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When The Forest Ran Red Electronic Press Kit
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Historical Society Sets out on the French and Indian Trail

PITTSBURGH, PA—The Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania and Paladin Communications of Pittsburgh have completed principal photography of a groundbreaking film documentary about the French & Indian War, known in historical circles as the first true "world war."  The film, When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army, chronicles a two-year period in colonial history that helped to set America on the road to revolution a generation later. 

The story begins with the ambush by George Washington of French officer Jumonville and his party, which vaulted Washington onto the world stage—as a murderer.  In the ensuing battle of Fort Necessity, Jumonville’s brother avenges the killing by forcing the surrender of Washington and his army of militia. These events lead to the film’s main story: the 1755 campaign of British Maj.-Gen. Edward Braddock against the French at Ft. Duquesne. Braddock's goal is the "Forks of the Ohio," site of present-day Pittsburgh.  Seven miles from Ft. Duquesne, French and British armies fight the Battle of the Monongahela, a brutal forest encounter in which Braddock’s army is overwhelmed by a bold French-Indian allied force. George Washington rallies the troops after the battle and personally tends to the mortally wounded Gen. Braddock.

Principal photography took place at the National Park Service Jumonville Glen Unit, the Fort Necessity National Battlefield Park, the site of Braddock’s base camp in Hopwood, PA, and the site of the Battle of the Monongahela in present day Braddock Borough, PA.  Cooperation was received from the National Park Service and the Braddock’s Field Historical Society.

Fred Anderson, author of the bestselling work, Crucible of War, appears on camera to interpret historical events as does R. David Edmunds, Native American scholar and author of the landmark The Shawnee Prophet.  Also appearing are historical educator Bruce Egli, National Park Service Ranger Carney Rigg, and Historical Society President and CEO Andrew E. Masich. 

Two dozen units of living historians or "reenactors" participated, and the project has been endorsed by Eastern Frontier artist Robert Griffing, whose work appears in the film. "No one has attempted to make this topic the focus of a film documentary," said Paladin president Robert Matzen about the film. "The story of Washington and Braddock in this time period can’t miss. It’s fascinating, it’s ironic, it’s heartbreaking. We take you back in time and show you history up close. It’s a vivid experience."

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French & Indian Documentary Visits Historic Locations

PITTSBURGH, PA—The new French & Indian War film documentary, When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army, has recently completed principal photography at a number of historic locations. This film chronicles the outbreak of war between England and France in 1754 as 22-year-old Virginia Militia Lt.-Col. George Washington ambushes a French company under the command of French Ensign Jumonville. It then follows the subsequent battle of Fort Necessity, in which a French army led by Jumonville’s brother avenged the killing by forcing the surrender of Washington’s army. The film culminates in a recounting of the 1755 campaign of British Maj.-Gen. Edward Braddock against the French Fort Duquesne.

When the Forest Ran Red was shot at the following locations:

• The secluded Jumonville Glen (Hopwood, PA) where Washington's force surprised the French party under Jumonville, killing 11 and taking 21 prisoners.

• Fort Necessity National Battlefield Park (Farmington, PA), the site of George Washington's first defeat.

• The Forks of the Ohio (present-day Pittsburgh), the prized parcel of land sought by both France and England and site of the French Fort Duquesne (1754-58).

• Traces of the Braddock Road forged by the 1755 British military expedition. The site of the Battle of the Monongahela, where Braddock’s army was destroyed by a French force on July 9, 1755. Shooting took place on the only remaining battlefield trace and at the initial pointof conflict in Braddock Borough, Pennsylvania.

• The site of Gen. Braddock’s base camp (Hopwood, PA), known as "Dunbar’s Camp" for Braddock’s second-in-command, Col. Thomas Dunbar. Survivors fled to this site after the defeat of the British army, and it was here that hundreds of tons of ordnance and supplies were destroyed before a final retreat eastward, creating one of the richest archaeological sites in colonial American history. 

"These sites still resonate for me as I’m sure they will for viewers," said the film’s writer and producer, Robert Matzen. "To stand in places where men fought and died, where graves are so old that they’re unmarked and forgotten, that’s powerful."

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Producer Considers Documentary to Be the Prequel of 'The Patriot'  

PITTSBURGH, PA—The producer of a new film documentary concerning the French & Indian War says that the program serves as a setup to events portrayed in Mel Gibson’s blockbuster motion picture, The Patriot. "What you see in The Patriot," says independent producer Robert Matzen, "is a colonial farmer who succeeds in the American Revolution because of his combat experience in the French & Indian War. But the details of the earlier war are never revealed. All we see is that it was a brutal war because it produced a hero capable of brutal acts, and one who could help to win the Revolution. Our film, When the Forest Ran Red, tells you how this was possible."

When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army chronicles a two-year period in colonial history that saw the opening of the French & Indian War, known in historical circles as the first true "world war." Combatants included the British, French, and Native American empires. Matzen wrote and produced the film through his company, Paladin Communications, working in cooperation with the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania based in Pittsburgh.

"What we do is put you squarely in the shoes of George Washington and the other combatants," says Matzen. "You see what they faced, you hear their voices speaking their own words, and suddenly you’re caught up in a terrific story. You learn how Benjamin Martin of The Patriot acquired the guerrilla skills that would one day lead the British to nickname him ‘The Ghost.’"

Principal photography for When the Forest Ran Red took place at several historic locations in Pennsylvania, including George Washington’s first battlefields. The documentary also features the forests and raw wilderness that so challenged each empire. "I wanted nature to be a character in the film," says Matzen. "I wanted it to live for the viewer as it did for the armies who lived and died in it."

Matzen is banking on the fact that no one has attempted to focus on the first campaigns of the French & Indian War through the medium of film. "This is new territory for documentaries," he says."Mel Gibson brought the Revolutionary War into focus for the modern viewer by showing a fictional hero doing great deeds. We feel confident we can similarly entertain with our own project by showing real people who did deeds that were great and, in some cases, truly amazing."

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Acclaimed Historian Fred Anderson Appears in Documentary        

PITTSBURGH, PA—Fred Anderson, author of the landmark book, Crucible of War: The Seven Years’ War and the Fate of Empire in British North America, 1754-1766, appears in the French & Indian War documentary, When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army. Anderson helps to explain the simmering conflict that existed between Britain, France and various Native American groups over possession of the rich Ohio Valley in 1750s North America. This conflict, with George
Washington at its epicenter, boiled over into the first true "world war."

Fred Anderson is a Harvard Ph.D. and a past Harvard educator. He is currently Associate Professor of History at the University of Colorado, Boulder. His latest book, Crucible of War, was released in February 2000 and has been called "consuming," "vivid" and "brilliant" by various reviewers. The New York Times Book Review said of his work, "Anderson carries his mastery of a vast scholarly literature lightly. His wide-ranging story is eventful and fast-paced, yet always clear." Kirkus
Reviews said, "Important and beautifully written . . . A rousing, epic yarn and the best sort of history . . . Anderson earns his crown as the preeminent chronicler of what Americans know as the French and Indian War." Fred Anderson is also the author of A People’s Army: Massachusetts Soldiers and Society in the Seven Years’ War (1984), as well as articles, essays and reviews.

Anderson welcomes his participation in When the Forest Ran Red, which he calls "most impressive. It’s a wonderful documentary, and a real contribution to education and public history alike." The new feature-length film is the first of its kind, focusing on 18 months that shook the world. The story begins in December 1753 with a meeting to discuss ownership of the Ohio Valley between French army officers and the 21-year-old Washington, who represents the colony of Virginia and therefore the British Crown. It ends in July 1755 when the British army of Maj.-Gen. Edward Braddock—with Washington in its ranks—is annihilated in a brutal forest encounter known as the Battle of the Monongahela or "Braddock’s Defeat."

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Documentary Features Native American Historian R. David Edmunds  

PITTSBURGH, PA—The country’s foremost expert on the history of Native American peoples, Dr. R. David Edmunds, appears in the historical documentary, When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army. In the film, Dr. Edmunds—who is of Cherokee descent—explains the position of Native American tribes who must deal with the encroachment into their lands of European powers England and France in 1753-55. Both countries claimed the rich Ohio Valley, which led to the conflict known as the French & Indian War or the Seven Years’ War, and Indian groups such as the Iroquois Confederacy and the Delaware found themselves in the unenviable position of taking sides when they much
preferred that the Europeans would simply go away.

R. David Edmunds earned a Ph.D. in history at the University of Oklahoma. He is now Watson Professor of history at the University of Texas at Dallas after teaching previously at the University of Wyoming, Texas Christian University and Indiana University. Dr. Edmunds is a noted lecturer and the author or editor of seven books. His book The Shawnee Prophet (1984) was awarded the Ohioana Prize for Biography and nominated for a Pulitzer Prize. An earlier work, The Potawatomis: Keepers of the Fire (1978), was awarded the Francis Parkman Prize, while a book he co-authored with Joseph L. Peyser, The Fox Wars: The Mesquakie Challenge to New France (1993), received the 1994 Heggoy Prize from the French Colonial Historical Society.

These are just a few of the honors earned by R. David Edmunds. He was named Honorary Tribal Historian for the Citizen Band Potawatomi Tribe, and he is a recipient of fellowships from the Ford and Guggenheim Foundations as well as the Newberry Library. In 1990-91 he served as the Acting Director of the McNickle Center for Indian History at the Newberry Library in Chicago. His works have been recommended by the Smithsonian Institution.

Filmmaker Robert Matzen believed it was imperative to involve Dr. Edmunds in When the Forest Ran Red. "Since I’m of European descent myself," says Matzen, "it’s easy to overlook the viewpoint of the Native American in telling the story of a war between England and France. But it was vital to me that the Indians be heard, because they had the most legitimate claim to these lands. A Native American had to tell their story. And there’s no one more qualified to do it than Dr. Edmunds."

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Award-Winning Actor Narrates French & Indian Documentary

PITTSBURGH, PA—Michael Rothhaar knows whereof he speaks. The veteran actor was raised within miles of places he describes via voiceover narration for the historical documentary When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army. The film chronicles a two-year period culminating in the Battle of the Monongahela or "Braddock’s Defeat." This brutal forest encounter between British and French forces near present-day Pittsburgh changed the course of American history and helped lead the colonies on the path of revolution a generation later.

Michael Rothhaar says of his work on the film, "Having played historical drama from Shakespeare’s Rome in Julius Caesar to the frozen bottom of the earth in Terra Nova, it was a thrill to help realize a story that happened—really in my home town—and to help bring to life the script’s lovely unspinning of the tale’s inevitable tragedy."

Rothhaar also portrays the voice of a young George Washington at key points in the film. "It was a nice challenge to play someone before he was important," he says. "He is kind of hot-headed, kind of arrogant. He walked into a trap and paid the price."

Michael Rothhaar has been a professional actor since 1975 and a professional theatre director since 1985. His professional honors include the 1997 Los Angeles Drama Critics Circle Award and the 1997 Drama Logue Award for Outstanding Lead Performance in Ardèle, as well as the 1997 Drama Logue Award in Direction for Mrs. Warren’s Profession.

Rothhaar has appeared in the television series Family Law (recurring as Judge Prentiss), Ally McBeal, Arliss, NYPD Blue, The X-Files, Murder One, Star Trek—The Next Generation, Snoops, Murphy Brown, L.A. Law, Civil Wars, Picket Fences, Step By Step, Hudson Street, Dr. Quinn—Medicine Woman, Married ... With Children and Love and War. He also appeared in the feature films The Nutty Professor and Space Jam. His work on Broadway includes The Front Page and The Corn is Green, and he appeared off Broadway in Frankenstein and Brand.

Michael Rothhaar has directed Otherwise Engaged, Candida, Mrs. Warren’s Profession, Waiting for Godot, The Private Ear and Macbeth ... According to the Fifth Grade for the Pacific Resident Theatre. He served as the Artistic Director of Pennsylvania’s Allenberry Playhouse from 1987 to 1992, directing more than 40 productions. In Washington, D.C., he directed Mrs. Warren’s Profession and The Millionairess at the Washington Stage Guild. In 1994, he directed the Southern California tour of Sleuth.

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Cameraman Films Braddock's Defeat Up Close  

PITTSBURGH, PA—For director of photography Richard K. Schutte, production of When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army involved many kinds of filming, from interviews with renowned historians to French & Indian War battle maneuvers on mountainsides that recreate the battle known as "Braddock’s Defeat." But shooting in extreme conditions is nothing new for Rich. As an assistant cameraman (AC) and a camera operator, Rich has been involved with film productions around the world in all environments. His work as an AC includes a film tour of the White House (Within These Walls/PBS), a trip up the Amazon River (Web of Life/PBS), a climb of the Andes Mountains (DDI: A Better World) and travelogues of St. Petersburg, Russia (National Geographic: Voices of Leningrad) and the island of Bali (National Geographic: Masterpiece of the Gods).

His feature work as an AC includes B camera for The Prince of Pennsylvania (1988) with Bonnie Bedelia and Keanu Reeves, Iron Maze (1991) with Bridget Fonda, The Cemetery Club (1992) with Ellen Burstyn and Olympia Dukakis, Striking Distance (1993) with Bruce Willis and Sarah Jessica Parker and Sudden Death (1995) with Jean-Claude Van Damme. His work as an AC also includes the TV movies Alone in the Neon Jungle (1988) with Suzanne Pleshette, Bob Roberts (1992) with Tim Robbins, Citizen Cohn (1992) with James Woods and What She Doesn’t Know (1992) with Valerie Bertinelli. In addition, Rich has ACed for many other broadcast programs as well as corporate video and more than 600 broadcast commercials.

As a camera operator, Rich shot footage on the Amazon for PBS’s Web of Life. He shot atop the Rocky Mountains in Montana for DDI: A Better World, an award-winning corporate image film. He served as a photographer for George Washington: The Unknown Years, produced by Impact Television for The Learning Channel, a show that included French & Indian War battle reenactments. He then served as director of photography for three other Impact/TLC productions, Haunted Lighthouses, Ghost Waters and Night Visitors. He has shot for Entertainment Tonight, Rescue 911, The Golf Channel and the Wham! TV Network. He has also served as director of photography for many organizations, including
FedEx, H.J. Heinz, Metrojet, PNC Bank and USAirways.

When the Forest Ran Red recounts the undeclared and declared war between England and France for possession of the Ohio Valley in 1753-55, with Native American tribes caught in the middle and fighting for the lands they knew as "home." Rich’s toughest shot on the show: operating a camera at ground level while a line of British redcoats fired volleys over his head. Now that’s battle conditions.

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Philadelphia Band Scores French & Indian Documentary  

PITTSBURGH, PA—Broadside Electric, Philadelphia’s leading and longest-lived electric folk band, brings 10 years of experience to the musical scoring of the French & Indian War documentary, When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army. The group has earned a solid reputation for thoroughly original arrangements and painstaking research into traditional English, Celtic and Eastern European music. This research turned up obscure but musically interesting tunes that serve as themes for the characters and armies of the story. When the Forest Ran Red recounts the first two years of undeclared and declared war between England and France, with Native American tribes caught in the middle and fighting for the lands they knew as "home."

Broadside Electric has been called "Pennsylvania’s answer to Steeleye Span," "folk music’s answer to death metal" and a band that "gives members of the usual folk audiences something new to talk about." The quintet has captivated audiences and earned critical praise at dozens of concerts across the northeast. Recent appearances include the Philadelphia Folk Festival (PA), the Baltimore Folk Festival (MD) and venues such as Club Passim (MA), The Cherry Tree (PA) and The Minstrel Coffeehouse (NJ). They have recorded the albums Black-edged Visiting Card (1993), Amplificata (1994), More Bad News… (1996) and With Teeth (1999).

Much of the band’s repertoire is drawn from scholarly studies of traditional music. This research uncovered musical pieces that haven’t been heard in a couple of centuries. Says band member Jim Speer, "We actually did end up finding Pennsylvanian colonial tunes titled "General Braddock’s March" and "Washington’s March," which we used for the corresponding characters’ themes. We also recorded two shape-note hymns instrumentally, as backup for ‘woods’ themes. Also a handful of other tunes as well, including a really cool solo violin tune we think works great as the Irish mother’s lament for the dead son."

Filmmaker Robert Matzen had a definite idea of the music required for the show. "As entertainment, this story is all about the ambitions of Braddock and Washington, the triumphs of armies conquering the wilderness, the heroism of men and women going off to battle, and exuberance of victory and the heartbreak of defeat and death. We needed music that spanned such a broad spectrum of emotion. Music that will move the viewer. And I know we got it."

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Historian Connects to the Star Power of George Washington  

PITTSBURGH, PA—Well-known historical educator Bruce Egli relishes the idea of sharing the stage with George Washington in the French & Indian War film documentary, When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army. "I’m happy, I’m honored, I’m enchanted to be associated in this production alongside George Washington," says Egli.

When the Forest Ran Red looks at Washington’s first military campaigns in 1754-1755 against the French in the American wilderness. He was then just out of adolescence. This military education, which involved two resounding defeats, would serve him well as commander of Continental forces in the American Revolution 25 years later.

At the rock-strewn Jumonville Glen in southwestern Pennsylvania, where George Washington first faced hostile gunfire, Bruce Egli interprets for the camera some of the most dramatic events in American history. They are also events sometimes overlooked in the educational systems of today."Entertainment and information are often felt to be opposites and enemies," says Egli. "That’s not really true. I think this production is both informative and entertaining."

Bruce Egli has spent 20 years combining entertainment and information through Bruce Egli Historical Programs, which offers living history presentations to schools and organizations. He is a certified teacher in Pennsylvania, and has taken his act on the road to such places as Colonial Williamsburg, Ft. Niagara, Fortress Louisbourg National Historical Park and two western Pennsylvania military landmarks well known to George Washington, Ft. Ligonier and Ft. Necessity. He has also appeared in broadcast documentaries for The Discovery Channel and The Learning Channel that include Haunted Lighthouses, Ghost Waters, and George Washington: The Unknown Years.

In When the Forest Ran Red, Egli shares the screen with such eminent historians as Dr. Fred Anderson, author of the best-selling book, Crucible of War, and Pulitzer Prize nominee Dr. R. David Edmunds, one of the country’s foremost Native American scholars. When reminded of this fact, Egli smiles politely but leaves no doubt who the real star is. "I’m certainly flattered to have my name on the screen along with these experts," he says. "But really, I’m just as pleased to be associated with something that George Washington is also associated with." With no agent in sight and 200 years after his death, Washington still commands top billing. Now that’s star power.

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Documentary Film Editor Cuts a Home Town War 

PITTSBURGH, PA—For editor Tom Wilson, editing the historical film documentary When the Forest Ran Red:  Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army involved a trip down memory lane and a marathon series of late-night editing sessions.  The film in part chronicles the 1755 military campaign of British Maj. Gen. Edward Braddock against the French at Fort Duquesne in the wilderness of present-day Pennsylvania.  These events unfolded a generation before the Revolutionary War, culminating with a brutal forest encounter between the French and British in present-day Braddock, Pennsylvania—where Tom Wilson was born and raised.

“When we arrived to scout the locations and to shoot there,” says Wilson, “it was interesting to have my own memories superimposed on what I was now looking at as an important battlefield.  Like, oh, look, over here is where Col. Gage’s troops fired the first volley, and there’s where I used to go see my step-brother play baseball.”

Wilson, a Pittsburgh-area musician, also worked closely with Broadside Electric, Philadelphia’s leading and longest-lived electric folkband, in scoring the show.  “I knew they had the right sound,” says Wilson, “fiddle, dulcimers, reed and wind instruments of the era.  After we had ‘set’ the picture in place, one of the band members was able to really score a few scenes for us.  I’m very happy with how it all worked out.  I think the music helps evoke the feeling that my old neighborhood was actually the frontier.”  It was a little corner of the frontier that helped to change American history.

For Tom Wilson, making When the Forest Ran Red helped to bring that history to life.  “It’s one thing to learn about dates of battles and movements of men, but when Dr. Edmunds explains that the Indian and French victory was motivated by a precognitive dream of one man, you start to understand that these were real humans caught up in these events.  It helps when you stop thinking of them as just names on a page and start considering them as people.”

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Historical Documentary Earns National Honors  

PITTSBURGH, PA—The Council of Nontheatrical Events in Washington, D.C. announced on December 28, 2001 that the French and Indian War film documentary When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army has been honored with a 2001 CINE Golden Eagle Award in the category of Historical Broadcast Documentary.  When the Forest Ran Red was produced by Paladin Communications of Pittsburgh in association with the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania.  The program was first broadcast on Pittsburgh’s PBS affiliate WQED-TV on September 26, 2001. When the Forest Ran Red chronicles the quest of the British, French and Native American Empires to possess the Ohio Country 20 years prior to the Revolutionary War.  Its main characters include British Major-General Edward Braddock, Seneca war chief Tanagrisson (also known as the Half King), French Captain Louis Coulon deVilliers and a young Virginia gentleman turned soldier, George Washington.

When the Forest Ran Red was filmed in cooperation with the National Park Service, Colonial Williamsburg and Mount Vernon.  It features historical interpretation by prominent historians, including Fred Anderson, author of the 2001 Francis Parkman Prize-winning Crucible of War, and R. David Edmunds, a Native American scholar who received a Pulitzer Prize nomination for The Shawnee Prophet.

“Obviously I’m thrilled to see the show earn this honor,” said Robert Matzen, writer/producer of When the Forest Ran Red.  “The CINE Golden Eagle is a sought-after national award.”  The show had previously earned a 2001 Silver AXIEM(TM) Award in the category of Regional Educational Television.  Said Matzen, “Each award raises awareness about the program itself, and also about the American history it represents.”

The CINE Golden Eagle Film and Video Competition, held since 1957, acknowledges high-quality professional production in a variety of content categories.  Over the years the judging procedures have evolved into an efficient multi-stage jury process to determine which productions are deserving of the coveted CINE Golden Eagle award.  In 2001, 600 jurors on 150 juries judged more than 1,000 entries in 21 categories.  Winners in 2001 included several ABC News productions as well as
programming from American Movie Classics, Boston’s PBS affiliate WGBH and HBO.

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Third National Honor for French & Indian Documentary  

PITTSBURGH, PA—Winners in the 23rd annual Telly Awards competition in Cincinnati, Ohio, were announced on March 1, 2002.  Earning a Bronze Telly in the category of TV Program—Documentary was the French and Indian War program When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army, produced by Paladin Communications of Pittsburgh in association with the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania.  The film documentary was first broadcast on Pittsburgh’s PBS affiliate WQED-TV on September 26, 2001.

When the Forest Ran Red chronicles the quest of the British, French and Native American Empires to possess the Ohio Country 20 years prior to the Revolutionary War.  Its main characters include British Major-General Edward Braddock, Seneca war chief Tanagrisson (also known as the Half King), French Captain Louis Coulon deVilliers and a young Virginia gentleman turned soldier, George Washington.

When the Forest Ran Red was filmed in cooperation with the National Park Service, Colonial Williamsburg and Mount Vernon.  It features historical interpretation by prominent historians, including Fred Anderson, author of the 2001 Francis Parkman Prize-winning Crucible of War, and R. David Edmunds, a Native American scholar who received a Pulitzer Prize nomination for The Shawnee Prophet.

Honors already earned by When the Forest Ran Red include a 2001 Golden Eagle Award in the category of Regional Broadcast Documentary issued by the Council of International Nontheatrical Events in Washington, D.C. and a 2001 Silver AXIEM AWARD(TM) for Excellence in Educational Media issued by the AXIEM Committee in Rapid City, South Dakota.

In 2001 more than 11,000 programs were entered in the Telly Awards.  Winners included Sony Pictures, Walt Disney Studios, U.S. Navy, ESPN, Universal Studios, Miramax Films and National Geographic, among others.  Said Robert Matzen, writer/producer of When the Forest Ran Red, “I thought all along that we had a great team making a great product.  Now these three awards validate that point of view.  The Telly is icing on the cake for us.  People respect the name, and labeling our show as a Telly honoree speaks to its value as both entertainment and education.

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Prestigious Honor for French & Indian War Documentary  

NEW YORK, NY.  In a May 13, 2002 awards presentation at the American Association of Museums' annual meeting in Dallas, Texas, the historical documentary When the Forest Ran Red: Washington, Braddock & a Doomed Army earned a 2002 Bronze MUSE Award in the category of Historical Documentary.  When the Forest Ran Red was produced by Paladin Communications of Pittsburgh in association with the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania’s Senator John Heinz Regional History Center.  The film details the opening of the French and Indian War in America, which revolved around the actions of the 22-year-old George Washington, then beginning his military career.

Andrew E. Masich, President and CEO of the Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania, accepted the Bronze Award at the MUSE Award Reception in Dallas.  “This is a very prestigious honor in a very competitive field,” said Masich.  “We received honors along with the Smithsonian Institution’s National Museum of American History for their A More Perfect Union project and the Newseum Interactive Museum of News in a field of more than 30.  So it’s a great honor.”

Writer/producer Robert Matzen of Paladin Communications agrees.  “Of all the awards we’ve won so far for the film, this one is very special, because it is recognition by historians judging under the most stringent criteria.  And the MUSE is associated with the Metropolitan Museum of Art, a name that certainly gets your attention.”

The MUSE Awards were established in 1989 to recognize excellence in films and videos produced by or for museums. Since that time, the awards have kept pace with changing technology and delivery platforms, and expanded to include CD-ROMs, interactive experiences on the museum floor and web sites.

The Muse Awards recognize excellence in museum media and have four major objectives:

• To provide peer recognition for the year's best productions.

• To gain national recognition for museum programs.

• To raise the level of museum media production values.

• To nurture awareness of the benefits of media and technology programs for museum audiences.

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September 20, 2001
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