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Portrait of a genius: Ken Burns on Leonardo da Vinci

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Ever since he got a movie camera for his 17th birthday, Ken Burns has been making documentaries. Over the years, he’s created 36 documentary series for PBS, all of them about American history, from “The Civil War,” “Baseball” and “Jazz,” to “Prohibition,” “The Vietnam War” and “Muhammad Ali.”

Now, he’s just made his first project ever that’s not about an American subject: “Leonardo da Vinci.” “It was just getting to know one of the most incredibly interesting human beings who has ever walked the Earth,” Burns said. “And the fact that he turns out to be arguably the greatest painter and certainly the greatest scientist of his age is, you know, extra added.”

Burns co-directed the show with his daughter, Sarah Burns, and her husband, David McMahon.

To watch a trailer for the documentary “Leonardo da Vinci” click on the video player below:


Preview – Ken Burns’ DAVINCI by
WPBS-TV on
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The four-hour series makes use of the approximately 6,000 notebook pages Leonardo left behind, from studies in such disciplines as geology and physics, to his preparatory studies for his paintings. And then there are his to-do lists. What emerges is a portrait of a genius, who’s not just a painter, not just a scientist, not just an inventor.

“He wants to know everything about everything,” said Sarah Burns. “So, he’s dissecting a cadaver because he wants to understand how the heart works and how the body works, all towards creating a painting that is more life-like, more believable, more alive.”

Ken Burns said the “gigantic” volume of source material asks fundamental basic questions: “Where did I come from? Where am I going? How does the universe work? I mean, these are things that occupied him every single moment of every single day.”

What also emerges is a man who rarely finished anything. “There’s fewer than 20 paintings that exist today, probably less than half of those are actually finished, we think,” said Sarah Burns.

Ken Burns says he doesn’t believe it’s a mark of procrastination: “I think things are left unfinished, or undelivered to patrons, because the questions that he was asking of this work for himself had been satisfied.”

Sarah added, “Being interested in so many different things as he was, there’s always the next thing, a new question, something else that comes along that takes away his attention.”

Two things DaVinci did finish, though, are among the most famous paintings ever made: “The Last Supper” and “Mona Lisa.”

“‘The Last Supper’ was a very commonly painted subject for Leonardo’s time,” said McMahon. “Leonardo discovers a completely different thing happening than most other painters had. This is Christ telling his disciples that one of them is going to betray him. And he puts them in groups. And so, one is putting his hand over his eyes, another is reaching for a knife. And so, it becomes a painting that feels like seconds unfolding. And it makes me feel like he would have been a filmmaker, today, had he lived in our time.”

scenes-from-the-last-supper.jpg
Scenes from “The Last Supper,” by Leonardo da Vinci.

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“I think he invents film,” said Ken Burns. “There’s a kind of inherent dynamism and movement to it that’s just exquisite.”

Of “Mona Lisa,” Burns said, “In order for him to be a great painter, he has to understand the circulatory system. He has to understand about hair. He has to understand about geography and rock formations and mist and how atmosphere works. And so, my wish is that nobody ever makes a joke about her smile ever again! Because she is embodying the entire human project in that thing.”

If you’ve ever edited photos or videos on an iPhone or a Mac, you may already know one of Burns’ favorite editing techniques: Zooming or panning across a still image, a process, he says, meant to “shake alive something that is two-dimensional.”

But the new documentary, narrated by Keith David, introduces techniques that will be very new to Burns aficionados: split screens that juxtapose old and modern footage.

According to Sarah Burns, Leonardo da Vinci was a lateral thinker: “He made connections across all of these disciplines. Showing multiple things on screen at the same time was a way of, in some ways, visually illustrating Leonardo’s thought process.”

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A split-screen dramatizes Leonardo da Vinci’s fascination with the physiology of bats.  

PBS


Asked about the balance of labor for the project, Saran Burns said, “Dave and I are the writers of this. And then once we have our script, we begin our editing process. And that’s when we get in there all together and work on making it better, together. Occasionally, we disagree about what that should be.”

But Ken Burns doesn’t automatically get the final word: “No! That doesn’t work,” he said. “That doesn’t wash with collaboration.”

“Leonardo da Vinci” airs on PBS in mid-November. It’s the story of a fascinating man and an astonishing life. “He could feel, I think, quite rightfully, that he had lived a fuller life than practically anybody I’d ever come across, in any study, in any period. Period,” said Burns.

WEB EXTRA: Ken Burns on the “incredibly modern” Leonardo da Vinci:


Ken Burns on the “incredibly modern” Leonardo da Vinci

02:30

     
For more info:

      
Story produced by Jay Kernis. Editor: Emanuele Secci. 

     
See also: 

       
More from Ken Burns:



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Timothée Chalamet surprises crowd at NYC look-alike contest, as police break up event

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Timothee Chalamet from “Wonka”, Margot Robbie from “Barbie” | The Lot


Timothee Chalamet from “Wonka”, Margot Robbie from “Barbie” | The Lot

24:10

NEW YORK — Timothée Chalamet made a surprise appearance Sunday at his own look-alike contest in Manhattan. 

At least one person was arrested after a large crowd formed and police broke up the event in Washington Square Park.

Chalamet posed for photos with his doppelgängers, some of whom came dressed as his characters from the movies “Wonka” and “Dune.”

The look-alike contest was one of several such competitions hosted by the YouTube personality Anthony Po, and it promised $50 for the winner. As word spread on social media, thousands of people RSVP’d. 

From “a silly joke” to “pandemonium”

New York Chalamet Look alike Contest
Miles Mitchell, 21, winner of the Timothee Chalamet look-alike contest, holds his trophy near Washington Square Park, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2024, in New York.

Stefan Jeremiah / AP


Minutes after the competition started — and before Chalamet arrived — police ordered the group to disperse from the park. Organizers were hit with a $500 fine for an “unpermitted costume contest,” and police said one person was issued a summons for disorderly conduct. 

“It started off as a silly joke and now it’s turned pandemonium,” Paige Nguyen, a producer for the YouTube creator, told The Associated Press.

The group relocated to another park, and the audience eventually crowned Miles Mitchell, a Staten Island college senior, as the winner. 

“I’m excited and I’m also overwhelmed,” Mitchell said. “There were so many good look-alikes. It was really a toss-up.”

The contestants were asked to demonstrate their French skills, about their romantic plans with Kylie Jenner, and what they would do to make the world a better place. 



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11-year-old stuns pharmacist at shuttering Massachusetts Walgreens with $6,000 gift

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Community gathers to thank Walgreens pharmacist for 30 years of serving Weston after store closes


Community gathers to thank Walgreens pharmacist for 30 years of serving Weston after store closes

01:58

WESTON – A small group of loyal customers gathered in Weston Saturday morning to thank a pharmacist who is relocating as Walgreens closes the location where he served the community for almost three decades.

The celebration was led by an 11-year-old boy who shocked the pharmacist by presenting him with thousands of dollars that he raised as a thank you gift.

Weston Walgreens closing

In the midst of corporate cutbacks at Walgreens, the location on Boston Post Road is closing permanently. So a small group came out to thank the pharmacist at the store.

“It’s humbling. I can’t believe it. It’s amazing,” said veteran pharmacist Bob Hesselberg, who has worked at the store for nearly 30 years. “I don’t want to retire, even though I am 75. I don’t want to retire. I’m not ready for it.”

Hesselberg is moving on to a store in Waltham. The sendoff was led by 11-year-old Aarav Khanna, whose school bus routinely drops him off right across from the Walgreens location.

“I’ve seen the amount of kindness and hard work he puts into his job,” Khanna said.

walgreens-donation-weston.jpg
Eleven-year-old Aarav Khanna shocks pharmacist Bob Hesselberg with a $6,000 check.

CBS Boston


Money raised for pharmacist 

Khanna got the idea to raise money for Hesselberg as a going away present. And the total grew quickly. Thanks to the community, Kanna was able to present Hesselberg with a check for $6,000 on Saturday, leaving the pharmacist in shock.

During the Saturday celebration, a young girl gave a handmade card to Hesselberg, who people in the community call “Pharmacist Bob.”

“You walk in, he not only greets you by name, but he wants to know how your family is, and how is that medication you had last time, and how are you doing? And he means it,” customer Carol Ott said.  

The Weston Walgreens closes in the middle of November. Hesselberg hopes some customers will follow him to Waltham, but he worries about some of the older residents driving that distance, especially since the chain won’t be doing home delivery anymore.

“I’m gonna miss everybody. And I’m very grateful for all of this. And thank you so much,” Hesselberg told the crowd.



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Harris tells Philadelphia church election will “decide the fate of our nation for generations to come”

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Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at Philadelphia’s Church of Christian Compassion


Vice President Kamala Harris speaks at Philadelphia’s Church of Christian Compassion

09:15

Vice President Kamala Harris is back in Philadelphia Sunday as the countdown to election day nears one week.

Harris, who spent several days in the Delaware Valley over the past week, spoke at the Church of Christian Compassion in Philadelphia on Sunday morning and will hold a campaign rally in the city later in the night. 

“In just nine days we have the power to decide the fate of our nation for generations to come,” she told the congregation.

Several minutes into her speech, some shouting broke out in the crowd. Harris paused during the disruption. “That’s why we fight for our democracy. Every voice is important,” she said while the outburst was quieted.

Harris went on to encourage the Philadelphia church to lean on faith in the days leading up to the election, and urged worshippers to use their feet to get to the polls.

“Here in Pennsylvania, right now each of us has an opportunity to make a difference. Because in this moment we do face a real question. What kind of country to we we want to live in,” she said. “The great thing about living in a democracy is we the people have the choice to answer that question. So let us answer not just with our words, but with our works.”

On Wednesday, Oct. 23, Harris visited the Famous 4th Street Deli in Philadelphia’s Queen Village neighborhood before attending a town hall in Delaware County. Earlier in the week, the vice president sat down with former Congresswoman Liz Cheney in Chester County in the first of three moderated conversations in battleground states.

During that conversation, Harris appealed to Republican voters who are on the fence about voting for former President Donald Trump, and claimed he used the presidency as a way to “demean and to divide” Americans.

“I think people are exhausted with that, rightly,” Harris said. “And it does not lead to the strength of our nation to tell American people that we must be suspicious of one another, distrust one another.”

On Monday, Harris will harness the star power of some of her biggest supporters during a benefit concert at Temple University’s Liacouras Center, according to multiple sources.

Twenty-time Grammy winner Bruce Springsteen will headline a concert and a rally with former President Barack Obama as part of the Harris campaign’s effort to mobilize voters in the final weeks of the 2024 presidential election.

Speaking to CBS News Philadelphia’s Joe Holden, Harris said she’s “honored” to have Obama’s support on the campaign trail. “And people like Bruce Springsteen, to have their support, and of course he is an American icon, I think it just shows the breadth and depth of the support that we have,” Harris said.

When asked if any other big name supporters are planning to turn out for the event Monday, Harris said with a laugh, “I have nothing to report at this moment. Stay tuned, however.”

Earlier this month, Springsteen endorsed Harris and her running mate Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz.





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