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Eric D. Burns is a documentary filmmaker and writer. Burns has been writing, directing and producing historical documentaries for nearly 20 years, since his collaboration on the celebrated PBS series The Civil War, (1990), which he produced with his brother Ken Burns, and wrote with Geoffrey C. Ward. PBS re-directs here; for alternate uses see PBS (disambiguation) PBS logo The Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) is a non-profit public broadcasting television service with 349 member TV stations in the United States. ...
The Civil War is a highly popular and acclaimed PBS documentary about the American Civil War created by Ken Burns, and released on PBS in September 1990. ...
Kenneth Lauren Burns (born July 29 [1] [2], 1953) is an American documentary filmmaker. ...
Since founding Steeplechase Films in 1989, he has directed several programs for WGBH Boston's American Experience, including Coney Island (1991). He also wrote and directed The Donner Party (1992). WGBH is an established public television and public radio broadcast service located in Boston, Massachusetts. ...
American Experience (sometimes abbreviated AmEx) is a television program aired on the PBS network in the United States. ...
In 1995, Burns wrote, directed, and co-produced The Way West. In April 2002, Burns completed Ansel Adams, a co-production of Steeplechase Films and Sierra Club Productions for American Experience. New York: A Documentary Film
Burns is probably best known for his series New York: A Documentary Film, which premiered nationally on PBS. The eight-part, seventeen and a half hour film chronicles the city’s rise from a tiny Dutch trading post down through its continuing preeminence as the undisputed economic and cultural capital of the world. New York: A Documentary Film is a seven-part American documentary on the history of New York City produced by Ric Burns that originally aired in the U.S. on PBS. The first four two-hour installments, which covered the history of the city from its founding to the turn...
The first five episodes of New York were broadcast in November 1999; the sixth and seventh episodes in the fall of 2001; and the eighth and final episode in September 2003.
Recent Films Burns’s most recently completed projects include, Eugene O’Neill: A Documentary Film (March 2006) which tells the story of the life and work of America’s greatest and only Nobel Prize-winning playwright. In September 2006, Andy Warhol: A Documentary Film aired as the premiere of PBS’ American Masters 20th Anniversary series. American Masters is a PBS television show which does biographies on what it judges are the best artists, actors and writers of the United States. ...
Books Burns has co-authored two books: New York: An Illustrated History (with James Sanders and Lisa Ades), and the companion book to the Civil War series (With Geoffrey C. Ward and Ken Burns) Kenneth Lauren Burns (born July 29 [1] [2], 1953) is an American documentary filmmaker. ...
Education Burns attended Columbia University and Cambridge University, breaking from his graduate work to join his brother on the production of the Civil War series
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