7.9
/10
Self - Narrator is a real person portrayed by Campbell Scott in the TV series American Experience (based on a true story).
In the first episode they appeared in, titled Kinsey (season 17), they were 43 years old.
They appear in 10 episodes out of a total of 387 aired so far
Self - Narrator is also portrayed by Tom Hanks, Glenn Close, Liev Schreiber, F. Murray Abraham, Ellen Burstyn, Keith Carradine, Louis Gossett Jr., Hal Holbrook, Linda Hunt and Kyle MacLachlan.

Self - Narrator

by Campbell Scott

character

Episodes10

  • 7.4
    /10

    Kinsey

    episode S17.E5 february 2005
    Documentary examining the impact and continuing influence of 'Alfred Kinsey''s groundbreaking research on human sexuality.
  • 6.2
    /10

    Hijacked

    episode S18.E8 february 2006
  • 7.6
    /10

    The Lobotomist

    episode S20.E2 january 2008
    This program tells the gripping tale of medical intervention gone awry.
  • 7.7
    /10

    The Trials of J. Robert Oppenheimer

    episode S21.E1 january 2009
    This biography presents a complex and revealing portrait of one of America's most influential scientists.
  • 7.7
    /10

    Clinton, Part 1

    episode S24.E3 february 2012
    Hour 1 follows their bumpy road to the 1992 presidential victory, an amazing triumph over repeated scandals and setbacks. Although they have won the presidency, the Clintons have not yet won the country. In their moment of triumph, the first couple has no way of imagining the turmoil that lies ahead.
  • 7.8
    /10

    Clinton, Part 2

    episode S24.E4 february 2012
    Clinton wins the 1996 election in a landslide, pulling off one of the greatest turnarounds in political history. But events have been set in motion that will soon divide the country and nearly destroy Clinton's presidency.
  • 8.2
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    The Great War: Part 1

    episode S29.E8 april 2017
    Explore America's tortured, nearly three-year journey to war. In August 1914, a war unprecedented in size and violence broke out on the European continent. Ever the idealistic diplomat, Wilson vowed to keep his country out of "the Great War." His neutrality was supported but reports from Europe began to challenge America's delicate position. From behind the battle lines came reports detailing German atrocities in Belgium and France: history's first chemical attack and the sinking of the British liner Lusitania, killing 128 Americans. But Wilson stood firm, asserting that America would not fight - this was not her war. Despite Wilson's pleas, American men and women, volunteered in the hospitals and on the fighting fields of France, and by 1916, there was a growing sense that the war was coming closer to home. On April 2, Wilson asked a joint session of Congress for a declaration of war against Germany, proclaiming that "the world must be made safe for democracy."
  • 8.2
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    The Great War: Part 2

    episode S29.E9 april 2017
    Americas entry into World War 1 is recalled, including the speed of mobilization.
  • 8.1
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    The Great War: Part 3

    episode S29.E10 april 2017
    Chart the ways in which the bloodiest battle in American history, and the ensuing peace, forever changed a president and a nation. In the fall of 1918, the deadly flu swept through cities at home and at the front. When the tide of war turned, the Germans wanted a cease-fire on Wilson's terms. On November 11, 1918, the war was over, but for Wilson, the last fight remained. He negotiated the terms of the peace treaty and won the world over to his League of Nations, but felled by a stroke, he failed to convince the Senate to ratify the Treaty of Versailles, with tragic consequences. While Wilson had heralded the triumph of American values abroad, many were worried about democracy at home; with citizens persecuted, "aliens" interned, and cities torn apart by race riots. The Great War changed the country forever. African Americans who had fought in the war found ways to continue to push for change. Women's suffrage gained converts, including Wilson. And America stepped onto the world stage.
  • 7.4
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    The Secret of Tuxedo Park

    episode S30.E2 january 2018
    Tells the story of the role played by American tycoon and physicist Alfred Lee Loomis and a team of British scientists at Loomis's home laboratory outside New York City in countervailing Nazi advances in nuclear fission during World War II.