Alexander Scourby's moving narration of the Bible has touched and inspired the hearts of millions. Best known for his magnificent voice, Scourby was a noted Broadway Shakespearean actor, a radio and movie actor, and a narrator of classic TV documentaries. One of his greatest achievements, however, was narrating the Bible --- a recording project that took Scourby over one year to complete.________________________

Description


Product Description

Alexander Scourby Narrates The King James Bible Study

With over 70 hours of powerful word-for-word narration and synchronized on-screen text, this KJV Bible On DVD brings the scripture to life with Alexander Scourby’s expressive and inspiring voice.
Scourby KJV Bible On DVD Features:
*No Music — a voice-only narration of the King James Version.
*Complete narration of the New and Old Testaments
*Over 70 hours on two DVDs
*Synchronized graphics and text showing every verse
*Widescreen and full frame display
*Interactive Menus provide direct access to every book and chapter
*Bonus material including a Holy Land Photo Tour
*Optional optional playback modes including:
-Play a single chapter
-Play a single book
*Continuous play of all of the Old and New Testament
*No Region Coding (works anywhere on the earth)
*NTSC TV format

About the Actor

The precise, mellifluous voice of Alexander Scourby, trained in Shakespearean roles in the 1930’s and perfected in radio dramatic parts in the 1940’s, has grow to be a well-known sound on Broadway, in motion pictures, and on television, where as Harriet Van Horne has observed, he’s “the most sensitive and knowing narrator in the business.” His most appreciative audience, alternatively, is found a few of the nearly 80,000 borrowers of Talking Books, the recordings of literature produced under the supervision of the Division for the Blind of the Library of Congress for using the legally blind. Scourby, who has recorded about 300 books for the blind, has described this as “the one work that in reality means something to me.” Nelson Coon, a former regional librarian in the Library of Congress’ program for the blind, has observed in the letters column of the Saturday Review (September 9, 1961): “The dependence on and satisfaction in the voice of Alexander Scourby among blind people is something you wouldn’t consider unless you had been a librarian.”
[amz_corss_sell asin=”B000OPP9Y8″]