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Bill Landry

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Bill Landry is an actor, director and producer most noted for The Heartland Series, a historical series on East Tennessee broadcast from WBIR-TV in Knoxville, Tennessee.

Life

Bill Landry graduated from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga with a Bachelor of Arts in Literature, English and Arts and the Dallas Theater Center with a Master of Fine Arts. After completing his education, he worked as a teacher. In the early 1980s, he wrote and performed a one-man play titled Einstein the Man and worked during the 1982 Knoxville Worlds Fair as a riverboat captain in the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) exhibit. After the fair ended, he continued to play the role of "Captain Nat" on a TVA tour of the Cumberland, Tennessee and Mississippi Rivers as part of TVA's 50-year anniversary celebrations.[1] After working in a commercial filmed at Pellissippi Community College, Landry was referred to WBIR-TV and hired in 1984 to work on The Heartland Series, a historical program on East Tennessee.

Landry wrote and directed many of the episodes, as well as producing and appearing as a character. The series issued over 1400 short features and about 150 half-hour length programs, and won awards including four Emmy Awards, six Iris Awards from the National Association of Television and Program Executives, two bronze medals and a silver from the New York International Film and Television Festival, and a Theodore Roosevelt Award for "Best Outdoor Documentary."[2]

Landry received Emmy Awards for directing in 1999 and 2000, and in 1999 received an honorary Doctorate of Humanities degree from Lincoln Memorial University in recognition of his contributions to the humanities.

In 2000 the play Einstein the Man was published through a grant and made available to middle and high school students in the state of Tennessee. In 2003, Landry's production of The George Washington Carver Project was also distributed by the Tennessee Department of Education to schools in Tennessee through the Carver Project website. In 2011, Landry published a book on East Tennessee history titled Appalachian Tales & Heartland Adventures.

References

  1. ^ Shearer, John (2 August 2009). "Former Chattanoogan Landry Had 25-Year Run With Popular Appalachian Features". The Chattanoogan. Retrieved 1 December 2011.
  2. ^ "About Knoxville". Retrieved 1 December 2011.