Liberty!': Freedom Rings; A Gripping Account of the Birth of a Nation FINAL Edition

For people who think of the Founding Fathers as a bunch of dead white guys chiseled in marble -- and of the war they fomented as the stuff of a dogeared schoolbook -- public television's "Liberty! The American Revolution" should come as a revelation. Stirring, moving and occasionally...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inThe Washington post
Main Author Grove, Lloyd
Format Newspaper Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Washington, D.C WP Company LLC d/b/a The Washington Post 22.11.1997
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Online AccessGet full text
ISSN0190-8286

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Summary:For people who think of the Founding Fathers as a bunch of dead white guys chiseled in marble -- and of the war they fomented as the stuff of a dogeared schoolbook -- public television's "Liberty! The American Revolution" should come as a revelation. Stirring, moving and occasionally surprising, this six-part series on PBS -- airing two parts at a time tomorrow, Monday and Tuesday nights at 9 -- takes a venerable subject, the birth of American democracy, and reveals it afresh. Over the course of six hours, viewers will learn that: George Washington was a pretentious dandy who complained churlishly to his London tailor about the prices of clothes; John Adams was a socially insecure country lawyer who craved public attention but considered himself "unpopular and obnoxious"; and Benjamin Franklin was an oily operator who mixed business and politics in ways that might even shock Bob Strauss. These men were also idealists and visionaries -- and "Liberty!" shows compellingly just why and how they were.
ISSN:0190-8286