Ken Burns

Ken Burns

Active - 1982 - 2022  |   Born - Jul 29, 1953 in Brooklyn, New York, United States  |   Genres - Historical Film, Sports & Recreation, War

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Biography by AllMovie

After earning his BA at Hampshire College, Brooklyn-born Ken Burns pursued a career as a documentary filmmaker. At age 22, he formed Florentine Films in his home base of Walpole, New Hampshire. Dissatisfied with dry, scholarly historical documentaries, Burns wanted his films to "live," and to that end adopted the technique of cutting rapidly from one still picture to another in a fluid, linear fashion. He then pepped up the visuals with "first hand" narration gleaned from contemporary writings and recited by top stage and screen actors. Burns' first successful venture was the award-winning documentary The Brooklyn Bridge, which ran on public television in 1981. While he was Oscar-nominated for his 1985 theatrical release The Statue of Liberty, Burns' work has enjoyed its widest exposure on television: such films as Huey Long (1985), Thomas Hart Benton (1986) and Empire of the Air (1991) (a bouquet to the pioneers of commercial radio) have become staples of local PBS stations' seasonal fund drives. In 1990, Burns completed what many consider his "chef d'oeuvre": the eleven-hour The Civil War, which earned an Emmy (among several other honors) and became the highest-rated miniseries in the history of public television. Civil War was the apotheosis of Burns' master mixture of still photos, freshly shot film footage, period music, evocative "celebrity" narration and authentic sound effects. In 1994, Ken Burns released his long-awaited Baseball, an 18-hour saga which, like The Civil War, was telecast at the same time as the publication of a companion coffee-table book. Over the coming decades, Burns would continue to ingrain his reputation as the biggest name in long-form documentary film making, creating multi-part histories of Jazz, WWII, Baseball, and Prohibition.

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Factsheet

  • Started his production company, Florentine Films, at age 22.
  • Received an Oscar nomination for producing his first documentary, Brooklyn Bridge, in 1981.
  • In 1990, was the director, producer and music director for the series The Civil War, which won more than 40 television and film awards.
  • His 1994 documentary, Baseball, became, at the time, the most watched series in PBS history with more than 45 million viewers.
  • Became co-owner of the Restaurant at L.A. Burdick Chocolate, which opened in 2000.
  • Popularized a filming technique known as the Ken Burns Effect that involves zooming in on photographs and panning across the subjects in the still images.
  • Has received more than 20 honorary degrees from institutions such as Penn State University and the University of Michigan.