Screening & Live Event
Of the Deep: Films by the Department of Tropical Research
Sunday, February 25, 2018, 2:00 p.m.
Museum of the Moving Image - Redstone Theater
With Fabien Cousteau and Howard Rosenbaum in person
Introduced by Director of the New York Aquarium Jon Forrest Dohlin
William Beebe in the 1930s, in his steel-walled sphere—the Bathysphere—made record-setting dives fathoms below the ocean surface to discover marine organisms living in darkness. A famed ecologist, ornithologist, and ichthyologist from New York, Beebe’s research crew was named the Department of Tropical Research (DTR). Women and men, scientists and artists, belonged to the DTR (part of the New York Zoological Society, now known as the Wildlife Conservation Society), and some went on to Hollywood fame. Members Ruth Rose and Ernest Schoedsack made King Kong, and Floyd Crosby (Tabu, High Noon) got his first professional experience behind a movie camera on a 1927 expedition to Haiti. On February 25, Science on Screen presents documentary films that Crosby and other DTR members shot, some of which have not been screened since the Department of Tropical Research toured with them in the 1930s.
The film program will be introduced by Jon Dohlin, Vice President and Director of the New York Aquarium, and presented with live musical accompaniment by High Water. It will be followed by a discussion about marine ecology and underwater filmmaking with conservation biologist and whale researcher Howard Rosenbaum and Fabien Cousteau, grandson of pioneer Jacques Cousteau and himself an oceanographic explorer and filmmaker. The program duration is approximately 90 mins.
Before the film program, hand-colored lanternslides from the Department of Tropical Research expeditions will play. Music from DTR cinematographer Floyd Crosby’s son, David Crosby (Crosby, Stills, & Nash), will also be featured.
Credits: All footage courtesy the Wildlife Conservation Society. Lanternslide film courtesy Katherine McLeod, Mark Dion, Madeleine Thompson, and Sarah Enid Hagey. Special thanks to archivist at the Wildlife Conservation Society Archives Madeleine Thompson.
Tickets: $15 (Free for members at the Film Lover level and MoMI Kids Premium levels and above). Order tickets online. (Members may contact members@movingimage.us with questions regarding online reservations.)
Ticket purchase includes same-day admission to the Museum (see gallery hours). View the Museum’s ticketing policy here. For more information on membership and to join online, visit our membership page.
About the speakers
Fabien Cousteau is an oceanographic explorer, conservator, and filmmaker who grew up on his grandfather Jacques Cousteau’s ships. Cousteau led the longest scientific expedition on the world’s only underwater marine laboratory, living underwater for 31 days. He has studied sharks, coral reefs, and worked to restore ecosystems. Cousteau has used film underwater to study marine animals, and has collaborated to produce television specials such as Attacks of the Mystery Shark (National Geographic), Mind of a Demon (CBS), and Ocean Adventures (PBS). Cousteau is founder of the Ocean Learning Center, which raises awareness and leads initiatives to help preserve marine habitats and life.
Howard Rosenbaum is the Director of the Wildlife Conservation Society’s Ocean Giants Program and has more than 25 years experience in marine mammal research and conservation activities involving a number of large whale and dolphin species. His research interests involve the application of current techniques in molecular biology to the conservation of wildlife. In addition to his position at the Wildlife Conservation Society, Dr. Rosenbaum is a Senior Scientist at the American Museum of Natural History, is on the United States delegation to the International Whaling Commission, and is a faculty member at Columbia University.
Jon Forrest Dohlin is a Vice President of the Wildlife Conservation Society and the Director of the New York Aquarium, where he oversees the care and exhibition of its animals and conservation programs. Under his leadership, the Aquarium is nearing completion of the $150 million "Ocean Wonders: Sharks!" exhibit which will introduce visitors to New York City’s marine wildlife and the work WCS researchers are doing to protect it. The Aquarium is also beginning construction on a $100 million rebuild of the areas damaged by Hurricane Sandy, which will include resiliency measures to protect the facility in future weather events.