GBH Openvault

Frames of Reference; Ellis Island; Meredith Monk's Ellis Island

Part of New Television Workshop.

This excerpt from Meredith Monk's haunting, reflective piece on Ellis Island and the immigrants who passed through there shows re-creations of the medical examinations the immigrants underwent and the conditions they lived through. The sequences were filmed in the run-down buildings of Ellis Island before restoration was started. Approximate date: 1981


License Clip
Series
Frames of Reference
Program
Ellis Island
Title

Meredith Monk's Ellis Island

Series Description

“Frames of Reference” was a series that began circa 1978. Half-hour shows were produced to showcase commissioned and already created works. It was around this time that the focus of the Workshop shifted, to concentrate more heavily on creating works for broadcast. During its time, “Frames of Reference” was the focus of the Workshop’s national arts programming effort. In an attempt to raise funds and foster collaboration, Workshop personnel approached and visited several public television stations nationwide. The major collaborative relationship was with WGBH’s “sister station,” WGBY (Springfield, Mass.). Among the featured artists were Meredith Monk, Remy Charlip, Trisha Brown, and Peter Campus. In 1981, “Frames of Reference” was packaged and offered to PBS, during what is known as “flex time” and was broadcast by WGBH, WNET (New York), and WGBY (Springfield, Mass.). “Frames of Reference” ended as a series ca. 1983, because of a lack of funding. Series release date: 1978

Program Description

Haunting, reflective piece on Ellis Island and the immigrants who passed through there. Black-and-white, near-static shots of actors and actresses realistically portraying turn-of-the-century immigrants are combined with color shots of a modern-day tour guide conducting a tour of the buildings. Re-creations of the medical examinations the immigrants underwent and the conditions they lived through are filmed in the run-down buildings of Ellis Island before restoration was started. Elements of modern dance are also incorporated, as contemporary dance groups often interact with the immigrant re-creations. Ethereal music and chanting accompany the piece, adding to the piece’s reflective tone. Particularly beautiful is a three-minute dance scene performed by what appear to be the ghosts of immigrants.

Asset Type

Clip

Media Type

Video

Subjects
Monk, Meredith
Ellis Island (N.J. and N.Y.)
Emigration and immigration
Dance
Topics
Film and Television
Publication Information
WGBH Educational Foundation
Citation
Chicago: “Frames of Reference; Ellis Island; Meredith Monk's Ellis Island,” GBH Archives, accessed May 1, 2024, http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_7D5A9DF3EB544F87A63E7E7493BF12AE.
MLA: “Frames of Reference; Ellis Island; Meredith Monk's Ellis Island.” GBH Archives. Web. May 1, 2024. <http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_7D5A9DF3EB544F87A63E7E7493BF12AE>.
APA: Frames of Reference; Ellis Island; Meredith Monk's Ellis Island. Boston, MA: GBH Archives. Retrieved from http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_7D5A9DF3EB544F87A63E7E7493BF12AE
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