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    MUSIC

    Pioneer Campfire:  Bobby Bridger - Seekers of the Fleece

    Pioneer Campfire: Bobby Bridger - Seekers of the Fleece

    Presented by Harris County Precinct 4 at Jesse H. Jones Park & Nature Center

    November 21, 2009

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    Jesse H. Jones Park & Nature Center presents Pioneer Campfire, Saturday, November 21, at 6:30pm.

    Enjoy an evening of hot cider and roasted marshmallows around the campfire as talented performer Bobby Bridger (pictured) performs Seekers of the Fleece. Seekers of the Fleece presents the life story of premiere American mountain man Jim Bridger and the Fur Trade Era. Beginning with Bridger's historic ascension of the Missouri River with the Ashley-Henry Expedition in 1822, Seekers of the Fleece musically dramatized the adventures of the initial interactions between European and Native American people as well as the beginnings of the Emigration Era and the Indian Wars Era.

    A distant relative of premiere nineteenth-century American mountain man, Jim Bridger, Bobby Bridger began work on his epic trilogy A Ballad of the West over four decades ago. Since 1974 Bridger has traveled the globe performing this historical epic as a one-man show to audiences in America, Canada, Europe, Australia and Russia.

    Bridger began his professional recording career in 1967 in Nashville recording for Monument and Nugget Records before signing with RCA Records in Hollywood in 1970. Bridger wrote, produced and recorded two albums for RCA - Merging Of Our Minds and And I Wanted To Sing For The People - before parting ways with the label in 1973. Since the early 1980s Bridger has recorded Heal In The Wisdom, Songs From A Ballad of the West, and the four-disc boxed set, A Ballad of the West, on his own Golden Egg Records.

    Bridger has performed twice on PBS's Austin City Limits, twice on C-Span/Booknotes, once on ABC's Good Morning America, on A & E, on National Public Radio and on the Australian Broadcasting Company. He performed on twenty-eight consecutive Kerrville Folk Festivals, served on the festival's board of directors from 1976-2002, and on the board of advisors since 2002. Bridger suggested the popular "Ballad Tree" to Kerrville Folk Festival director, Rod Kennedy, and wrote the festival's anthem, Heal In The Wisdom.

    Bridger has been an artist-in-residence at Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks, and was the first poet/balladeer-in-residence at the Buffalo Bill Historical Center in Cody, Wyoming, the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center in Waterford, Connecticut and the John G. Neihardt Center in Bancroft, Nebraska. Under the tutelage of Broadway and Hollywood legend, Dale Wasserman (Man of LaMancha, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest), Bridger created the role of "the Drifter" in the musical comedy Shakespeare and The Indians and from 1982-'83 appeared in over 100 performances of the renown playwright's show.

    Working with the production team developing the Native American classic, Black Elk Speaks for stage and film, Bridger served on the board of directors of the American Indian Theater Company from 1982-1987 and was featured with David Carradine and Will Sampson in a Native American production of Black Elk Speaks in Tulsa in 1984. Bridger was also on the National Theater Institute faculty from 1984-'87 and in 1984 and 1985 N.T.I. produced an unprecedented two consecutive workshop productions of Bridger's epic space fantasy Aldebaran and The Falling Star.

    Returning from landmark tours of Australia in 1986 and the Soviet Union in 1987, Bridger was invited to Oxford University in 1988 to perform Heal In The Wisdom for closing ceremonies of the First Global Forum of Spiritual and Parliamentary Leaders On Human Survival; featured presenters were the Dali Lama, Mother Teresa, the Archbishop of Canterbury, and Carl Sagan. From 1988-1995 full-company outdoor musical productions of Part One of A Ballad of the West, Seekers of the Fleece, featuring many stars such as Tony-nominated, Joe Sears (playwright/star of the Greater Tuna trilogy of comedies) and Wes Studi (Dances With Wolves, Last of the Mochicans, Geronimo and The New World) were produced in Wyoming. In 1996 Bridger returned his focus to performing his one-man shows around the American west. Bridger's trilogy of one man shows of A Ballad of the West ran in repertory each summer at Old Trail Town in Cody, Wyoming from 2000-2003.

    Bridger is the author of a hardback and paperback edition of A Ballad of the West, the award-winning, Buffalo Bill and Sitting Bull: Inventing The Wild West, and contributed essays to anthologies on American western literary giants John G. Neihardt (A Sender of Words) and Frank Waters (Frank Waters: Man and Mystic). From 2003-04 Bridger served as a poetry judge for the Western Writers of America's prestigious "Silver Spur" award. Bridger is the host of The Tradition Lives On, a history of ballads produced by textbook publisher Holt, Rinehart Winston as a section of The Elements of Literature, an experimental global electronic textbook focusing on the language arts. In 2002 Bridger began teaching the interdisciplinary freshman seminar course, The Environmental Legacy of the American West - based in part on A Ballad of the West - at the University of Texas/Austin.

    Bridger is currently touring, writing an autobiography and in post-production on a five-disc DVD production of his one-man shows of A Ballad of the West backed by an extraordinary four-piece ensemble of renown studio musicians. Scheduled for release in early 2006, the DVD production will also feature a ninety-minute documentary based on Bridger's life and work (The Quest of an Epic Balladeer), a thirty-minute documentary (The Making of A Ballad of the West) and a host of other special features.

    Reservations required beginning Wed.,Nov. 11.


    • At-a-
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      • Venue Info

        Jesse H. Jones Park & Nature Center

        20634 Kenswick Drive
        Humble, TX 77338

        Full map and directions

      • Admission Info

        Tickets:

        Free Event. Reservations required.

        Info Phone: (281) 446-8588

      • Dates & Times

        Dates:
        November 21, 2009

        Times:

        6:30pm
         

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