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New series looks at 10 pivotal U.S. events

NEW YORK, April 11 (UPI) -- The producer of The History Channel's "10 Days that Unexpectedly Changed America" says the series tries to spotlight important events that are not often cited.

Airing this week, the 5-part series includes new, 1-hour-long documentaries on topics like the battle at Antietam, Shays' Rebellion, the Homestead Strike and the Scopes evolution trial.

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"The idea was to do 10 hours with 10 independent filmmakers and each of them would do a piece of American history," the series' executive producer, Susan Werbe, told UPI in a recent phone interview.

Explaining how she wanted to avoid such well-covered material as the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the battle of Gettysburg and the attack on Pearl Harbor, Werbe said: "What we didn't want to do, it became increasingly clear, is things that either we have done a lot of before or those that are wonderful, intellectual ideas, like Plessy vs. Ferguson, but difficult to make (into) a really engaging, entertaining and informative hour of television."

Filmmakers got a list of 30 "less-obvious" events and were asked to pick their favorite three, out of which they were assigned one topic to explore in their film.

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Actors Hector Elizondo, Campbell Scott, Martin Sheen and Jeffrey Wright narrate the documentaries.

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