A Celebration of Horses: The American Saddlebred

A Celebration of Horses: The American Saddlebred was a half-hour television special about the American Saddlebred horse breed. As a pilot episode, it was scheduled for four national releases from November 1993 to October 1995 on the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) in the United States on 56 regional affiliates, and was also broadcast into Canada. The program starred actor and horse enthusiast William Shatner. Most of the segments were taped on location with Shatner at his Belle Reve Farm, and at the Lexington Junior League Horse Show in Lexington, Kentucky.

"The American Saddlebred"
A Celebration of Horses episode
Cover of American Saddlebred magazine featuring William Shatner
Episode no.Season 1993—1994
Series 1
Episode Pilot
Story byWilliam Shatner, impromptu behind-the-scenes
Teleplay byBetty Wills
Narrated byDavid Henry
Presented byWKNO-Memphis
Produced byAxiom Entertainment
Featured musicASCAP
Cinematography byScott Jewett
Editing byJoe Dixon
Production codeG
Original air date2003 November
Running time28:30
Awards1993 AHSA Award for Broadcast Media Excellence[1]
Guest appearance(s)

William Shatner

Concept and creation

American Saddlebred coverage of the episode.

The documentary was produced as the pilot episode for a proposed PBS series titled A Celebration of Horses. The series was designed to showcase the history of various horse breeds, the evolution of equestrian sports and the preparation required for horse show competition. The series' origins correlated with the stated vision of former ASHA president Judy Werner, who said in the organization's 1989 Annual Meeting, "Don't we all feel that a television, radio, or magazine advertisement focusing on 'The Sport of Showing Horses,' regardless of the breed, would make us all proud? Convey to the public a positive feeling about the sport? Be effective? I do, and I guarantee you that is going to happen..."[2] The series concept originated with executive producer Betty Wills, a competitor in equine sports. Patricia Nichols, former executive secretary of the American Saddlebred Horse Association;[3] and Lynn Weatherman, former editor of The American Saddlebred magazine,[4] participated as technical advisors in the production and also provided some of the stock footage.

Cast

  • William Shatner, celebrity guest host
  • Marcy Lafferty Shatner, former wife of William Shatner, played the role of Chief DiFalco in Star Trek: The Motion Picture.
  • Donna Moore, trainer of American Saddlebred Horses
  • Melissa Moore, exhibitor of American Saddlebred Horses
  • Lynn Weatherman, editor, The American Saddlebred
  • Horses: Imperator, Sky Watch, Sultan's Great Day, and Miss O'Hare

Background/production

Post-production and distribution of the episode was handled by PBS affiliate WKNO (TV) in Memphis, TN. WKNO was a member entry station for American Program Service (APS)[lower-alpha 1] which handled broadcast distribution to the public television network comprising PBS member stations. Joe Dixon, an editor with WKNO at the time,[5] did the post production editing and sound mix for the program.

Theme

The episode features the history of the American Saddlebred Horse as a breed, and segues into guest host William Shatner speaking candidly about the preparation and training for horse show competition, breeding, raising and selling horses while guiding viewers on a tour of his Belle Reve Farm near Lexington, KY. Shatner also appears competing at the Lexington Junior League Horse Show and in an interview after his performance. The episode ended with the intense head-to-head competition between two of the all-time greatest five-gaited Champions of their time, the stallion Sky Watch and the gelding Imperator, in the stake competition at the Freedom Hall Civic Center in Johnson City, Tennessee; referred to by some as "the biggest stage in the show horse industry."[6][7]

Release

As a pilot episode, A Celebration of Horses: The American Saddlebred was scheduled for four releases nationally on 56 PBS affiliates from November 1993 through October 1995.[2]:87

AHSA Award

The program won the 1993 AHSA Award for Broadcast Media Excellence.[2]:86 AHSA Award originated in 1993 as part of the Making Strides for Equestrian Sport initiative[8] sponsored by the American Horse Shows Association.[lower-alpha 2] The American Saddlebred Horse Association nominated the program's executive director and subsequent winner of the broadcast division.[2] Wills was one of five recipients to receive the award which was presented to former ASHA president Judy Werner on behalf of Wills at the 1994 American Horse Shows Association convention in Denver, Colorado.[2]:86

Notes

  1. In 1999, American Program Service changed their name to American Public Television
  2. The American Horse Shows Association is now the United States Equestrian Federation

References

  1. "A celebration of horses". Archived from the original on 3 May 2016. Retrieved 14 March 2016.
  2. "TV Series Featuring Saddlebreds Honored". The American Saddlebred. American Saddlebred Horse Association: 88. January 1994.
  3. "Patricia Nichols Dies". The Saddle Horse Report. October 1, 2014.
  4. "Saddlebred Legend Lynn Weatherman Dies". EQUUS Magazine. April 15, 2006. Cite magazine requires |magazine= (help)
  5. "KNO Productions" (PDF). January 1, 2014. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 10, 2017. Retrieved March 25, 2016.
  6. "CH Sky Watch". Kentucky Horse Park. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  7. Bob Funkhouser (September 15, 2003). "A Celebration Of History, A Celebration Of Challenges, A Celebration Of Tomorrow".
  8. "Horse Show Magazine". 59 (3). American Horse Shows Association. March 1994. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
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