Award Winning Film and Its Maker to be Featured in Museum
Larry Foley, veteran broadcast journalist, educator and documentary filmmaker will introduce the showing of (two of his films) his film ”The First Boys of Spring” in the Old Independence Regional Museum on Sunday, June 3 at 1:30.
His films have earned seven Mid America Emmys from the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences, and 19 Emmy nominations in writing, journalist enterprise, history, cultural history, special program and community service. He has also received four Best of Festival of Media Arts awards from the international Broadcast Education Association for his films.His most recent award was for his short film about Frank Broyles, which received a Best of Festival Award from Broadcast Education in Las Vegas last April.
His “The First Boys of Spring” is an hour-long documentary film, narrated by Arkansas native Billy Bob Thornton. It shows the close connections between Hot Springs, Arkansas, and early professional baseball payers and teams. Despite its somewhat remote location, the town was the pre-season training site of choice for decades before many teams began going to Florida or Arizona sites for Spring Training.
Using vintage photos, interviews, anecdotes, re-enactments and historic locations in Hot Springs the film tells the interesting and often overlooked story of the important role the Spa City played in helping baseball become the national pastime.
Between the 1880s and the 1920s early spring found many teams from big-league baseball, the minor leagues and the Negro Leagues in Hot Springs, AR, preparing for the upcoming season. The film shows Babe Ruth, Honus Wagner, Satchel Paige, Cool Papa Bell, and Cy Young and others as they trained there. They were just a few of the many players on dozens of well-known teams who regularly spent pre-season time there.
In 1939 about half of the first class of inductees into the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, NY, had spent time training in Hot Springs. Many teams and players attributed their on-field success to the time they spent conditioning, training and playing exhibition games in the hills and valleys of Hot Springs.
Players loved to begin conditioning and training there, believing the famed mineral waters helped them condition their bodies and shed extra winter pounds. They also appreciated other Hot Springs diversions such as horse racing, gambling, and the generally free and easy lifestyle of that era in Hot Springs.
Filmmaker Foley is professor and chair of the School of Journalism and Strategic Media at the University of Arkansas. In 2017, he was inducted into the Mid America Emmy Silver Circle for a distinguished career invested in teaching, reporting, writing, producing and directing stories, mostly about his beloved home state of Arkansas. He was honored because he personified the spirit of innovation, passion, creativity and commitment that are hallmarks of excellence in television arts and sciences.
His PBS credits include The Buffalo Flows, Saving the Eagles, The Lost Squadron and When Lightning Struck: Sago of an American Warplane. Foley’s scripts have been narrated by President Bill Clinton, Academy Aware winners Billy Bob Thornton, Mary Steenburgen and Ray McKinnon, county music star Joe Nichols, ABC reporter T.J. Holmes, and NFL Hall of Fame broadcaster Charlie Jones.
This program is open and free to the public……..
Cathy Drew is a lifelong resident of the region that she loves to promote. She was born in downtown Batesville in the late ’60s, located in one of the eight counties she now enjoys encouraging people to visit.
Drew became associated with the Ozark Gateway Region in 1990 while working at the ad agency (The Media Market Inc.). The agency handled marketing for the regional association, where she and her co-workers produced an annual tabloid publication. She began working as the Ozark Gateway Region director in June 2000.
After Drew became director, she took the region to the next level by helping the tourism organization create a new website and moved it from the old newspaper paper tabloid publication to a color magazine format. She helped open a visitor center for the Ozark Gateway, allowing visitors to pick up information from the entire state 24/7. Over the years, Drew has helped the organization meet new marketing goals, such as in- and out-of-state marketing, assuring that all 100,000 copies of their magazines are distributed each year.
In 2016, she assisted in creating the first Ozark Gateway Region Golf Classic. The tournament continues to grow each year, allowing the organization to expand its co-op program and helping each county have dedicated promotion. Drew stays busy at Ozark Gateway as the ad sales manager, magazine editor, day-to-day office operations, trade show representative, and magazine distribution representative, all while ensuring that the region is represented all over Arkansas and southern Missouri.
Drew was featured in several local and statewide publications over the years, as well as the 1997 cover of the Ozark Gateway Region tabloid, along with her then 4-year-old son, Jon. She has received several awards, such as the Batesville Rotarian of the Year in 2010 and a three-time Paul Harris Fellow.
She also has served as an Independence County election commissioner for several years. She now serves as their co-election coordinator, helping with behind-the-scenes management of voting equipment, day-to-day election deadlines, and poll worker training.
Drew is Batesville Rotary Club Past President, and is the Rotary Clubs’ current membership chair.
In March of 2018, Drew was honored with induction into the Arkansas Tourism Hall of Fame for her many years of dedicated service to the tourism industry.