
Press Contact: Sheila Weber
Vice President, Communications
646-322-6853
[email protected] |
|
NEW!
Good
News: Teens Honor
Wilberforce's Legacy with
Public Service |
|
Creating The Better Hour,
Commentary by Mike McManus,
Apr 9, 2008 |
Christian Post
Mar 29, 2008
Film seeks to restore
Wilberforce's name among
Americans
Read
the Article Now |
Baptist Press
Feb. 27, 2008
Wilberforce documentary
airing on PBS
Read
the Article Now |
|
BreakPoint,
Wilberforce
and 'The Better Hour', with
Chuck Colson, Feb 18, 2008 |
|
William Wilberforce and The
Better Hour by Jim
Tonkowich, Feb 11, 2008 |
A Better
Documentary.
Christianity Today, Feb 8,
2008
Read
the Article Now. |
Publishers Weekly
Jan. 2, 2008
About "THE BETTER HOUR"
Read
the Article Now |
|
Featured in World Magazine's October 13,
2007
Issue.
Read
the article now.
|
|
Click
here for art and visuals for
"The Better Hour"
Documentary |
|
THE BETTER HOUR Documentary
Presented to Congressional
Staff |
|
The Better Hour Contest
Featured on KLOVE. |
Two Filmmakers Work to Make
William Wilberforce a
Household Name
Featured at Yale “Voices and
Votes” Conference Monday,
February 12, 2007 |
Project takes on
modern slavery.
Washington Times,
April 23,
2007 |
Press & Media
Press Release
THE BETTER HOUR: The Legacy of
William Wilberforce Will Be Appearing
Nationwide on Public Television
beginning in February, 2008 in time for
Black History Month
For immediate release: Contact:
Sheila Weber, VP Communications
646-322-6853 or
[email protected]
"THE BETTER HOUR: The Legacy of William
Wilberforce"
Will Be Appearing Nationwide on Public
Television beginning in March, 2008
in time for Black History Month
NEW YORK, NY. In time for Black History
Month, an inspiring, new one-hour
television documentary, THE BETTER HOUR:
The Legacy of William Wilberforce, will
appear nationwide on public television
beginning in March, 2008. The film
was produced to commemorate the 200th
anniversary of the 1807 abolition of
British and American slave trade in a
20-year heroic effort led by British
Parliamentarian William Wilberforce.
(Effective date of U.S. legislation was
January, 1808.)
Shot in high definition, THE BETTER
HOUR: The Legacy of William Wilberforce
is an engaging documentary, rich with
content and commentary, that can inspire
people with the remarkable story of
William Wilberforce. He used his
position as a British parliamentarian to
launch 69 organizations for the
betterment of society and end the
trans-Atlantic slave trade -- a business
that was key to the country’s economic
strength.
The film focuses on a politician who,
over time, developed strength of
character in the service of high and
seemingly unattainable goals. This film
highlights William Wilberforce’s drive
and love for humanity and reveals how he
and his colleagues worked tirelessly to
end the slave trade, even as it
represented a large portion of the
British economy. In Wilberforce, we see
character and a sense of justice for all
join together to bring into the world
what the English poet William Cowper
described as "the better hour."
Once, everyone knew the name William
Wilberforce. Frederick Douglas said,
"Let no man forget the name of William
Wilberforce." A quarter century after
Wilberforce’s death, Abraham Lincoln
said, "Every school boy knows the name
of William Wilberforce." Yet "few
American today understand why, or even
know Wilberforce’s name," explains
executive producer Cullen Schippe.
"This film does an outstanding job of
bringing into sharp focus how the
passion, persistence and actions of one
man changed the course of history and
worked to rid the world of the great
evil of trafficking in human life," says
Marshall Mitchell, Vice Chancellor of
Wilberforce University, the second
oldest historic black college in the
United States.
Wilberforce's compassion,
self-discipline, and respect for others
offer lessons for a contemporary
audience on how to change the world for
the better --peacefully and
definitively. In the world of politics
William Wilberforce’s political career
is a case study that not only merits
attention, but also can inspire others
to see the potential for great good in a
political life that is built on strength
of character rather than expediency.
"Wilberforce," says WTIU Public
Television Executive Producer Steve
Krahnke, "shows us that it is possible
to join a religious faith with political
will--not as a means to convert
unbelievers, but as a means to help make
the world a better place for everyone
regardless of their beliefs."
Narrated by Avery Brooks, the film
features interviews with leading
authors, historians and public figures
from both the U.K. and the United
States, including the Archbishop of
Canterbury Dr. Rowan Williams,
Wilberforce expert Kevin Belmonte,
historian James Walvin, Newton Scholar
Marylyn Rouse, Wilberforce University
president, former Congressman Floyd
Flake, and author Eric Metaxas, among
others.
Underwriting support is provided by the
John Templeton Foundation
(www.templeton.org). TWC films in
association with WTIU and directors,
Phil Cooke and Brian Mead, produced the
program. Cullen Schippe, Executive
Producer and writer of the film, has
more than 35 years experience producing
educational media for the classroom and
for broadcast. In 2004 he retired as the
publisher for Music, Religion, and
Social Studies for
Macmillan/McGraw-Hill.
The Heartland Film Festival selected the
film as a featured documentary in
October 2007. After January 31st, the
DVD is available at
www.ShopPBS.org, and local broadcast
information can be found at
http://www.pbs.org/tvschedules.
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