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Independent
Television Service
Press Release
Posted: 11/24/04
A TOUCH OF GREATNESS
"A
TOUCH OF GREATNESS," A PORTRAIT OF RENEGADE EDUCATOR ALBERT CULLUM, TO
AIR ON THE PBS SERIES INDEPENDENT LENS ON TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 2005 (check local
listings)
Film By Catherine Gund and Leslie Sullivan Premieres Nationally On "Independent
Lens" ITVS's Emmy® Award-winning Series On PBS Hosted By Susan Sarandon
Tuesday, January 11, 2005 At 10:00 P.M. (check local listings)
In An Era When Dick, Jane And Discipline Ruled America's Schools, Albert Cullum
Allowed Shakespeare, Sophocles And Shaw To Reign In His Fifth Grade Classroom
(San Francisco, CA)-A TOUCH OF GREATNESS documents the extraordinary work of
Albert Cullum, a maverick teacher who embraced creativity, motivation and self-esteem
in the classroom through the use of poetry, drama and imaginative play. Directed
by Leslie Sullivan, A TOUCH OF GREATNESS will air nationally on the Emmy award-
winning PBS series Independent Lens, hosted by Susan Sarandon, on Tuesday, January
11, 2005 at 10:00 P.M.
Regarded by academics as one of the most influential educators of the 1960s
and '70s, Albert Cullum championed what is by today's standards an unorthodox
educational philosophy built upon the fervent belief that the only way teachers
can be successful with children is to speak directly to their hearts and to
their instinctive and largely ignored capacity to quickly understand and identify
with the great personalities, ideas and emotions found in classical literature.
To that end, Cullum regularly taught his elementary school children literary
masterpieces, exposed them to great works of art and engaged them in the events
of world history. Without leaving the classroom, his students visited King Tut's
tomb, attended joint sessions of the U.S. Congress, operated on bleeding nouns
in his "grammar hospital," and clamored to play the timeless roles
of Julius Caesar, Lady Macbeth and Hamlet.
In the early 1960s, while Cullum was an elementary school teacher at Midland
School in Rye, New York, then unknown filmmaker, Robert Downey (the irreverent
director of the independent classic Putney Swope) filmed many of Cullum's classroom
events. These lush black and white films, with original music created by Tom
O'Horgan, capture the work of this radical teacher and the amazing passion for
learning that his students embraced. In one exhilarating scene, Cullum, dressed
as old King Oberon of A Midsummer Night's Dream and draped in a long black cape
topped with a crown, runs outdoors through a sparkling wintry forest with a
group of children scampering riotously in delight behind him. In a magical rite,
Cullum gingerly places marshmallows in the open, eager mouths of his five-year-old
students in order to make them as light as fairies. In another segment, Joan
of Arc pulls out her sword, leads her army to Orléans and meets her death
burning at the stake. Shot with stunning extreme close-ups, the footage recalls
Carl Theodor Dreyer's 1928 masterpiece. However, Cullum's astonishingly brave
Saint Joan is a fifth grade girl from Westchester. As Cullum, who passed away
soon after the film was completed in 2003, says, "Every child should have
the chance to play the part of St. Joan before the age of twelve, because the
older you get, the more difficult it is to hear the voices of St. Margaret and
St. Catherine calling you."
In other scenes, nine and ten-year-old students passionately recite soliloquies
from Shakespeare's Richard III, hurl themselves from the make-believe walls
of Troy and "swim" down the chalk borders of the Mississippi River
marked on the playground pavement.
This inspiring, joyous film interweaves footage from these early films, rare
television broadcasts and a treasure trove of archival photographs with lively,
provocative comments from former students as they speak about how these experiences
resonate in their lives today. Among them are a public service lawyer who taught
in a Bronx high school, an emergency room doctor practicing in a Chicago hospital,
a psychodramatist, a writer, a film festival director, an EmmyAward-winning
actress, and a AME minister working in a small North Carolina community.
A trailblazer in American education, Albert Cullum ignited the imagination of
his young students, and through his passionate use of poetry and drama, built
their self-confidence and inspired them to new heights of originality and joy.
What emerges in this film is a portrait of lives transformed by this maverick
teacher who enabled children to embrace the "heroic deed" and through
the power of language find their own inner greatness.
The program's interactive companion website www.pbs.org/atouchofgreatness
features detailed information about the film, including an interview with the
filmmaker, links and resources pertaining to the film's subject matter, and
a "talkback" section for viewers to share their ideas and opinions,
preview clips of the film and more.
About Albert Cullum
Albert Cullum believed in the classroom as a place where joy, excitement and
productivity are inextricably linked. A TOUCH OF GREATNESS affirms that mystery,
magic and grandeur can create an atmosphere for effective learning that traditional
lesson plans can never match. Cullum believed that elementary school children
are open to greatness, for at such a young age they gravitate to profound ideas.
Children are interested in revolutions and heroic deeds, the joys and sufferings
of poets, and plays and books full of intrigue. In his teaching, Cullum proved
that new doors to learning can be opened if educators transcend the limited
models which currently dominate their understanding of artistic and intellectual
experience. "Very early on," he said, "children understand the
heroic deed, the heroic aspect of Shakespeare's characters
the feathered
cap and the wooden sword that they have, that we as adults have lost."
Cullum's varied career as an educator included teaching at St. Luke's School
in Greenwich Village in the 1940s and at Midland School in Rye, New York from
1956-66. From there, Cullum went on to become a professor of education at Boston
University and Stonehill College, a liberal arts college outside of Boston.
He trained future teachers for more than 30 years. After teaching his final
class for the semester in May 2003, his health began to fail and he died two
months later in July 2003.
Cullum was the author of numerous books including the best-selling The Geranium
On The Windowsill Just Died But Teacher You Went Right On (which sold over half
a million copies), Shake Hands With Shakespeare, Greek Tears and Roman Laughter,
You Think Just Because You're Big You're Right and Push Back The Desks (considered
a classic in the field of education).
About the Filmmakers
Leslie Sullivan (Director)
Leslie Sullivan first met Albert Cullum while she was studying to be a teacher
at Stonehill College in Massachusetts. Meeting him was a life-changing experience
for her because he radically altered her view of education. Although he continued
to be a mentor and role model, she did not set out to make a film which treats
Cullum in a sentimental way. Rather, the film is an exploration of creativity
in the classroom, looking at ways in which one teacher created an environment
where academic success and self-esteem flourished without risking any one student's
participation.
Sullivan has been the executive producer for two independent films, The Other
Olympians and Because the Dawn. Funded by Canon, The Other Olympians focuses
on physically disabled athletes and gained critical acclaim through its screening
on PBS in 1989. Because the Dawn was shown at the Berlin and Toronto Film Festivals
in 1988 and has become a cult favorite at independent art house theaters. From
1991 until 2001, she served as the director of development for Poets House,
a national literary center and poetry archive founded by U.S. Poet Laureate
Stanley Kunitz. A TOUCH OF GREATNESS is her directorial debut.
Catherine Gund (Producer)
Catherine Gund, the founder of Aubin Pictures, is an award-winning film/videomaker,
writer and organizer. Her media work focuses on the radical right, race relations,
art and culture, HIV/AIDS, reproductive rights, the concept of democracy, and
gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender issues and has screened around the world
in festivals, on public and cable television, at community-based organizations,
universities, and museums. Her productions include A TOUCH OF GREATNESS, Making
Grace, On Hostile Ground, Hallelujah! Ron Athey: A Story of Deliverance, When
Democracy Works, Positive: Life with HIV, Sacred Lies Civil Truths, Not Just
Passing Through, Among Good Christian Peoples and Keep Your Laws Off My Body,
as well as work with the collectives DIVA TV (co-founder) and Paper Tiger Television.
She was the founding director of BENT TV, the video workshop at the Hetrick-Martin
Institute for queer youth.
About Independent Lens
Independent Lens is an Emmy Award-winning weekly series airing Tuesday nights
at 10 P.M. on PBS. Hosted by Susan Sarandon, the acclaimed anthology series
features documentaries and a limited number of fiction films united by the creative
freedom, artistic achievement and unflinching visions of their independent producers.
Independent Lens features unforgettable stories about a unique individual, community
or moment in history, which prompted Nancy Franklin to write in The New Yorker:
"Watching Independent Lens... is like going into an independent bookstore-you
don't always find what you were looking for but you often find something you
didn't even know you wanted." Presented by ITVS, the series is supported
by interactive companion websites, and national publicity and community outreach
campaigns. Further information about the series is available at pbs.org/independentlens.
Independent Lens is jointly curated by ITVS and PBS, and is funded by the Corporation
for Public Broadcasting (CPB), a private corporation funded by the American
people, with additional funding provided by PBS and the National Endowment for
the Arts.
About ITVS
Independent Television Service (ITVS) funds and presents award-winning documentaries
and dramas on public television, innovative new media projects on the Web and
the Emmy Award-winning weekly series Independent Lens on Tuesday nights at 10
P.M. on PBS. ITVS is a miracle of public policy created by media activists,
citizens and politicians seeking to foster plurality and diversity in public
television. ITVS was established by a historic mandate of Congress to champion
independently produced programs that take creative risks, spark public dialogue
and serve underserved audiences. Since its inception in 1991, ITVS programs
have revitalized the relationship between the public and public television,
bringing TV audiences face-to-face with the lives and concerns of their fellow
Americans. More information about ITVS can be obtained by visiting itvs.org.
ITVS is funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, a private corporation
funded by the American People.
About PBS
PBS is a private, nonprofit media enterprise that serves the nation's 349 public
noncommercial 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 educational services for adult learners. PBS' 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,
averaging more than 30 million unique visits and 380 million page views per
month in 2004. PBS is headquartered in Alexandria, Virginia.
CONTACT
Mary Lugo 770/623-8190 lugo@negia.net
Cara White 843/881-1480 carapub@aol.com
Randall Cole 415/356-8383 x254 randall_cole@itvs.org
Wilson Ling 415/356-8383 x231 wilson_ling@itvs.org
Program companion website: www.pbs.org/atouchofgreatness
Back to Articles/Children, Young Adults & Parenting
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