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22 May 2005
-World Premiere begins where most Vietnam films end, with the war's final days-
For America, the Vietnam War officially ended in April 1975. But what happened to the Vietnam that America left behind? How did the Vietnamese reunite and recover from a war that claimed more than 3 million of its own? VIETNAM PASSAGE: Journeys from War to Peace chronicles the stories of six Vietnamese, whose lives took divergent directions both during and after the devastating war, which they call ãthe American War.
Among them, a South Vietnamese pilot trained in the United States who was actually a Viet Cong spy; a freedom fighter imprisoned and tortured in the infamous Tiger Cages of South Vietnam after a bombing plot was discovered; a young widow who was separated from her children during the panicked final evacuation of Saigon. Each story is told using interviews, photographs and war footage unearthed from the U.S. National Film Archive and the Vietnam National Film Archive, much of it never before viewed publicly in the United States.
The stories are linked by on-air narrator and host, the distinguished Los Angeles Times journalist, David Lamb. Mr. Lamb covered the Vietnam War in 1968 and 1975; in 1997, he became the first newspaperman who had covered the war to open a bureau in peacetime Vietnam. His assignments have also taken him to the battlefronts of Beirut, the Persian Gulf, Rwanda, and most recently, Afghanistan.
VIETNAM PASSAGE: Journeys from War to Peace premieres on PBS on Thursday, May 23 from 10-11 PM (ET) [check local listings]. The film's premiere coincides with the release of Mr. Lamb's latest book, "Vietnam Now: A Reporter Returns." Published by Public Affairs, the book is a rich portrait of post-war Vietnam that will alter perceptions about the country, and perhaps the war as well.
VIETNAM PASSAGE: Journeys from War to Peace begins with the war's final days and recounts Vietnam's isolation during the post-war years, when nearly 400,000 people were sent to "re-education camps." Through each characterâs story, the film brings viewers into present-day Vietnam, a country that is now thriving and moving slowly towards a free-market economy.
VIETNAM PASSAGE: Journeys from War to Peace profiles the following, often heartbreaking, stories:
VIETNAM PASSAGE: Journeys from War to Peace was executive produced by Sandy Northrop of Wind & Stars Production Group. Ms. Northrop also produced the critically-acclaimed PBS documentary, Pete Peterson: Assignment Hanoi, which premiered in September 1999 and chronicled the extraordinary odyssey of America's first post-war Ambassador to Vietnam.
This program has been made possible by grants from: The Atlantic Philanthropies; Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc.; The Albert Kunstadter Family Foundation; Vietnam Veterans of America Foundation; and Friends of Vietnam Passage.
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For more information, please contact:
National Media Relations: PBS Station Relations:
Georgia Juvelis - Robyn DeShields
415.495.4521 - 301.388.2492
georgia@juvelis.com
deshields@earthlink.net