PBS President and CEO. “PBS invites everyone — regardless of geographic or economic situation — to take a front-row seat and enjoy a backstage pass to the world of music, theater, dance, art and cultural history.”

Adds Elsie Garner, WTVI’s president and CEO, “With these arts presentations, the 13-county WTVI audience can sit back, relax and enjoy performances by renowned artists in first-rate presentations — without high prices, crowds or parking hassles.”

The broadcast programs, which originate from cities around the country, will be introduced by well-known hosts connected to the regions and themes of the programs. Short films (“mini-documentaries”) produced by local PBS member stations that highlight each city’s unique arts and cultural scenes will accompany the national broadcasts.

The PBS Arts Fall Festival broadcast schedule, with show and mini-documentary descriptions and celebrity host information, is listed below.

PBS Arts from Minnesota: THE GUTHRIE THEATER PRESENTS H.M.S. PINAFORE

THE SHOW: Delight in this spectacular new production of the beloved Gilbert and Sullivan classic from the Guthrie Theater, directed by the theater’s artistic director, Joe Dowling. Infused with fresh musical arrangements of Sir Arthur Sullivan’s memorable melodies — ranging from big band swing to classic pop — H.M.S. Pinafore is pure joy and sensational entertainment for everyone. The evening’s presentation is produced by PBS member station Twin Cities Public Television (tpt).

AIR DATE: Saturday, October 15, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: Rainn Wilson hosts the Fall Festival’s opening broadcast. A veteran of the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis, Wilson is best known for his starring role on “The Office.” Wilson performed in Guthrie productions of Philadelphia, Here I Come! in 1996, as well as The Venetian Twins and The Importance of Being Earnest in 1998.

SHORT FILM: “Arts Scene Minnesota” – Home to tens of thousands of artists and 1,700 arts organizations, Minnesota’s artistic landscape has always attracted people who make their livings in the arts. The inculcation of the arts into everyday life here fostered a movement that made Minnesota the only state whose citizens voted to write arts funding into the state constitution. This extraordinary show of support for the arts underscores Minnesotans’ commitment to establish an arts and cultural legacy for future generations. The film from Twin Cities Public Television explores how the state’s diverse arts community began decades ago with visionaries who invested in and guided arts institutions to become successful businesses and world-class organizations. Produced by tpt.

PBS Arts from Seattle: AMERICAN MASTERS “Pearl Jam Twenty”

THE SHOW: In honor of Pearl Jam’s 20th anniversary, award-winning director and music journalist Cameron Crowe creates a definitive portrait of the seminal band carved from more than 1,200 hours of rarely and never-before-seen footage, plus 24 hours of recently shot concert and interview footage. “Pearl Jam Twenty” chronicles the years leading up to the band’s formation, the chaos that ensued soon after their rise to mega-stardom, their step back from center stage and the creation of a work culture that would sustain them. Part concert film, part insider hang, part testimonial to the power of music and uncompromising artists, the film celebrates the freedom that allowed Pearl Jam a way to make music without losing sight of what mattered most to them — their fans and the music fans that they themselves had always been. “Pearl Jam Twenty” features interviews with original band members Jeff Ament, Stone Gossard, Mike McCready and Eddie Vedder, drummer Matt Cameron, and friend and Soundgarden singer/guitarist Chris Cornell, as well as archival performance and interview footage of Mother Love Bone, Pearl Jam, Temple of the Dog, Kurt Cobain and Neil Young. AMERICAN MASTERS is a production of Thirteen for WNET. The evening’s presentation airs in collaboration with PBS member station KCTS.

AIR DATE: Saturday, October 29, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: Oscar-winning film director Taylor Hackford, who has a particular passion for music, hosts this broadcast. In addition to Ray, a biopic about Ray Charles, and a documentary about Chuck Berry, many of his acclaimed films, such as An Officer and a Gentleman, Against All Odds and White Nights, included galvanizing soundtrack songs that became popular hits. Hackford is the current president of the Directors Guild of America.

SHORT FILM: “Something in the Water” – Pearl Jam. Nirvana. Soundgarden. Alice in Chains. In the 1990s, Seattle crashed the music party on a wave called grunge. What's it like to make music in the Emerald City 20 years after Pearl Jam’s seminal album, Ten? PBS member station KCTS 9 looks at the camaraderie and creativity that make Seattle a wellspring for groundbreaking musical talent. See and hear the local scene through the DJs, independent label reps and musicians (The Head and the Heart, Macklemore, Grand Hallway) who are taking the city in new directions, and find out why, despite the lure of Seattle's legendary past success, it’s more important to make it here than to make it big. Produced by KCTS.

PBS Arts from the Blue Ridge Mountains: GIVE ME THE BANJO

THE SHOW: Narrated by actor/comedian/banjoist Steve Martin, “Give Me the Banjo” explores the roots of American music — the minstrel show, ragtime and early jazz, blues, old-time, folk, bluegrass and country. It is a story of America’s quintessential musical instrument from its African slavery roots to the 21st century, featuring performances and commentary from contemporary folk musicians such as Pete Seeger, Earl Scruggs, Taj Mahal, Béla Fleck and the Carolina Chocolate Drops, as well as from leading music historians, instrument builders and collectors. The show is produced and directed by Marc Fields with Michael Kantor as executive producer. Tony Trischka is co-producer and music director. The evening’s presentation is in collaboration with PBS member station UNC-TV (North Carolina).

AIR DATE: Saturday, November 5, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: The show is hosted by Grammy-winning singer, songwriter and country music royalty Rosanne Cash, whose music spans many genres, from country and folk to blues, rock and pop. Daughter of the late legend Johnny Cash, she has sung with banjo legend Earl Scruggs, who is featured prominently in the broadcast. In addition to introducing the show, Cash will talk with country music star Rodney Crowell about the influence of banjo music on their individual styles.

SHORT FILM: “Hand Made” – Out of both necessity and ingenuity, the handcrafting of tools and household items helped sustain the people and the culture of the remote Blue Ridge Mountains for centuries. Today these crafts continue in both their most traditional forms and in bold interpretations that veer toward contemporary art. This film from PBS member station UNC-TV explores the work of four Blue Ridge Mountain artists — wood carver Davy Arch, metal worker Bill Brown, potter Mark Peters and basket maker Billie Ruth Sudduth — capturing the traditions of their crafts while tapping into the creative forces that inspire more abstract expressionism. Produced by UNC-TV.

PBS Arts from Chicago: AMERICAN MASTERS “Bill T. Jones: A Good Man”

THE SHOW: Follow award-winning director/choreographer Bill T. Jones’s intense creative journey as he leads his company in the creation of Fondly Do We Hope ... Fervently Do We Pray, an original dance-theater piece in honor of Abraham Lincoln’s bicentennial. “Bill T. Jones: A Good Man” is a co-production of A Good Man Film LLC, Kartemquin Films, Independent Television Service (ITVS), Thirteen’s AMERICAN MASTERS for WNET, and Media Process Group, with the cooperation of the Ravinia Festival. The evening’s presentation is in collaboration with PBS member station WTTW.

AIR DATE: Saturday, November 12, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: This show is hosted by award-winning theater and television actor Anna Deavere Smith. Smith’s theater work explores American character and its multifaceted national identity. She has won numerous honors and awards — among them two Obies, two Tony nominations and a MacArthur fellowship. In theater, she is known for looking at controversial events from multiple points of view. She is author of the acclaimed plays Twilight: Los Angeles 1992, Fires in the Mirror and House Arrest. Her most recent, Let Me Down Easy, tells the human side of the American health care story. Smith is well known for playing Gloria Akalitus on Showtime’s hit series “Nurse Jackie” and Nancy McNally on NBC’s “The West Wing.”

SHORT FILM: “Jeanne Gang: The Sky’s The Limit” – Chicago is an artistic powerhouse — with world-class theater, symphony, opera and contemporary music — and the birthplace of sketch comedy. But the setting for this art is an achievement in itself. The world’s first skyscrapers were built here, and many noteworthy buildings were designed by a who’s-who list of great architects: Frank Lloyd Wright, Mies van der Rohe, Renzo Piano and Frank Gehry, to name a few. This short film from PBS member station WTTW highlights a new architect on the scene, MacArthur “Genius Award” winner Jeanne Gang of Studio Gang Architects, highlighting her work style and current projects and her early triumphs, including the award-winning Aqua skyscraper. Framed by the city’s extraordinary architectural legacy, the film shows how Gang and her firm represent Chicago’s future. Produced by WTTW.

PBS Arts from Miami: GREAT PERFORMANCES “Miami City Ballet Dances Balanchine and Tharp”

THE SHOW: Witness the grace and beauty of one of America’s finest dance companies, Edward Villella’s Miami City Ballet, in a trio of signature works by George Balanchine and Twyla Tharp. Watch the company’s critically acclaimed performances of Balanchine’s “Square Dance” and “Western Symphony” and Tharp’s “The Golden Section.” Part of GREAT PERFORMANCES’ “Dance in America,” GREAT PERFORMANCES “Miami City Ballet Dances Balanchine and Tharp” is a production of Thirteen for WNET New York Public Media. The evening’s presentation is in collaboration with PBS member station WPBT.

AIR DATE: Saturday, November 19, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET
HOST BIO: Academy Award-nominated and internationally acclaimed actor Andy Garcia, who garnered a Best Supporting Actor nomination for his role in The Godfather: Part III, hosts this broadcast. Garcia has been seen in many notable theatrical and television films, including the hit remake of Ocean’s Eleven and For Love or Country: The Arturo Sandoval Story, an HBO film that he produced, and which received Emmy Award and Golden Globe nominations. Garcia has strong connections to Miami: His family was exiled from his native Cuba to South Florida when he was five, he studied acting at Florida International University and he maintains a home in the city.

SHORT FILM: “Miami’s Island Arts” – Contemporary Haitian and Cuban artists are creating new venues in their Miami neighborhoods, connecting community members to their traditions and cultural roots while drawing diverse audiences from other neighborhoods and beyond. This program, produced by PBS member station WPBT2, centers on Afro-Caribbean art, with Roberto Ramos’ Cuba Ocho Gallery along the burgeoning Calle Ocho Arts District, and the newly built Little Haiti Cultural Center — home to renowned artist Edouard Duval Carrié and the African dance ensemble Delou, both of whom use art as a tool to build communities. Produced by WPBT.



PBS Arts from Cleveland: WOMEN WHO ROCK

THE SHOW: From Bessie Smith to Janis Joplin to Lady Gaga, this performance documentary vibrates with energy as it traces the indelible mark that amazing women musicians have made on America’s soundtrack. Inspired by the “Women Who Rock: Vision, Passion, Power” exhibit at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Museum, “Women Who Rock” reveals new insights into what it means to be female in the male-dominated world of rock and roll, while exploring how those dynamics between the sexes have changed with time. The film is produced by Susan Wittenberg and Carol Stein with assistance from the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. The evening’s presentation is in collaboration with PBS member station WVIZ/PBS ideastream®.

AIR DATE: Saturday, November 19, 2011, 9:30 p.m. ET
HOST BIO: With nearly 30 years as a music icon and worldwide record sales of 30 million, host Cyndi Lauper is certainly an expert on “Women Who Rock.” Lauper, who appears in the film, won a Grammy Award for Best New Artist for her first album, She’s So Unusual, which spawned five top-ten singles. She’s been nominated for more than 40 Grammy, Emmy, American Music, American Video and MTV awards. In June 2010, she released her 11th studio album, the Grammy nominated Memphis Blues, which sat atop the Billboard Blues Chart for 14 consecutive weeks. Lauper will release the DVD From Memphis with Love on October 25 and her long-awaited autobiography in 2012, along with a new reality show. Lauper is completing work on writing the music for the Broadway show Kinky Boots, and continues her philanthropic work through her foundation, the True Colors Fund.
SHORT FILM: “Artistic Choice” – Most people recognize the power of art to enlighten and inspire individuals and even entire communities. But most of us don’t have a clue how to pay for it. In the early 20th century, renowned institutions like the Cleveland Museum of Art and the Cleveland Orchestra would “take Mrs. Rockefeller to lunch” — a metaphor for convincing wealthy patrons to write a check. These days, the wealthy patrons are long gone. This short film from PBS member station WVIZ/PBS ideastream ® shows how Clevelanders not only moved to recognize the powerful resource of their cultural traditions, but also discovered an innovative way to keep them alive. Produced by WVIZ/PBS ideastream ®.
PBS Arts from Los Angeles: GREAT PERFORMANCES “Il Postino From LA Opera” with Plácido Domingo

THE SHOW: Bask in the beautiful voice of world-renowned tenor Plácido Domingo with the LA Opera in this romantic new opera, by composer Daniel Catán, based on the Oscar-winning Italian film. GREAT PERFORMANCES is a production of Thirteen for WNET New York Public Media. The evening’s presentation is in cooperation with PBS SoCal (Southern California).

AIR DATE: Saturday, November 26, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: Music legend Linda Ronstadt hosts this evening’s broadcast. Her success in so many styles of music, from country, rock, standards, Mexican folk, operetta and more — added to her love for Spanish language, poetry and music — make Ronstadt arguably the most versatile vocalist of the modern era and the ideal choice for this broadcast. One of the most awarded female musicians (10 Grammy Awards, two Academy of Country Music awards, an Emmy Award and numerous gold, platinum and multiplatinum albums), Ronstadt was nominated for a Tony and a Golden Globe for her role in the Broadway production of Gilbert and Sullivan’s The Pirates of Penzance. She also received the ALMA award (created by the National Council of La Raza to honor Latino artists who promote a positive image of their community), presented to her by Domingo, making this a felicitous pairing of host and star.

SHORT FILM: Due to this broadcast’s length, there will not be a corresponding film.

PBS Arts from New York: GREAT PERFORMANCES “Andrea Bocelli Live in Central Park”

THE SHOW: The broadcast premiere of internationally acclaimed tenor Andrea Bocelli’s free concert in Central Park features his best-known and best-loved songs, with an array of surprise guests from throughout the music world. Bocelli will be accompanied by the New York Philharmonic, under the direction of music director Alan Gilbert, and the Westminster Symphonic Choir, conducted by Joe Miller. “Andrea Bocelli Live in Central Park” is a production of, and is presented in collaboration with, Thirteen for WNET New York Public Media.

AIR DATE: Friday, December 2, 2011, 9:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: Paula Zahn, a celebrated presence in network news for 30 years, during which time she has interviewed numerous dignitaries and newsmakers, hosts the Bocelli broadcast. Zahn is currently host of Investigation Discovery’s “On the Case with Paula Zahn” and co-host of THIRTEEN’s weekly arts magazine “SundayArts.” Zahn anchored CNN’s primetime evening program “Paula Zahn Now,” co-hosted “CBS This Morning,” anchored the “CBS Evening News Saturday Edition” and was news anchor at ABC’s “Good Morning America.” She is an accomplished cello player and has performed extensively on international stages from Seoul to St. Petersburg, making her Carnegie Hall debut in 1992.

PBS Arts from San Francisco: GREAT PERFORMANCES “The Little Mermaid From San Francisco Ballet”

THE SHOW: Hans Christian Andersen’s haunting tale of love is seen anew in San Francisco Ballet’s production of John Neumeier’s inventive ballet. The original score is by young Russian-American composer Lera Auerbach. Part of GREAT PERFORMANCES’ “Dance in America” series, “The Little Mermaid From San Francisco Ballet” is a production of Thirteen for WNET New York Public Media. The evening’s presentation is in collaboration with PBS member station KQED.

AIR DATE: Saturday, December 31, 2011, 8:00 p.m. ET

HOST BIO: Olympic Gold medalist and Bay Area resident Kristi Yamaguchi is one of the most popular and successful athletes of our time. Along with her many awards and accomplishments, Yamaguchi is a member of the U.S. Figure Skating Hall of Fame, the World Figure Skating Hall of Fame and the US Olympic Hall of Fame. In 1996, she founded the Always Dream Foundation, dedicated to supporting children’s charities. In 2008 Yamaguchi became a “Dancing With the Stars” Champion and has since become a New York Times best-selling author with her children’s book Dream Big, Little Pig.

SHORT FILM: Title TBD – San Francisco traditionally has attracted misfits, oddballs and eccentrics — in other words, the perfect place for artists! Whether they’re bred here or have journeyed here in search of their “true selves,” artists find that the frontier edge of the Bay Area nurtures creativity and innovation and frees them to give full expression to unique voices and visions. Rather than conform to an arts establishment, artists here create against the grain and off the beaten track. PBS member station KQED’s mini-documentary explores the renegade characteristic of Bay Area arts, revealing artists who are quirky, rebellious and visionary. Produced by KQED.

PBSArts.org will host weekly curated exhibits that take consumers beyond the television experience and into the creative process itself. Participants will be able to explore themes around each Fall Festival program, watch video clips and share their own stories.

To ensure that the arts remain vital to the classroom experience, PBS will help strengthen teachers’ ability to integrate several of the PBS Arts Fall Festival programs into their curricula and help engage students with rich artistic content. Materials relating to “Give Me the Banjo,” “Bill T. Jones: A Good Man,” “Women Who Rock” and “The Little Mermaid” will be available for the 2011-2012 school year to coincide with the on-air programming.

“Every year, PBS fans join us for journeys into the world of high art, modern cinema or grassroots rock,” said John F. Wilson, SVP and Chief TV Programming Executive. “Last year, PBS offered more than 500 hours of arts and culture programming, which were watched by more than 94 million people. Like a season ticket pass, the PBS Arts Fall Festival will build on this work with local stories captured from around the country and a range of arts unique in the current media landscape.”

Series Executive Producer of the PBS Arts Fall Festival is Glenn Dubose. Series Producer is Fawn Ring. Funding for the launch of PBS Arts has been provided by Anne Ray Charitable Trust, public television viewers and PBS.

About PBS
PBS, with its nearly 360 member stations, offers all Americans the opportunity to explore new ideas and new worlds through television and online content. Each month, PBS reaches 124 million people through television and 20 million people online, inviting them to experience the worlds of science, history, nature and public affairs; to hear diverse viewpoints; and to take front-row seats to world-class drama and performances. PBS’ broad array of programs has been consistently honored by the industry’s most coveted award competitions. Teachers of children from pre-K through 12th grade turn to PBS for digital content and services that help bring classroom lessons to life. PBS’ premier children’s TV programming and its website, pbskids.org, are parents’ and teachers’ most trusted partners in inspiring and nurturing curiosity and love of learning in children. More information about PBS is available at www.pbs.org, one of the leading dot-org websites on the Internet, or by following PBS on Twitter, Facebook or through our apps for mobile devices. Specific program information and updates for press are available at pbs.org/pressroom or by following PBS Pressroom on Twitter.


About WTVI, Charlotte’s PBS station
WTVI is an essential community resource that connects people in the heart of the Carolinas. A public television station, WTVI offers a diverse mix of quality programs and services designed to inform, educate and entertain. From award-winning children’s programming to groundbreaking documentaries and original music performances, WTVI offers quality content viewers can trust. WTVI reaches more than 380,000 households in its 13-county area in both North and South Carolina: Mecklenburg, Gaston, Lincoln, Rowan, Iredell, Stanly, Union, Anson, Catawba, Cabarrus, Cleveland in North Carolina and York and Lancaster in South Carolina. www.wtvi.org

More information about the Arts Fall Festival and the fall season schedule is available on WTVI’s website at www.wtvi.org.


CONTACT:
WTVI
Jeff Vawter
704.371.8839
jvawter@wtvi.org

For full episode descriptions, images, videos and additional up-to-date information on these and other PBS programs, visit PBS PressRoom at pbs.org/pressroom.

Thursday, October 6, 2011

Women, War & Peace, a new 5-part series, uncovers the untold stories of women’s strategic role in global conflict and peacemaking


WTVI to host two community outreach events for veterans

CHARLOTTE, NC (October 6, 2011) – What if you looked at war as though women mattered? What if you looked at peace as though women mattered? These two questions are at the heart of a five-hour series, Women, War & Peace, a comprehensive global media initiative on the changing roles of women in war and peace. Actors Matt Damon, Geena Davis, Tilda Swinton, and Alfre Woodard narrate.

Filmed in conflict zones in Afghanistan, Bosnia, Colombia, and Liberia, Women, War & Peace - airing Fridays, October 14, 21, 28 and November 4 and 11 at 10 pm. ET on WTVI -couldn’t be timelier. As the recent developments in Afghanistan make headlines around the world, Women, War & Peace places women at the center of an urgent dialogue about conflict and security.

Women, War & Peace challenges the conventional wisdom that war and peace are men’s domain. The series reveals how the post-Cold War proliferation of small arms has changed the landscape of war, with women becoming primary targets and suffering unprecedented casualties, yet simultaneously emerging as necessary partners in brokering lasting peace and as leaders in forging new international laws governing conflict. The series is a co-production of THIRTEEN and Fork Films.

“As a female veteran of peace and wartime service in the Army, I am excited that this new five-part PBS miniseries has been compiled to shed light on the important roles women have played during peace and conflict. It is of critical importance to our citizens. Thank you for this partnership,” says Twila Adams, board member, Southeastern Paralyzed Veterans of America, and owner of Holistic NailCare Services.

As part of WTVI’s community outreach, the station will host two, free sneak preview screenings:
• Monday, October 10, 2011, at 6 p.m., at Beacon Manor Independent Living Center, 3501 Independence Blvd., Charlotte. Veterans of Foreign Wars (VFW) members, disabled veterans, American Legion members, National Association of Black Veterans (NABVETS) members, and women’s auxiliary groups are invited as well as the general public.

• Tuesday, October 11, 2011, from 8 a.m. – 2 p.m. Operation Stand Down (hosted by the National Coalition for Homeless Veterans), a resource fair for veterans, at the Grady Cole Center, 310 North King Dr., Charlotte. This event is open to veterans.

“I’m excited that these community outreach screenings and dialogue will engage diverse women from the Charlotte community who have served in the military. These upcoming events will help increase awareness of the issues facing women serving in war zones,” says Reverend Yvonne McJetters, NABVETS, Women’s Auxiliary Group, executive director of Hope, Hands & Heart Ministries.

Attendees at both screenings will see clips from all five episodes in the series:

I Came to Testify is the moving story of how a group of 16 women who had been imprisoned and raped by Serb-led forces in the Bosnian town of Foca broke history’s great silence – and stepped forward to take the witness stand in an international court of law. Their remarkable courage resulted in a triumphant verdict that led to new international laws about sexual violence in war. Narrated by Matt Damon. Produced and Written by Pamela Hogan. Airs October 14, at 10 p.m. Hear Matt Damon at http://www.pbs.org/wnet/women-war-and-peace/features/why-should-men-care/

Pray the Devil Back to Hell is the astonishing story of the Liberian women who took on the warlords and regime of dictator Charles Taylor in the midst of a brutal civil war, and won a once unimaginable peace for their shattered country in 2003. Directed by Gini Reticker. Produced by Abigail E. Disney. Co-produced by Johanna Hamilton. Airs October 21, at 10 p.m.

Peace Unveiled follows three women in Afghanistan who are risking their lives to make sure that women’s rights don’t get traded away in U.S. peace talks with the Taliban. Narrated by Tilda Swinton. Directed by Gini Reticker. Produced by Claudia Rizzi. Written by Abigail E. Disney. Airs October 28, at 10 p.m.

The War We Are Living travels to Cauca, a mountainous region in Colombia’s Pacific southwest, where two extraordinary Afro-Colombian women are braving a violent struggle over their gold-rich lands. They are standing up for a generation of Colombians who have been terrorized and forcibly displaced as a deliberate strategy of war. Narrated by Alfre Woodard. Produced by Oriana Zill de Granados. Written by Pamela Hogan and Oriana Zill de Granados. Airs November 4, at 10 p.m.

War Redefined, the capstone of Women, War & Peace, challenges the conventional wisdom that war and peace are men’s domain through incisive interviews with leading thinkers, Secretaries of State and seasoned survivors of war and peace-making. Interviewees include Secretary of State Hillary Clinton; Liberian peace activist Leymah Gbowee; Bosnian war crimes investigator Fadila Memisevic; and globalization expert Moisés Naím. Narrated by Geena Davis. Produced and Written by Peter Bull. Co-produced by Nina Chaudry. Airs November 11, at 10 p.m.

“I’m delighted that, through national partnerships, WTVI can provide such a timely perspective on culture and issues of war and peace that affect us all,” says Elsie Garner, WTVI’s president and CEO. “Both women and men will be educated and inspired by the stories in this series.”

Women, War & Peace airs Fridays at 10 p.m., beginning October 14, 2011.

Learn more about women’s changing roles in today’s wars at womenwarandpeace.org


About WTVI, Charlotte’s PBS station
WTVI is an essential community resource that connects people in the heart of the Carolinas. A public television station, WTVI offers a diverse mix of quality programs and services designed to inform, educate and entertain. From award-winning children’s programming to groundbreaking documentaries and original music performances, WTVI offers quality content viewers can trust. WTVI reaches more than 380,000 households in its 13-county area in both North and South Carolina: Mecklenburg, Gaston, Lincoln, Rowan, Iredell, Stanly, Union, Anson, Catawba, Cabarrus, Cleveland in North Carolina and York and Lancaster in South Carolina. www.wtvi.org

Contact:

WTVI
Jeff Vawter
704.371.8839
jvawter@wtvi.org

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