WQPT-PBS will air three of the documentaries from Fourth Wall Films’ “Hero Street Film Series” on Thursday, November 5th. “Riding the Rails to Hero Street” will air at 8:00 p.m., the Regional Emmy-nominated "Letters Home to Hero Street" at 8:30 p.m., and “A Bridge too Far from Hero Street” will air at 9:00 p.m.
Riding the Rails to Hero Street explores the immigrants’ journey from Mexico to the Quad Cities segregated communities of Cook’s Point in Davenport, Holy City in Bettendorf, and the Chicago, Rock Island and Pacific Railroad yard in Silvis, Illinois. Featured interviews include Latino Studies professor Brian Behnken of Iowa State University and Marc Wilson, the author of “Hero Street, U.S.A.”
Letters Home to Hero Street, the Emmy-nominated and award-winning 30-minute documentary produced by WQPT-PBS and Fourth Wall Films focuses on young Mexican-American veteran Frank Sandoval's personal view of World War II, as told through the letters and V-Mail (Victory Mail) he sent home to his family on 2nd Street in Silvis, Illinois.
Frank was just beginning a new job at the Rock Island Arsenal when he was drafted by the Army in 1942. He sent dozens of letters to family and friends during the two years he was in the service and the more than 100 letters that remain tell a story of one man's epic journey from Illinois to India. Killed on the Irrawaddy River in Burma in June 1944, Frank becomes one of eight veterans of WWII and the Korean War from Hero Street, USA killed in combat.
The film stars Eric Juarez as Frank Sandoval, Maya Chavez, Cindy Ramos, and Josh Wielenga.
A Bridge too Far from Hero Street tells the story of Pvt. William “Willie” Sandoval who was assigned to Co. F, 504 Parachute Infantry Regiment, 82nd Airborne Division and became part of the ill-fated Operation Market Garden plan. The day after his 21st birthday, Willie was one of 20,000 paratroopers who leapt into the sky over German-occupied Holland on September 17, 1944.
“A Bridge Too Far From Hero Street” features commentary by historian John C. McManus, the author of “September Hope: The American Side of A Bridge Too Far.” Acoustic guitar music was provided by Joe Soliz whose great uncle Claro is among the Hero Street Eight. Quad Cities’ artist Bruce Walters created original art for the film.
Only a block and a half long, Hero Street in Silvis, Illinois lost six young men in World War II and two in the Korean War, more than any other street in America of any size. Hero Street has provided over 100 American military service members since World War II.
The Rundles’ Hero Street proposed ten-part documentary series, will explore the personal and family sagas behind each of the eight heroes and tell an unforgettable true story of American courage, character, and perseverance. "Letters Home to Hero Street" (co-produced with WQPT) was the first film created for the series, and it received a Mid-America Emmy-nomination. “Letters Home” is available with lesson plans to teachers nation-wide via the PBS Learning Media website.
Fourth Wall Films is an award-winning independent film production company formerly located in Los Angeles, and now based in Moline, Illinois.
To order the DVD for Riding the Rails to Hero Street or A Bridge too Far from Hero Street or Fourth Wall Films' Emmy-nominated and award-winning film Letters Home to Hero Street (co-produced with WQPT), CLICK HERE!
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