Actor Chris
Small
Is 'Honest Abe'
In The
Production
By NELSON
MORAIS
Staff Writer
Abraham Lincoln
was unhappy with his mole.
"I'm just not sold on the mole," Lincoln said.
"It doesn't look real to me."
More than willing to oblige, makeup artist
Debbie Close peeled the mole off Lincoln's face and disappeared to work on making a new
one.
Several minutes later, Lincoln (actually, reenactor Chris Small) had
a new mole, looked at his face in a mirror and said it certainly appeared more authentic than the
last one. But could it be darkened a bit?
Close said she could, and she
did.
The above scenario took place during lengthy preparation for filming
of a video Monday morning at the Dickson-Williams Mansion on President Lincoln and his Christian
faith.
Small, the reenactor with the troublesome mole, said he wanted to
be as accurate as possible in his portrayal of the 16th president for two videos being shot this
week at the mansion.
The filming Monday was for a video on Lincoln's
religious faith.
A separate video will also be filmed this week at the
Dickson-Williams Mansion on Lincoln's thoughts on the emancipation of the
slaves.
The two films may also include some outdoor shots around
Greeneville for a few exterior shots to complement Lincoln as he speaks
on-camera.
Lincoln (Small) will be the only person seen in the
videos.
Director Loren Small, Chris Small's brother, said that when
completed, the two videos -- each about 45 minutes to one hour long -- will hopefully be aired as
early as February on a so-called DTV channel, a new channel of digitally-made films that will be
broadcast once the deadline switch to digital TV broadcasting is
made.
"We're still finalizing details" on when the films will be aired,
but the director said they had "a potential audience of 20 million people" if aired on the DTV
channel.
Work Began Sunday
Though Monday
was the first day of filming on the two productions, work began Sunday with makeup tests to check
skin tones -- and that pesky mole.
The actor, director and makeup artist
on Monday were on the set with Bryan Fowler, director of photography for Fowler Films based in
Chattanooga, and Jim Clayburn and Clarence Small, the actor's father, who said they were "go-fer"
people on the set.
"To be able to film in such a gorgeous period mansion
is just tremendous," Chris Small said.
As befitting the man he is
portraying, Small will begin each video with humor, as expressed by
Lincoln.
He also said Lincoln's faith evolved as he grew. "He had a firm
grounding in the Scriptures," Small said, though the president "went through a period of skepticism
in his 20's."
A Co-Production
The videos
are a co-production of The Lincoln Project and COGfilm, based in Nashville, where the director
lives.
Small first portrayed Lincoln in 1997 and founded The Lincoln
Project in Livonia, Mich., in 2003, when he was a resident there. He and his wife moved to
Greeneville in 2006.
The Lincoln Project is the primary sponsor and
promoter of Lincoln Bicentennial celebrations in Greeneville. This Feb. 12 will be the 200th
anniversary of Lincoln's birth.
Chris Small said he hoped to do a third
video later this year that will compare and contrast Lincoln to President Barack Obama, the nation's
first African-American president.
DVDs will be for sale at
www.thelincolnproject.com, he said.
For information on the Lincoln
Bicentennial events in Greeneville, visit the Web site and look under the tab "Bicentennials" for
the most up-to-date information.