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V. Entertainment & Guests |
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Assembled from lists and records found in the FBI documents, the jobs and workers listed in the Entertainment & Guests department are in this pdf file:
As a general rule, live entertainment was included as a part of a Rally meeting, although there were exceptions: not every Rally featured entertainment, and there were occasions - for new arrivals or when guests visited, for example - which called for special celebration. Originating in Redwood Valley and carried through to San Francisco, the entertainment always raised spirits and let Peoples Temple rejoice as a community. Edith Roller reported live entertainment 29 times in six months in 1978. Entertainment included singing, dancing, skits and plays - from serious to outrageous - readings, etc. Some of the community's performers - notably the Jonestown Express - took their talents to neighboring towns and villages, and even went to Georgetown.
One example of an evening of entertainment was videotaped on 17 November 1978, with Congressman Leo Ryan and members of his entourage in attendance, and featured dancers, the singing of Diana Wilkinson, skits and more. Edith Roller's journal entry of 17 March 1978 gives a summary of the entertainment program below, as an example. A group of new arrivals to Jonestown came in by boat from Georgetown that Friday evening. This group had 48 persons, including Eugene Smith, Vern and Mark Gosney, Edith Cordell, Larry Layton, among others. Jim wanted the family to out to give them a strong welcome, get them off to a good start, as there had been problems in coming across country. And the red carpet was rolled out with the following program: The Program
Movies/Videos Entertainment also included feature-length movies one or two nights a week. Some were required viewing, especially those which presented socialist, communist or political themes, but most were not. Videotapes were sent to Jonestown from the U.S., and included a wide array of movies, children's programs and documentaries. The Temple also rented 16mm films from Georgetown. Some films mentioned in Edith's Journal: On a Clear Day You Can See Forever, The Outfit, Turning Point, Newman's Law, Far from the Maddening Crowd, Parallax View, Z, Sesame Street, a documentary on Castro, movies on the Nazis, Rosenberg TV documentary, Three Days of the Condor, The Battle of Algiers, Roots, Tora! Tora! Tora!, and Diary of Anne Frank. Roller also speaks of the "Owl Movies" shown many nights in August 1978, though she never went to them. Library Jonestown had a large library with up to 20,000 books. Teresa King was the librarian. One of the more complete lists of the Jonestown community was that of the library: Each library card included the person's name, residence, birth date, and a list of books checked out to him or her. [This list appears on the FBI release to this website under FOIA, CD2, section 124. All pages. Serial CC-1 PT Member Cards] Music, Tapes & Tape Recorders Jonestown dorms and cottages had electricity, for lights mostly. But people had other things too. Roller had an electric typewriter that she used (and reluctantly loaned out). She borrowed someone's iron a number of times. The most popular non-essential in residences, though, were cassette players, for recorded music that people brought with them from the States. Approximately 200 of the tapes recovered in Jonestown after November 1978 were music tapes, ranging from commercially-produced cassettes to classical music programs dubbed from San Francisco radio stations. The subject of musical tapes found its way into Jonestown Rallies and Jim Jones' addresses to the community. While he said he understood the need for singing and dancing, he often criticized popular music as juvenile, distracting and even counterrevolutionary. He urged residents to listen to "better" music, especially classical, but also music from the 1940s or songs with political themes or traditional music from Third World cultures. Eventually, the ongoing controversy over music was joined when - as Roller described in her journal entry for March 28, 1978 - a new "edict" called in all tape recorders, an order which led to much unhappiness. After an attack from outside, there was paranoia that a traitor inside would use a cassette recorded to tape a message to send out. Later the recorders themselves were reportedly sold to raise money. There was still some music in Jonestown, as classical music was played over the P.A. system. Guests - Visitors - Workers From the founding of the Agricultural Mission in 1974, there were many visitors to Jonestown, ranging from local people - those who came for medical support, Guyanese workers in Jonestown, and government officials - to representatives of Guyana's national government advising the community on agricultural, medical, educational, and other issues, to people from the U.S. visiting Jonestown residents, to U.S. Embassy officials, and more. Over time specific formats, activities and people were assigned for various kinds of visitors. For the most important visitors, much preparation and staging was done. Not all expected visits materialized. There are few records for July and after August. A Guest Book was kept which visitors were asked to sign. What survives of this are 30+ pages from January to November 1978 with spaces for about 15 signatures per page. [This list appears on the FBI release to this website under FOIA CD2 vol 97 pp 163-200 (RYMUR-89-4286-Bulky 2018-C-6-a-1a to 6-a-2i.)] - Don Beck
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