Geoffrey C. Ward
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Geoffrey Champion Ward (born 1940) is an American editor, author, historian and writer of scripts for American history documentaries for public television. He is the author or co-author of 19 books, including 10 companion books to the documentaries he has written. He is the winner of seven Emmy Awards.
BiographyEdit
YouthEdit
Ward was born in Newark, Ohio, and is a graduate of Oberlin College (1962), where he majored in art.<ref name=":0">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> He had initially planned to be a painter.<ref name=":0" /> His father was F. Champion Ward, educator and a vice-president of the Ford Foundation.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Ward spent some of his boyhood years in India.<ref name=":0" /> Ward's great-grandfather was Ferdinand Ward, a 19th-century swindler whose ponzi scheme led to a financial crash which bankrupted many investors, including Ulysses S. Grant and Thomas Nast. Ward wrote a book about the story of his great-grandfather, A Disposition to be Rich, in 2012.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
CareerEdit
Early careerEdit
Template:Expand section Ward was the founding editor of Audience Magazine (1970–1973) and the editor of American Heritage Magazine (1977–1982). His 1989 biography of Franklin D. Roosevelt, A First-class Temperament: the Emergence of Franklin Roosevelt, won the National Book Critics Circle Award and the Francis Parkman Prize of the Society of American Historians and was a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize.
Later careerEdit
Ward has been a long-time collaborator of American documentary filmmaker Ken Burns. Ward describes being asked to write the script for Huey Long after meeting Burns at his house in Walpole, New Hampshire.<ref name=":0" /> The principal writer of the television mini-series The Civil War (1990), Ward has collaborated with its co-producer Ken Burns on most of the documentaries he has made since, including Jazz, Baseball, The War, and The Vietnam War. The films with Burns have garnered him five Emmy Awards. He has won an additional two Emmys for The Kennedys (1992), and TR, The Story of Theodore Roosevelt (1996).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> His script for the documentary Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson, won the Writers Guild of America Award in 2005,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the accompanying book won the 2006 William Hill Sports Book of the Year<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and the Anisfield-Wolf Award for best biography.<ref>Book AwardsTemplate:Dead link</ref>
In 2006, the Organization of American Historians gave Ward their Friend of History Award for his outstanding contributions to American history: <templatestyles src="Template:Blockquote/styles.css" />
Over the last twenty years Geoffrey Ward's writings on American History have had a greater influence and reached a wider audience than those of any other American writer and historian. [His] work is always his own, but he has also helped free ideas that otherwise might have been imprisoned in the academy and helped them find a wider world. He has helped academic historians understand the possibilities, limits, and demands of what has become the medium through which most Americans now get their history."<ref>Organization of American Historians Awards Ceremony and Presidential Address Booklet 2006, page 4. Organization of American Historians Template:Webarchive</ref>{{#if:|{{#if:|}}
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The 2011 Burns/Ward collaboration, Prohibition, brought Ward his seventh Emmy for Outstanding Writing for Nonfiction Programming.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Since that project, he worked with Ken Burns on The Roosevelts: An Intimate History, a seven-part documentary miniseries depicting the lives of Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Eleanor Roosevelt, (broadcast on PBS in September 2014), and a multi-part TV series "The Vietnam War", with Lynn Novick and Ken Burns (broadcast on PBS in September 2017).
In 2012, Ward published a biography of his great-grandfather Ferdinand Ward (1851–1925), known as the greatest swindler of the Gilded Age. A Disposition to be Rich was written with the assistance of private family materials.
IndiaEdit
Ward spent some of his boyhood years in India and has remained involved with India and in Indian issues. Working and writing about the ongoing struggle to save the Bengal tiger in the wild has meant friendships with great tiger men like Fateh Singh Rathore<ref>Fateh Singh Rathore, the 'Tiger Guru,' Dies at 73 - NYTimes.com</ref> and Billy Arjan Singh.<ref>Tiger-Wallahs: Encounters with the Men Who Tried to Save the Greatest of the Cats (with Diane Raines Ward), HarperCollins, 1993</ref> His essays and pieces on India have appeared in a wide array of publications, including Geo, Audubon, National Geographic, Smithsonian, Aperture and others. In 2011, he wrote an introduction for the book Varanasi: Portrait of a Civilization, (Collins, India,) by the photographer Raghu Rai, with whom he has collaborated on magazine pieces. He is currently at work on a book about the partition of the Indian subcontinent.<ref name="book review">Template:Cite news</ref>
JazzEdit
Ward is involved in the world of jazz and has collaborated with Wynton Marsalis<ref>Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life (With Wynton Marsalis) Random House, 2008</ref> and the Jazz at Lincoln Center Orchestra. After the documentary Jazz was aired on public television, in an interview in the New York Times, Ward spoke of playing West End Blues by Louis Armstrong, as a 15-year-old student, so often that the bartender in the Paris cafe across the street from his student housing called him 'Satchmo': "I must have played it a thousand times," he remembered. "I think jazz music is so important to this country.... I find these characters, Armstrong, Ellington, working in a Jim Crow world, genuinely heroic.""<ref>New York Times, January 12, 2001, pg. B2</ref>
Personal lifeEdit
Ward is married to the writer<ref>Water Wars: Drought, Flood, Folly and the Politics of Thirst, Riverhead Books, 2003 and 2012</ref> and social/environmental activist<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Diane Raines Ward. He has three children.
When he was nine years old, Ward contracted poliomyelitis, and wears leg braces.<ref>'The Roosevelts', Documentary Series on PBS - The New York Times</ref> He describes hearing Louis Armstrong's recording of "West End Blues" on the radio while in the hospital and noted its profound impact on his life.<ref name=":0" /> He later cited Franklin Roosevelt as a source of inspiration on how to overcome his handicap.<ref>Revisiting the Roosevelts: PW Talks With Geoffrey C. Ward</ref> When interviewed for The Roosevelts, Ward "was determined not to get emotional", as Ken Burns said later, when discussing the "terror" felt by FDR during his ordeal in 1921; Burns did not mention Ward's disability on camera, but he had waited until the end of their interview before getting to questions on FDR's polio, at which point Ward "was taken aback and the emotions caught him".<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Ward considers British broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough to be "the best television writer in the history of the medium."<ref name=":0" />
Ward describes himself as a "lifelong liberal Democrat."<ref name=":0" />
WorksEdit
BooksEdit
- Lincoln's Thought and the Present (1976), Sangamon State University
- Treasures of the World: The Maharajas (1983), Time Life, New York
- Before the Trumpet: Young Franklin Roosevelt, 1882-1905 (1985), Harper & Row; New York
- A First Class Temperament: The Emergence of Franklin Roosevelt (1989), Harper & Row.<ref>Winner, National Book Critics Circle and Los Angeles Times Awards for Best Biography, the Francis Parkman Award of the Society of American Historians, finalist for the Pulitzer Prize, 1990</ref>
- The Civil War: An Illustrated History, (1990), with Ric and Ken Burns; based upon PBS television series, Alfred A. Knopf
- American Originals: The Private Worlds of Some Singular Men and Women (1991), HarperCollins
- Tiger-Wallahs: Encounters with the Men Who Tried to Save the Greatest of the Cats (1993), with Diane Raines Ward; HarperCollins
- Baseball: An Illustrated History (1994), with Ken Burns; Alfred A. Knopf
- Closest Companion: The Unknown Story of the Intimate Friendship Between Franklin D. Roosevelt and Margaret Suckley (1995), Houghton Mifflin
- The West: An Illustrated History (1997), Little, Brown & Co
- The Year of the Tiger (1998), with Michael Nichols; National Geographic Books
- Not For Ourselves Alone: The Story of Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B. Anthony (1999), with Ken Burns; Alfred A. Knopf
- Jazz: A History of America's Music (2000), with Ken Burns; Alfred A. Knopf
- Mark Twain (2001), with Dayton Duncan; Alfred A. Knopf
- Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (2004); Alfred A. Knopf<ref>Anisfield-Wolf Book Award, 2005; William Hill Sports Book of the Year, 2006</ref>
- The War: An Intimate History (2007), with Ken Burns; Alfred A. Knopf
- Moving to Higher Ground: How Jazz Can Change Your Life (2008), with Wynton Marsalis; Random House
- A Disposition to be Rich: How a Small-Town Pastor's Son Ruined an American President, Brought on a Wall Street Crash and Made Himself the Best-Hated Man in the United States (2012); Alfred A. Knopf
- The Roosevelts: An Intimate History (2014) with Ken Burns; Alfred A. Knopf
- The Vietnam War: An Intimate History (2017) Alfred A. Knopf
Documentary film scriptsEdit
- With Ken Burns and Florentine Films; shown on Public Television
- The U.S. and the Holocaust (2022; Emmy Award, 2024)
- The Vietnam War (2017)
- The Roosevelts: An Intimate History (2014)
- Prohibition (2011, Emmy Award)
- The War (2007; Emmy Award, 2007)
- Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (2005 Emmy Award, 2005)
- Mark Twain (with Dayton Duncan, 2002)
- Jazz (2001)
- Not for Ourselves Alone (1999)
- Frank Lloyd Wright (1998)
- Thomas Jefferson (1997)
- The West (with Dayton Duncan, 1996)
- Baseball (principal writer 1994; Emmy Award, 1995)
- Empire of the Air: The Men Who Made Radio (writer, 1991)
- The Civil War (principal writer, 1990; Emmy Award, 1991)
- Thomas Hart Benton (writer,1989)
- The Congress (contributing writer,1989)
- The Statue of Liberty (co-writer, 1985)
- Huey Long (writer, 1985)
- For the American Experience Series, WGBH-TV
- Abraham and Mary Lincoln: A House Divided (with David Grubin, 2001)
- TR (writer with David Grubin, 1996. Emmy Award)
- The Last Boss (writer, with Barak Goodman, 1996)
- The Kennedys (principal writer, 1992; Emmy Award)
- Reminiscing in Tempo, (principal writer, 1991)
- Lindbergh (writer, 1990)
- Nixon (principal writer, 1990; Writers Guild Award)
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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