A six-year project from conception to completion, Vietnam: A Television History carefully analyzes the costs and consequences of a controversial but intriguing war. From the first hour through the last, the series provides a detailed visual and oral account of the war that changed a generation and continues to color American thinking on many military and foreign policy issues.
A seminal television event when it premiered as a 13-part series on PBS in 1983, Vietnam: A Television History was edited to 11 hours and rebroadcast in 1997. The series won television's top awards, including seven Emmys, the George Foster Peabody Award, the duPont/Columbia Journalism Award, the George Polk Award, two Writer's Guild Awards, and the Erik Barnouw Award of the Organization of American Historians. The duPont/Columbia jurors noted, "These 13 hours of spellbinding, journalistically exemplary television have deservedly been called a landmark in American broadcast journalism and the most important and most compelling documentary series ever made. The power and importance of this series will endure."
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Will Lyman | Narrator |
|
Everett Alvarez | |
|
George Ball | |
|
Dai Bao | |
|
Herbert Bluechel | |
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Charles Henri Bonfils | |
|
J. Lawton Collins | |
|
Ted Danielsen | |
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Bill Erhart | |
|
Leslie Gelb |
| Packaging | Digipak |
|---|---|
| Nr Discs | 3 |
| Screen Ratios | Fullscreen (4:3) |
| Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital 2.0 [English] |
| Layers | Single side, Single layer |
| Edition Release Date | 2004 |
| Regions | Region 1 |