HENRY DAVID THOREAU TO AIR ON PBS
MARCH 2026
Executive Produced by Ken Burns and
Don Henley, Directed by Erik Ewers
and Christopher Loren Ewers
Thoreau Voiced by Jeff Goldblum,
Film Narrated by George Clooney, Additional Voices by Ted Danson, Tate Donovan,
and Meryl Streep
November
21, 2025 - HENRY DAVID THOREAU, a new, three-part, three-hour film directed by
Erik Ewers and Christopher Loren Ewers, and executive produced by Ken Burns and
Don Henley, will air on March 30 (Episodes 1 and 2) and March 31, 2026 at 9:00
p.m. ET (check local listings), PBS announced today. A trailer for the film appeared following
Episode 5 of Burns’s THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION last night. You can see it here.
I wanted to live deep and suck out all the marrow of life, to live
so sturdily and Spartan-like as to put to rout all that was not life, to
cut a broad swath and shave close, to drive life into a corner, and
reduce it to its lowest terms, and, if it proved to be mean, why then to
get the whole and genuine meanness of it, and publish its meanness to
the world; or if it were sublime, to know it by experience, and be able
to give a true account of it in my next excursion.
¿Qué
sucedería si hubiera un impuesto sobre las palabras, sobre el lenguaje,
para incentivar las producciones propias? ¿No tenemos el genio para
acuñar nuestras propias palabras?
HDT
Talk about learning our letters and being literate! Why, the roots of
letters are things. Natural objects and phenomena are the original
symbols or types which express our thoughts and feelings, and yet
American scholars, having little or no root in the soil, commonly strive
with all their might to confine themselves to the imported symbols
alone. All the true growth and experience, the living speech, they would
fain reject as “Americanisms.” It is the old error, which the church,
the state, the school ever commit, choosing darkness rather than light,
holding fast to the old and to tradition. A more intimate knowledge, a
deeper experience, will surely originate a word. When I really know that
our river pursues a serpentine course to the Merrimack, shall I
continue to describe it by referring to some other river no older than
itself which is like it, and call it a meander? It is no more meandering
than the Meander is musketaquidding. As well sing of the nightingale
here as the Meander. What if there were a tariff on words, on language,
for the encouragement of home manufacturers? Have we not the genius to
coin our own? Let the schoolmaster distinguish the true from the
counterfeit.
HENRY
DAVID THOREAU examines the life and work of the 19th-century writer in the
context of antebellum New England and the larger United States, as well as
through the universal themes he focused on in his writings: an individual’s
relationship to the state, how to live an authentic life, our connection to
nature, and the impact of race on American life. Set against the political and
social tensions of the mid-19th century, the film traces Thoreau’s journey from
his early days in Concord, Massachusetts to his deep engagement with the moral
crises of his time, including industrialization, slavery, war, and
environmental degradation. Through his essays, journals, and landmark works
such as Walden and Civil Disobedience, he became an inspiration
for generations of writers, thinkers, and activists.
The
film draws on a rich collection of archival materials, newly filmed cinematography
in Concord and beyond, and interviews with scholars, writers, and
environmentalists. Among the people featured in the film are Pico Iyer, Douglas
Brinkley, Lois Brown, Kristen Case, Laura Dassow Walls, Clay Jenkinson, Robin
Kimmerer, J. Drew Lanham, Bill McKibben, Michael Pollan, Rebecca Solnit, and
more.
HENRY
DAVID THOREAU is narrated by George Clooney and voices are provided by Ted
Danson (Ralph Waldo Emerson), Tate Donovan (William Ellery Channing), Jeff
Goldblum (Henry David Thoreau), and Meryl Streep (Lidian Emerson, Margaret
Fuller, Mary Merrick Brooks, and Maria Thoreau).
“Thoreau’s
insistence that conscience must guide citizenship, and that solitude can be a
source of strength, continues to speak directly to our time,” said executive
producer Ken Burns. “He challenged Americans to ask hard questions about who we
are and what kind of society we want to build, a challenge that remains as
urgent today as it was in his day. But perhaps most importantly he asked us to
stop and to pay attention to the world around us.”
Executive
producer Don Henley, founding member and lead singer of the Eagles and a
longtime advocate for environmental causes, added: “Thoreau was not only a
pioneering environmentalist, but also a prophetic philosopher who believed in
the power of individual action. His writings have been a guiding force
throughout my life. This film honors his legacy while asking what it means to
live with purpose in the 21st century.”
Henley,
founder and chairman of The Walden Woods Project, has long worked to preserve
the physical and philosophical legacy of Thoreau. Established in 1990, the
organization led a successful campaign to protect nearly 200 acres of
threatened land surrounding Walden Pond and has since become a national leader
in conservation and environmental education. The Walden Woods Project promotes
Thoreau’s writings and values through research, public programming, and efforts
to engage new generations in discussions around environmental stewardship and
civic responsibility.
HENRY
DAVID THOREAU is the latest in a long line of PBS documentaries that explore
the American experience through the lives of extraordinary individuals. As the
nation prepares to mark the 250th anniversary of its founding, the film offers
a timely meditation on democracy, nature, and the responsibilities of
citizenship. It is also the first full-length documentary devoted to Thoreau,
one of the country’s greatest writers and among the most enduring thinkers and
artists of what came to be known as the Transcendentalist Movement in America.
“Thoreau
famously retreated into nature not to escape the world but to better understand
it,” the director Erik Ewers said. “His writing about the wild and nature
remains so vibrant because he was acutely aware of how the surrounding
countryside was teetering on the edge of industrialization. He believed
strongly that we have a connection to the landscape and nature and must remain
grounded to fully experience what it means to be human.”
Equally,
Thoreau was very active in the most pressing political and social issues of the
day, especially abolitionism and slavery. He lectured and wrote in support of
freedom for the enslaved, defied the Fugitive Slave Act, and defended the right
of citizens to resist unjust laws. His insistence on moral action would
influence later generations of reformers, from John Muir and the early
conservation movement to Mahatma Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. The film
examines the universal nature of many of his writings, and his concerns about
humanity and the “quiet desperation” of life by also reflecting on current
events and challenges, through footage focused on other periods in American
history and social and cultural issues today.
“Thoreau’s
popularity and writings are often presented as simplified statements about
wellness or simple living,” said the director Christopher Loren Ewers. “To the
contrary, they provide deep, thoughtful investigations that combine an
appreciation for nature and the environment with a keen sense of moral
responsibility. Not only is he one of the first great nature writers in
American literature but he’s also an acute observer of the times.”
The
film illuminates the vibrant intellectual and political community that shaped
and nurtured Thoreau. Concord, Massachusetts in the mid-19th century was a
crucible of new ideas about religion, nature, politics, and social reform.
Thoreau moved among the towering figures of American thought, such as his
mentor Ralph Waldo Emerson, Margaret Fuller, Bronson Alcott, Frederick
Douglass, the radical abolitionists of Boston, and the even more controversial
John Brown, engaging in debates that would define the era.
Viewers
will also encounter the broader world of reform and resistance in which Thoreau
participated. The film situates his life within the ferment of antebellum
America: the fight against slavery, the rise of women’s rights, the impact of
industrialization on New England’s landscape, and the continued displacement of
Native peoples. Thoreau’s journals reveal how these forces shaped his thinking
and his art.
At
the same time, the series explores the Transcendentalist movement, of which
Thoreau was a central figure. Transcendentalism’s emphasis on self-reliance,
spiritual intuition, and the moral dimension of everyday life informed
Thoreau’s experiments at Walden Pond and his lifelong quest to live
deliberately. The film draws out how these ideas still animate debates about
the environment, citizenship, and individual conscience.
Ultimately,
HENRY DAVID THOREAU presents a portrait of a man both rooted in his time and
speaking far beyond it. By placing his life and writings within the great moral
struggles of the 19th century, the film underscores why Thoreau endures as a
guide to the tensions and possibilities of American democracy—offering wisdom
and provocation as the nation approaches its 250th anniversary.
HENRY
DAVID THOREAU is a Ewers Brothers Production, in partnership with Florentine
Films and WETA Washington, D.C. Directed by Erik Ewers and Christopher Loren
Ewers. Written by David Blistein. Produced by Julie Coffman and Susan Shumaker,
Producers Christopher Loren Ewers and Erik Ewers. Director of Photography
Christopher Loren Ewers. Edited by Erik Ewers and Ryan Gifford. Co-Produced by
Cauley Powell. Original Music Score by David Cieri. Narrated by George Clooney.
Voice of Thoreau by Jeff Goldblum, and other voices by Ted Danson, Meryl Streep
and Tate Donovan. The executives in charge for WETA are John F. Wilson
(posthumously) and Kate Kelly. Executive Producers are Ken Burns and Don
Henley.
Major funding for HENRY DAVID THOREAU was
provided by The Better Angels Society and its members: The Keith Campbell
Foundation for the Environment and Mark A. Tracy. Major funding was also provided by Jeff
Skoll, The Mansueto Foundation, Tyson Foods, Inc., and the Tyson Family
Foundation. Additional funding was provided by The Arthur Vining Davis
Foundations, The Neil and Anna Rasmussen Foundation, Roxanne Quimby Foundation
Inc and Elizabeth Kenny.
About WETA
WETA is the leading
public broadcaster in the nation’s capital, serving Virginia, Maryland and the
District of Columbia with educational initiatives and high-quality programming
on television, radio and digital. WETA Washington, D.C., is the second-largest
producing station for public television, with news and public affairs programs
including PBS News Hour
and Washington Week with The Atlantic; films by Ken Burns and Florentine
Films, such as The American Buffalo and The American Revolution;
series and documentaries by Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr., including Finding
Your Roots with Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and Great Migrations: A People on
the Move; performance specials including National Memorial Day Concert and
A Capitol Fourth; and health content from Well Beings, a multiplatform
campaign. Sharon Percy Rockefeller is president and CEO. More information on
WETA and its programs and services is available at weta.org.
Visit facebook.com/wetatvfm on
Facebook.
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MEDIA
CONTACT: DKCThoreau@dkcnews.com
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