Website:
http://www.joebev.com
Additional Credits and Funding:
Please read after the show:
For a CD of this documentary on the amazing life of Lady Bird Johnson, go to:
www.joebev.com
Timely on:
March: Women's History Month
Tones:
Informational,
Inspiring,
Sound Rich
Language:
English
Description:
The 2008 Presidential election marks the first time a woman, Hillary Clinton is being seriously considered.
Lady Bird Johnson was a pioneer First Lady who forged the way for this historic election.
This award-winning documentary, produced by Joe Bevilacqua, chronicles her life and times.
One of the 15 most licensed programs on The Public Radio Exchange, LADY BIRD JOHNSON: LEGACY OF A FIRST LADY is an award-winning one-hour radio documentary examines the challenges and achievements of this extraordinary woman, and a perfect hour to run this weekend.
30 and 60 second promos are also included.
This one-hour radio documentary combines never-before-released archive audio, gleaned from thousands of hours of recordings housed at the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum, period news broadcasts, private conversations with Lyndon Baines Johnson, and the words of Lady Bird Johnson from an interview that has never before been released to the public.
You can find this series in short module form for easy programming at:
http://www.prx.org/series/24213
Producer Joe Bevilacqua spent nearly five months listening to the rare tapes and traveled to Washington, D.C. to interview Mrs. Johnson's colleagues and friends. The program features Lyndon Johnson Administration staffers Liz Carpenter, Bess Abell, and Nash Castro, Washington Post owner Katherine Graham, Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum Director Harry Middleton, Lady Bird Johnson Wildflower Center Director Robert Glass Breunig; Lady Bird biographer Jan Jarboe Russell, and First Ladies Betty Ford and Barbara Bush. Other voices heard on the program include Kirk Douglas and Helen Hayes reading from LBJ and Lady Bird's love letters.
The production was produced in association with KUT Radio in Austin, TX, and overseen by a panel of scholars and experts including Lewis Gould, retired University of Texas at Austin Professor of History; Walt Rostow, UT Professor Emeritus, Elspeth Rostow, former dean of the UT LBJ School of Public Affairs; Carl Anthony, Washington, D.C. historian; and Don Carleton, director, The Center for American History at UT.
***** Informational, Inspiring
This is an excellent, uplifting journey through Lady Bird Johnson's life, and her growth and transition to first lady under tragic conditions. It's wonderful to hear her voice, rendered here in excerpts from interviews she's given and speeches she's made. It is especially poignant to hear a portion of her first audio diary entry, made the day after JFK's assassination. Nuanced choices of music are a production plus, but the strength is in the spoken word. Wisely chosen excerpts create a rich experience. The hour contains a wide range of voices, from historians to those who worked with her or know her, and they pinpoint her influence on LBJ, and on the capital, and the nation -- particularly in the areas of environment, race, and education. She truly is a force for good.
(Reviewer) (Editorial Board) Transom Editors , Atlantic Public Media
December 4, 2003