In what has turned out to be an interesting story that no one seems to have picked up on, we discovered that comedian Deon Cole, who is currently a writer for the Conan show on TBS (he was hand picked by Conan several years ago to join the writing staff) has become a narrator for a new History Channel special titled Stories From The Road To Freedom.
It seems that after eight months of taping this special and after being handpicked by the producers of the film Cole has been able to bring his other talent of voice-over to light. It seems that his skills have not gone unnoticed as he was even invited by Yale to come speak about the film and his other work in a questions-and-answers session.
Check out the press release below:
Ordinary people laid the groundwork for a revolution from slavery to the White House – just by living their lives. Theirs are the stories we don’t know…
STORIES FROM THE ROAD TO FREEDOM
New Two-Hour Documentary Special Premieres Saturday, February 16 at 8 p.m. on HISTORY(R)
New York, January 15, 2013 – The iconic images and sounds associated with America’s Civil Rights movement are well-known. By now, several generations of school children are familiar with the “Colored” signs on water fountains, the march on Washington, and Martin Luther King’s Dream. But what happened before the heroes and protests; court orders and riots? We’ve come a long way, but how did we get here?
STORIES FROM THE ROAD TO FREEDOM, a new two-hour special narrated by Deon Cole, premiering on Saturday, February 16 at 8 p.m. on HISTORY(R), gives a fresh perspective of the black movement in America, from Emancipation to the Civil Rights era. The special uses first-hand accounts, rare audio recordings, never-before-seen archival footage, and home movies to chronicle African American life as lived by regular people, in their own words, through 150 years of social upheaval.
STORIES FROM THE ROAD TO FREEDOM features an extraordinary collection of source material. In one of the only known recorded interviews of its kind, former slave Fountain Jordan describes the early days of emancipation. There is recently-discovered, never-before-broadcast footage of Ernest Beane, a Pullman Porter who documented his life on the rails, and an audio recording of an interview with World War I veteran Edward Nichols, who witnessed the 1919 Red Summer Riots in Duluth.
Other rarities include color footage of Richard and Mildred Loving, the interracial couple whose Supreme Court Case ended race-based legal restrictions on marriage; and outtakes from interviews with the first African American family to move into all-white Levittown, PA and the white neighbors who opposed it. Glimpses of everyday life can be seen in some of the earliest known African American home movies that were shot in wealthy black communities in Oklahoma in the aftermath of the Tulsa Riots; in the earliest known photographs of a Juneteenth celebration in Austin, TX in 1900; and in very rare and never-before broadcast footage from the 1954 All Black Memphis State Fair.
STORIES FROM THE ROAD TO FREEDOM is an unparalleled opportunity to see and hear from remarkable individuals who – for better or worse, whether they were aware of it or not – paved the way through the greatest social movement in American history.
STORIES FROM THE ROAD TO FREEDOM is produced for HISTORY by New Animal Productions. Executive Producer for HISTORY is Susan Werbe. Executive Producer for New Animal Productions is Nicole Rittenmeyer and Seth Skundrick.
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