About Geoffrey C. Ward
Photo © Goverdhan Singh Rathore
Geoffrey C. Ward is the coauthor of The Civil War (with Ken Burns and Ric Burns), and the author of A First-Class Temperament: The Emergence of Franklin Roosevelt, which won the 1989 National Book Critics Circle Award for biography and the 1990 Francis Parkman Prize.
About Ric Burns
Ric Burns is best known for his work on the acclaimed PBS series
The Civil War, which he produced with Ken Burns and wrote with Ken Burns and Geoffrey C. Ward, and for which he received two Emmy Awards and the Producer of the Year award of the Producers Guild of America. For public television, he has also directed the award-winning documentaries
Coney Island,
The Donner Party, and
The Way West.
James Sanders, an architect, has written for the
New York Times, the
Los Angeles Times,
Vanity Fair, and
Architectural Record. He has completed design and development projects for the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the Parks Council, the Landmarks Preservation Commission, and other civic groups and commercial clients in New York and Los Angeles.
Lisa Ades most recently produced
The Way West, a six-hour documentary for national broadcast on PBS. In 1992, she received Peabody and D. W. Griffith awards for producing
The Donner Party. Before co-producing
Coney Island with Ric Burns in 1990, she was a producer at New York's public television station WNET on the nightly public affairs series
The Eleventh Hour.
About Ken Burns
Photo © Craig Mellish
Ken Burns, director and producer of The National Parks, founded his own documentary company, Florentine Films, in 1976. His films include The War, Jazz, Baseball, and The Civil War, which was the highest-rated series in the history of American public television. His work has won numerous prizes, including the Emmy and Peabody Awards, and two Academy Award nominations. He received a Lifetime Achievement Emmy Award in 2008. He lives in Walpole, New Hampshire.
Ken Burns is represented by Random House Speakers Bureau (http://www.rhspeakers.com).