Showing posts with label Cyndi Sneath. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cyndi Sneath. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Darwin's Pilgrims: The Video

In February 2009, I hosted 'Darwin's Pilgrims": a visit to England by two Americans with links to the Dover Pennsylvania trial, Cynthia Sneath and Lauri Lebo, and Canadian Lit Hop artist Baba Brinkman to celebrate Darwin's 200th birthday. The trip involved a "pilgrimage" to Darwin-related sites and a series of performances in English cities, including the premiere of the Rap Guide to Evolution. Previous blog posts captured the spirit of the event
But this is the first time I have presented the complete video, covering trips to Malvern, Cambridge and London, even though I finished it a couple of years ago. I hope you enjoy the footage and the great music! For a bunch of non-believers, we spent a lot of time in churches!

Friday, March 13, 2009

Darwin's Pilgrims in Malvern: the Movie

I am trying to create a movie of the Darwin's Pilgrims tour, where I hosted a tour of Darwinian sites and series of shows from Lauri Lebo and Baba Brinkman. But the project is turning out to be too large to do in one go in iMovie, so I am going to create a series of short films as a I go along and then join them all together at the end.

Here is a draft version of the first film--the final version will be better quality (currently having problems with the titles). This movie captures Lauri Lebo and Cyndi Sneath's short visit to Great Malvern (an event beset by bad weather!). And in case you don't recognise it, the music is Nimrod by Elgar, the English composer who lived in Malvern (Lauri is seen shaking his statue's hand at the end).

Friday, February 13, 2009

Guest Blog from Lauri Lebo: Darwin's Pilgrims 1

Sunday 8th February, 2009

Visited the grave this afternoon of Charles Darwin's daughter Annie, who died of an infection here when she was 10. Her simple gravestone says, "A dear and a good child." A small rosebush has been planted at the foot of the stone and a single pink rose blooms. Her father had brought her here in 1851 to a house perched on the Malvern Hills overlooking the expansive Severn River Valley, which is covered in fog today, to try to save her. The family had spent a summer in Great Malvern, a Victorian-era spa in western England, two years earlier. Darwin, who suffered from chronic stomach ailments, had found the water restorative. Emma, pregnant, had remained behind in London. And Annie died without her mother. Darwin did not wait for the funeral - instead, he let the servants bury Annie - and rushed back to London to be at his wife's side.

Our host, Mark Pallen, a Birmingham University microbiologist, has taken us to the graveyard, which stands under towering ancient Norfolk pines brought here by the church. Now sitting in hotel lobby waiting for dinner at the local pub, drinking coffee and watching it snow over the Malvern Priory (a Middle Age church cut from blocks cut of red and tan sandstone.) The snowflake clusters are so big, one would cover the palm of your hand.

It's cozy and sleep beckons seductively, but Cyndi Sneath and I gamely fight off its advances. (But unable, apparently, in my jet-lagged state to resist heavy-handed metaphors.)

Tomorrow, we head for Cambridge.