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How do you illustrate the vision at the center of Milford Beeghly's career a man for whom
hybrid corn represented the cause of a lifetime? Dancing ears of corn, snippets of old
commercials, and visual meditations on the rich Midwest farmland that nurtured Beeghly's
faith in the miracles of hybridization are among the creative ways chosen by the maker of
the new film, "Hybrid, " to bring the laconic Beeghly's worldview to life.
The result is a quirky, poetic opus that says as much about the pragmatic spiritual values
and emotional inhibitions of the American hinterland as it does about that archetypal
Midwesterner, Milford Beeghly.
Monteith McCollum's "Hybrid " debuts Tuesday, July 9, 10 p.m. ET (check for rebroadcasts) on PBS. "Hybrid" is the third program in the 15th anniversary season
of P.O.V., television's longest-running series of independent, non-fiction films. P.O.V.
continues on Tuesdays through August 27, with additional Fall and Winter specials.
Beginning in the 1930s, Beeghly and his company, Beeghly's Best Hybrids, brought the
gospel of hybrid corn right into the homes of Midwestern farmers where it encountered
suspicion and fear. But hybrid corn seeds were far more than a business proposition for
Beeghly. His own experiments had convinced him that hybrids, most especially of corn,
which has peculiarly "promiscuous" characteristics, promised a millennial era of
peace and prosperity.
With a single-mindedness that seemed to preclude such normal obligations as
communicating with his family, Beeghly took the cause of hybrid corn on the road to show
farmers that it was neither a hoax nor a sin. In the 1950s, he produced his own
commercials for local TV stations incidentally creating time capsules rich in the language
and attitudes of mid-century American farmers. And he continued to develop his own
hybrids.
"Hybrid" begins by catching up with Beeghly and his family on the patriarch's
94th birthday he's still going strong enough to be getting remarried. Interviews with family
members paint the portrait of a remote, eccentric man obsessed with cross-breeding corn
and more comfortable in the quiet of a cornfield than in his own home. But interviews with
Beeghly in those same cornfields take surprisingly intimate turns director McCollum is, in
fact, Beeghly's grandson.
A more complex picture emerges, in which a lyrical love of life underlies the solace and
inspiration that Beeghly always found in his cornfields and in the great reaches of farmland
surrounding them. Hybrid is a deft portrait of a self-made man and peculiarly American
philosopher of the soil.
"This is a visually unusual film because I was searching for ways to express my
grandfather's feeling for the land and his passion for the corn plant," says
producer/director McCollum. "The corn and land ultimately became characters in a
story that is as much about the secret lives of families as it is about the mysteries of corn
hybridization."
"Hybrid" has won a number of international film festival awards, including the
Grand Jury Award for best feature at the Slamdance International Film Festival and an
Independent Spirit Award. Hybrid was also included in the prestigious New Directors/New
Films series at New York's Museum of Modern Art.
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Telephone Number: 800-569-6621
Email: docued@der.org
To purchase or rent this program for home viewing, please contact:
Indican Pictures
URL: http://indicanpictures.com
8205 Santa Monica Blvd. Suite 200
Los Angeles, CA 90046
Phone: 323-650-0832
Fax 323-650-6832
Email: admin@indicanpictures.com
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