"Favorite Son" is licensed for public display by and can be purchased for personal use at George Washington's
Favorite Son screens regularly at:
287 Convent Avenue
New York, NY 10005
212-283-5154
212-666-1640
Please with questions and comments or for further information.
Thanks to the for the use of 'Bennett's Mills,' Belleville,
NJ, by Archibald Robertson, 1796
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ALEXANDER HAMILTON - From the American Revolution to the Duel at Weehawken
Favorite Son, a new documentary about Alexander Hamilton,
is licensed for public display by The Cinema Guild and can be purchased for personal use online at George Washington's Mount
Vernon. Viewers in the New York metropolitan area may see it at
the 'Hamilton Grange' in Manhattan, a National Park Service site.
Favorite
Son chronicles Alexander Hamilton's role in the American Revolution,
in the ratification of the Constitution, and in creating the financial
structure of the United States while acting as President Washington's
Secretary of the Treasury. His conflicts with Thomas Jefferson- over
every issue that divided the young Republic- echo throughout American
history. But Hamilton's life had much to do with the New York area.
He first settled in Elizabeth, New Jersey, and spent much of the American
Revolution in the state. In 1791 he founded the city of Paterson, and
in 1804 he was fatally wounded in his infamous duel with Aaron Burr
at Weehawken. New Yorkers poured into the streets to mourn him, the
great Founding Father they had given to the nation.
Although the title Favorite Son refers to Alexander
Hamilton- in his relationship with George
Washington- the film is not a traditional biography. It is freely episodic
in form, telling some of the stories that took place in New Jersey and
New York during the American Revolution and the early Federalist era.
It is more interested in considering complex questions- slavery and
racism, capitalism and industrialization- than in providing the pat,
ready answers that dominate much documentary fare. Dramatic scenes move
the story forward; they do not "illustrate" the narrative or simply
re-enact it. Contemporary fictional characters, footage from D.W. Griffith's
America, and time-lapse landscapes are all part of
the mixture.
Julia Lowe Walker is 'Nyla,' a reporter whose ability to imagine the
young Hamilton is exceeded only by her diligence in exploring his life
and work. Jesse Pennington displays great instincts in embracing the
role of Hamilton. Michael Emerson, an Emmy Award winner, is the voice
of George Washington.
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