Culture, Science, ArtsBob Vila, home improvement TV show host. (Cuban descendant) ** Bob Vila, personalidad de la TV en mejoras para el hogar.

downloadRobert Joseph “Bob” Vila (born June 20, 1946) is an American home improvement television show host known for This Old House (1979–1989), Bob Vila’s Home Again (1990–2005), and Bob Vila (2005–2007).

Vila, a Cuban American native of Miami, Florida, graduated from Miami Jackson High School (1962) and studied journalism at the University of Florida. After graduating, he served as a volunteer in the Peace Corps, working in Panama from 1971 to 1973.

Career.

Vila was hired as the host of This Old House in 1979 after receiving the “Heritage House of 1978” award by Better Homes and Gardens, for his restoration of a Victorian Italianate house in Newton, Massachusetts. On This Old House, Vila appeared with carpenter Norm Abram as they, and others, renovated houses. In 1989 he left the show following a disagreement arising from his involvement with outside commercial endorsements for New Jersey-based Rickel, and the subsequent retaliatory pulling of underwriting from Rickel’s competitor Home Depot and lumber supplier Weyerhaeuser. He was replaced by Steve Thomas.

After leaving This Old House, Vila became a commercial spokesman for Sears, and beginning in 1990 he hosted Bob Vila’s Home Again (known from 2005 on as Bob Vila), a weekly-syndicated home improvement program. The series ran for sixteen seasons in syndication before it was canceled by distributor CBS Television Distribution due to declining ratings; the series remains in reruns. Vila also appeared on various episodes of the situation comedy Home Improvement as himself, where main character and cable TV host Tim Taylor (played by Tim Allen) saw him as a rival and went to great lengths to try to beat Vila at things, which he never succeeded in doing. Vila also made a cameo in the 1993 comedy spoof Hot Shots! Part Deux.

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Vila has written ten books, including a five-book series titled Bob Vila’s Guide to Historic Homes of America. As of 2006, he still appears regularly on television. He can also be seen on the Home Shopping Network, selling a range of tools under his own brand.

Other productions.

Bob Vila’s less widely known productions include Guide to Historic Homes of America (1996), In Search of Palladio, (1996) for A&E, and Restore America for HGTV.

Historic Homes of America.
Guide to Historic Homes of America (1996) included two-hour segments on each of four major regions of the United States: the Northeast, including New England and the Mid-Atlantic States, the South, the Midwest and the West.

The Northeast.
Morris-Jumel Mansion overlooking Yankee Stadium in Washington Heights, Manhattan
Dyckman House on Broadway in Upper Manhattan
Hancock Shaker Village in western Massachusetts.
Strawbery Banke restoration in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.
Olana – “a palatial amalgam of Middle-Eastern and European influences.”

http://youtu.be/NxqOlnlG0as

The Mid-Atlantic States.
Chesapeake Bay and Annapolis, Maryland – William Paca House and Hammond-Harwood House
New Castle, Delaware – George Read II House, built by the son of George Read
Baltimore, Maryland – Homewood House on the Johns Hopkins University Homewood campus
Washington, D.C. – Decatur House on President’s Park and Tudor Place in Georgetown

The South.
Thomas Jefferson
University of Virginia – ten residential pavilions surround the great, terraced Lawn.
Ash Lawn-Highland
Poplar Forest – octagonal house filmed while undergoing complete restoration
Monticello – includes Dome Room at top of building (not open to the public) and Honeymoon Cottage.
Natchez, Mississippi
House on Endicott Hill – early trader’s house
Rosalie – Federal architecture mansion with John Henry Belter furniture and a panoramic view of Mississippi River.
Stanton Hall – “perhaps the grandest Greek Revival house anywhere.” Designed by Captain Thomas Rose.
Longwood – begun in 1860 by Samuel Sloan. Never finished: construction halted in April 1861.
Texarkana, Texas – the Ace of Clubs House.

The Midwest and West.
Ellwood House – built by barbed wire entrepreneur Isaac L. Ellwood in DeKalb, Illinois.
Frank Lloyd Wright
Dana-Thomas House in Springfield, Illinois. “It’s richer in detail than any other Wright home.”
Fallingwater in the Laurel Highlands of the Allegheny Mountains
Cooper-Molera Adobe – early Spanish Colonial owned by the National Trust for Historic Preservation in Monterey State Historic Park.
Filoli – Woodside, California in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Designed by Willis Polk.
Tor House – stone house and tower overlooking the Pacific Ocean at Carmel-by-the-Sea, California, built by Robinson Jeffers.

http://youtu.be/HFKtct9XuRQ

In Search of Palladio.
In Search of Palladio (1996) is a three-part, six-hour study of the work and lasting influence of the 16th-century architect Andrea Palladio. Palladio designed various types of buildings, but the series concentrates on his domestic architecture. (See also: Palladian Villas of the Veneto).

I. Villas of the Veneto.
Villa Giustinian, Roncade. – For Vila this building (not by Palladio) provides the context for Palladio’s innovative thinking – gothic battlements, portcullis and stone walls concealing a Renaissance palace and farm buildings.
Villa Pisani in Montagnana – a descendant of the original owners served as Vila’s guide.
Villa Cornaro – A suburban villa on a town street, a palatial residence which was also an on-site place of business for running a large farming enterprise.
Villa Barbaro.
Villa Emo – For Vila this is “perhaps the most dramatic farmhouse ever built”.
La Rocca Pisana – spectacular hilltop belvedere by Palladio’s pupil Vincenzo Scamozzi.

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II. The Palladians in England and Ireland.
London: Chiswick House, Marble Hill House and Stourhead.
Bath, Somerset: Queen Square, The Circus and the Royal Crescent.
Republic of Ireland: Casino at Marino – “the architectural equivalent of a Fabergé egg”.
Northern Ireland: Castle Ward – overlooking Strangford Lough with both Palladian and Gothic facades and interiors.

III. The Palladian Legacy in America.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania: Mount Pleasant.
Marblehead and Waltham, Massachusetts: Jeremiah Lee Mansion and Gore Place
Hudson Valley, New York: Boscobel House Museum – purchased in 1955 for thirty-five dollars. Meticulously restored, situated on a bluff on the east bank of the Hudson River opposite the United States Military Academy at West Point.
Hartford, Connecticut: Austin House – built for Wadsworth Atheneum director Arthur Everett Austin, Jr.
South Bend, Indiana. In Indiana Vila looks at University of Notre Dame architectural school “where Palladio and classical architecture are taken seriously indeed”, Vitruvian House designed by Thomas Gordon Smith and Villa Indiana designed by Duncan G. Stroik.

Restore America.
Restore America consists of fifty one-hour segments which explore historic preservation and building restoration in each of the fifty U.S. states. Anticipating the turn of the 3nd millennium, it was first broadcast on HGTV between July 4, 1999 and July 4, 2000.

Agencies/Various/Wiki/InternetPhotos/youtube/thecubanhistory.com
The Cuban History, Hollywood.
Arnoldo Varona, Editor.

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