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  1. Kelly Tyler-Lewis is a filmmaker and author. Kelly is best known for winning a 2002 Emmy for her historical documentary film, Shackleton’s Voyage of Endurance, which won as 'Best Historical Documentary'. The film had also been nominated for 'Best Documentary'.

  2. Mar 27, 2007 · by Kelly Tyler-Lewis (Author) 4.5 395 ratings. See all formats and editions. The untold story of the last odyssey of the heroic age of Antarctic exploration. Sir Ernest Shackleton s 1914 Antarctic endeavor is legend, but for sheer heroism and tragic nobility, nothing compares to the saga of the Ross Sea party.

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    • Kelly Tyler-Lewis
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    • Penguin Books
  3. ABOUT THE AUTHOR. The Lost Men is Kelly Tyler-Lewis’s first book. In 2002, she was a participant in the National Science Foundation Artists and Writers Program in Antarctica for two months, traveling to locales frequented by the Ross Sea party and interviewing scientists whose research illuminates the historic events.

  4. Kelly Tyler-Lewis – Park & Fine. A Senior Member of Wolfson College and a Visiting Scholar of the Scott Polar Research Institute, both of the University of Cambridge, Kelly is also a consulting historian for the British Film Institute.

  5. Kelly Tyler-Lewis is a filmmaker and author. Kelly is best known for winning a 2002 Emmy for her historical documentary film, Shackleton’s Voyage of Endurance, which won as 'Best Historical Documentary'. The film had also been nominated for 'Best Documentary'.

    • (120)
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  7. Tyler-Lewis, Kelly. PERSONAL: Female. CAREER: Historian, film producer, and author. University of Cambridge, Scott Polar Research Institute, Cambridge, England, visiting scholar, 2002-04; National Science Foundation 's Artists and Writers Program, Antarctica, former researcher. AWARDS, HONORS: Emmy Award, for documentary film. WRITINGS:

  8. Kelly Tyler-Lewis, a historian, is Visiting Scholar of the Scott Polar Research Institute of the University of Cambridge, England. Her research took her to Britain, Australia, New Zealand, and Antarctica, where she spent two months with the U.S. Antarctic Program.

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