
Pittsburgh, PA -
March 13, 2008 -
George Westinghouse is considered America's
greatest industrialist and the only man who
would go up against Thomas Edison, and win.
His victory over Edison during the Battle of the
Currents set the stage for the entire future of
electric power. The Westinghouse air brake is
considered one of the most important inventions
in history and saved countless lives.
Writer, Director and Producer Mark Bussler has
produced the first and only documentary film
about George Westinghouse that brings this
forgotten role model to the screen. (Information
and trailer available at
www.WestinghouseFilm.com)
“George Westinghouse is possibly the most
important American of all time who has been lost
to history. We celebrate inventors like Howard
Hughes and Thomas Edison because they were
dramatic and eccentric individuals.
Westinghouse was a kind, reserved engineer,
inventor, businessman, husband and father. He
wasn’t eccentric - but he did more to advance to
United States’ industrial power than any person
who ever lived.
At 22 years of age he saw thousands of lives
lost in the railroading industry and created the
air brake. He worked with Nikola Tesla and
brought practical electricity into our homes.
Westinghouse built companies that manufactured
generators, turbines and railroading devices. He
created tens of thousands of jobs and built
entire communities around them. Kids today could
relate him to Bill Gates - yet
without Westinghouse there would be no
computers.
Today the world is electrified at a rate never
before seen in human existence and most power is
still generated by methods that were around 100
years ago. George Westinghouse is the role model
that America’s students need today to face the
engineering trials of the future.” says Bussler.
Westinghouse
is a feature-length documentary that
features rare and never before seen footage,
industrial films and photos previously buried
deep within the Westinghouse archives.
Filmed in High Definition, the film includes
interviews with the following:
-
Edward J. Reis, executive
director, George Westinghouse Museum
(1998-2007)
-
William H. Terbo, grandnephew
of visionary genius Nikola Tesla
-
Quentin R. Skrabec, Jr., PhD,
author, George
Westinghouse: Gentle Genius
-
Former Westinghouse employees
The film is currently available
on DVD via preorder on Amazon.com and will be on
sale at Internet retailers and retail stores
nationwide on April 8th.
Additionally,
Westinghouse
will premiere on screen at the Senator John
Heinz History Center in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
on Sunday, April 13, 2008 at 1 pm. A panel
discussion will follow.
For additional information on the film, contact
Julie Halapchuk at 412.967.2700 or
jhalapch@inecom.com.
For more information on this premiere, contact
Sandra L. Baker at 412.454.6412 or
slbaker@hswp.org.
Note to Editor:
Mark Bussler's credits include EXPO - Magic
of the White City narrated by Gene Wilder,
World War 1 - American Legacy narrated by
David Carradine, Horses of Gettysburg
narrated by Ronald F. Maxwell, Gettysburg and
Stories of Valor narrated by Keith Carradine
and Johnstown Flood narrated by Richard
Dreyfuss.
Inecom Media
Contact:
Julie Halapchuk
Inecom Entertainment Company
1.888.258.5164
jhalapch@inecom.com
www.Inecom.com |