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A Documentary
and Companion Volume Capture the Historic Rebuilding of the Nauvoo
Temple
The award-winning
collaborative team of Lee Groberg and Heidi Swinton tell the remarkable
story of the building of the original Nauvoo Temple, its eventual
destruction, and the historic rebuilding in their new documentary
and companion book, Sacred Stone: The Temple at Nauvoo.
"This is a story
that resonates with people far beyond the boundaries of the LDS
religion," said Swinton. "We all have a heritage of temples. We
see them throughout the Bible; we speak of Solomon's Temple, and
we know of the sacred esteem in which Jesus held temples. It is
this common religious language to which all people can relate."
"The Church
of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints holds a rich piece of the American
historical landscape. Against a backdrop of religious intolerance
is the emergence, survival, and eventual thriving of a new religion
born on American soil," said Groberg. "It is imperative that this
story be preserved and shared."
To accurately
tell the story, Swinton scoured hundreds of journals and recollections
of early Nauvoo residents, read all the significant newspapers from
that period, and visited Nauvoo numerous times to feel of its history.
"There is nothing like walking down the streets of Nauvoo early
in the morning. I can hear the voices and hammers from days gone
by," said Swinton. "I feel what they felt because I have experienced
the feeling of both a hot day in July and a horribly cold day in
March."
Groberg conducted
more than fifty interviews with noted scholars and Church historians.
"I chose those people who had the expertise I needed to flesh out
this story. As a result, we have both LDS and non-LDS scholars who
weave the fascinating fabric of temple worship with religion."
This is the
first time the building of a Latter-day Saint temple has been documented
to this extent. "I wanted to provide the definitive look at the
Nauvoo Temple," said Groberg. "There is such an emotional thrill
to see the first shovel of dirt, to be four feet away as the angel
Moroni flies to the top of the tower, and to see the first sunstone
set in place. I felt strongly that this story needed to be shared."
Groberg and
Swinton offer an unprecedented view of this remarkable rebuilding
as it spans across seven continents and eight states. They document
the handblowing of the glass in France and show the English Chapel
previously built by William Player, the chief stonemason. Workers
in Canada use old-world techniques to cut the stones for the temple.
And Israel, Greece, and Egypt hold the ancient temples of antiquity
that speak to an everlasting history of temple worship.
Although the
Nauvoo Temple will be a working temple like other Latter-day Saint
temples, there is a special historic significance that is creating
a heightened state of excitement. "The rebuilding of the Nauvoo
Temple is an acknowledgement that this is sacred ground and has
been since it was first dedicated," said Swinton. "It becomes a
tribute to the devotion and dedication of those Saints who built
the original temple under incredibly difficult conditions."
Both Swinton
and Groberg agree that a documentary gave them the most freedom
to tell this story. "The value of a documentary is that you help
people visualize the story as if they had done all the research
themselves," said Swinton. "The past and present are laced together
to allow the story to unfold as it happened." Groberg emphasizes
that the documentary lends a historical credibility and maintains
the dignity of the story.
The companion
book of Sacred Stone: The Temple at Nauvoo will be available
in bookstores in May, and the documentary will air on public television
stations this fall.
Sacred Stone:
The Temple at Nauvoo, based on the film by Lee Groberg and written
by Heidi S. Swinton ($29.95 in a 9 x 12 hardcover), is published
by Covenant Communications and is available at bookstores everywhere.
About the
Producer and Author
Heidi S. Swinton is an award-winning author and screenwriter
of LDS life and history. Sacred Stone: The Temple at Nauvoo is
her third in a trilogy for PBS, which includes American Prophet:
The Story of Joseph Smith, and Trail of Hope: The Story of
the Mormon Trail. A journalist by training, she has written
numerous books, articles, and films. She is a member of the BYU-TV
Advisory Committee, the BYU Women's Conference Executive Committee,
and serves on the LDS Curriculum writing committee.
Lee Groberg
is an award-winning producer/director whose documentary films include
American Prophet: The Story of Joseph Smith, and Trail
of Hope: The Story of the Mormon Trail, both of which garnered
several prestigious awards.
Additional contributors
Hal Holbrook is the narrator for the documentary. Holbrook has
dozens of television series, mini-series, motion picture, and stage
performances to his credit. He is best known for his remarkable one-man
show, Mark Twain Tonight! He has won four Emmy Awards, the
Peabody Award, and the Ace Award.
Gary Smith
is known nationwide for his paintings that depict rural America
from the turn of the century to the present. It is this talent that
he used to draw the numerous original sketches used in both the
book and the documentary. His simple, yet poignant pictures bring
the original building of the Nauvoo Temple to life. He lives in
Highland, Utah.
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