The Fair That Launched The 20th Century

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The Fair That Launched The 20th Century (NAPSA)—It was a showplace for startling new technologies, an exhibition of the best of 19th century high culture and a decidedly low-brow entertainment event along its Midway. It was Chicago’s great Columbian Exposition, an MAGIC OF THE WHITE City event historians say introduced Americato the 20th century. Fair-goers marveled at electric lights, refrigeration, long-distance telephones and a primitive motion picture. They were in awe of the giant, 26-story high, first-ever Ferris wheel. They were im- pressed by the renownedclassical exhibition halls—“The White City’—designed by more than a dozen of the country’s greatest architects. They relaxed by plazas and lakes planned by Frederick Law Olmsted, co-creator of New York’s Central Park. Thoughelectric lighting was not unknown at the time of the fair, the scale of its use was staggering, as both George Westinghouse and Thomas Edison helped plan it. The World’s Fair generated and used three times as muchelectricity as the rest of Chicago at the time. Visitors rode on an overhead electric railway and navigated the lakes in battery-powered boats—both novelties in those days. Fair-goers also indulged in the noisy carnival-like amusements of the Midway—which was both huge and hugely popular. Altogether, this World’s Fair was one of the most successful ever. Open only six months, it drew 28 million admissions. L. Frank Baum, the writer of VPN ees ' a : Relive the 1893 World’s Fair with anew DVD. the “Wizard of Oz” books, got his inspiration for the Emerald City there. The lovely Japanese pavilion inspired a young Frank Lloyd Wright. Another deeply impressed visitor was the father of Walt Disney—whose Disneyland and Disney World are considered today’s successors to much that was new at the 1893 World’s Fair. Now the amazing Chicago World’s Fair is being brought back to life in a stunning new documentary called “Expo—Magic of the White City,” narrated by actor Gene Wilder. It’s available at Borders, Barnes & Noble, Best Buy andothersas well as onlineretail- ers. For more information, visit www.ColumbianExpo.com. “Expo” is rated PG by the Motion Pic- ture Association of America.