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Film Features Film/TV

A Conversation With Jamie Harmon

When the COVID-19 pandemic exploded in March 2020, photographer Jamie Harmon set out to document the unique moment by taking portraits of Memphians in their homes. Now, the Memphis Quarantine project is a massive new photography exhibition at the Crosstown Arts gallery.

I spoke with Harmon about his work, his history in Memphis, and the weight of bearing witness to history for WKNO-TV. “In Conversation With Jamie Harmon” will air on April 8, 2022 — but since that’s the same weekend the exhibit will be closing, WKNO has made the full interview available on its YouTube channel. You can watch the entire interview below, and check out the exhibit for free inside Crosstown Concourse.

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“All Aboard with Mr. Be”

MisterBe.jpg

Kids growing up in Memphis in the 1960s and ’70s surely remember a popular show on Channel 10 called All Aboard with Mr. Be.

You don’t remember it? Then stop reading right here, turn off your computer, and do something productive with your lives.

But if you do remember this show, then I’m going to tell you more about it, like it or not.

First of all, the main character’s name was indeed spelled “Be.” I know this because some time ago I talked to a nice gentleman named Holden Potter, who produced and directed the show, and he ought to know. Mr. Be himself was a local actor named Allen Bates, who dressed up like a locomotive engineer, and this kindly old fellow served as the host to the half-hour show, which featured films and puppets, including one called Ponce de Lion (a play on the name of the Spanish explorer Ponce de Leon, you see).

“This was in the days before organized kindergarten and day care,” Potter told me, “so the show was designed to fill in for that.” They went with an old-timey train motif because back then, in the 1960s and 1970s, everything was high-tech and plastic, and Potter says, “We wanted to convey that grandfather image, smelling of pipe tobacco and oranges, and trains had a certain romance. Kids knew that trains could take you anywhere you wanted to go.”