Dayton Daily News

High-tech exhibit gives visitors close look at MLK

- By Sophia Tareen

CHICAGO — Imagine being so close to Martin Luther King Jr. as he gives one of the world’s most famous speeches that you notice the creases in his face and then realize the late civil rights leader is looking you square in the eye.

That’s the intense personal moment organizers are striving for with a one-of-akind virtual reality exhibit at Chicago’s DuSable Museum of African American History. Called “The March,” it captures the 1963 March on Washington during which King delivered his iconic “I Have a Dream” address.

“The speech is so well known and the ways people are used to seeing it is kind of archival, grainy two-dimensiona­l film,” said Mia Tramz, an editorial director of immersive experience­s at TIME, which helped create the project. “By being able to see it with your own two eyes and feel like you’re standing there, you not only get the message of the words, but the message of the energy that he put behind those words.”

The project has the rare full backing from King’s estate, which fiercely guards his likeness and speeches. The high-tech effort took years of research on King’s gestures and expression­s, as well as interviews with attendees.

Creators said it was inspired by an archive image of King giving a different speech on the National Mall, shot from his perspectiv­e looking out. TIME, which features King in a March issue, worked with companies including a production studio run by actress Viola Davis and her husband, Julius Tennon. Davis narrates part of the project.

Visitors start in an dark empty room with audio of people involved in key events leading up to the march. One is Hank Thomas, who was a Freedom Rider — activists who protested segregatio­n by sitting in bus seats reserved for whites and who experience­d violence and jail.

After that, attendees are outfitted with heavy virtual reality headsets that block out the outside world and replace it with three-dimensiona­l glimpses of Aug. 28, 1963, on the National Mall. In what sometimes looks like a video game, visitors march along Constituti­on Avenue and then stand in the crowd of some 250,000.

Then the scenery changes again. Visitors find themselves standing on the steps of the Lincoln Memorial and an arm’s length from King, whose hand gestures and facial expression­s are brought to life. After delivering part of the speech, he walks by and locks eyes, a moment creators say is unparallel­ed.

“You’re not listening to it. You’re not reading it. You are actually in it. And there is a point that you’re listening to it for the first time because you’re experienci­ng it, because you’re actually there,” Davis said. “It’s those experience­s that are unforgetta­ble.”

The permission from King’s estate was also unusual.

Run by King’s children and known to be litigious, the estate closely guards any use of King’s image, name and work. The estate initially balked at plans to put a life-size commemorat­ive King statue at the Georgia Capitol and didn’t grant rights to speeches for the 2014 film “Selma,” which won an Oscar for the best original song and was nominated for best picture.

Tramz declined to discuss how the project got the estate’s backing. Messages left for Atlanta-based Intellectu­al Properties Management, which manages King’s estate and controls rights to his works and images, weren’t returned.

The experience isn’t for the faint of heart. Participan­ts must sign a waiver warning of possible risks, such as dizziness, and there’s a built-in “decompress­ion zone.” The 15-minute experience isn’t recommende­d for children under 13.

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 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A visitor experience­s “The March” virtual reality exhibit at the DuSable Museum of African American History in Chicago ahead of the project’s launch.
ASSOCIATED PRESS A visitor experience­s “The March” virtual reality exhibit at the DuSable Museum of African American History in Chicago ahead of the project’s launch.

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