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White House Workers: Traditions & Memories - Eugene Allen & First Lady Nancy Reagan [Preview Video]

White House butler and maitre d' Eugene Allen served eight U.S. presidents. In 1986, he told First Lady Nancy Reagan that it was time he retired. In response, she invited him to a state dinner held for German Chancellor Helmut Kohl. Allen was probably the only butler ever afforded such an honor. This video was taken in conversation with James Deutsch and Charles Weber of the Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage, and is part of the Smithsonian Folkways Recordings DVD White House Workers: Traditions and Memories.

In 1990, Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage curator Dr. Marjorie Hunt began researching White House workers for the 1992 Smithsonian Folklife Festival's Workers at the White House program. One of the results of the research was a 32-minute documentary, "Workers at the White House," directed by Hunt, that features Allen and other workers who served many presidents. Hunt's documentary, which was produced in collaboration with the White House Historical Association, also appears on the 2009 DVD, "White House Workers: Traditions and Memories," along with an introduction by President Jimmy Carter; a 12-minute video accompanying the Smithsonian traveling exhibition, The Working White House; and two hours of additional interviews produced by Center curator James Deutsch and media director Charles Weber. The DVD illuminates the social and cultural history of America's most famous residence, exploring the skills, customs, knowledge, and experience of a wide range of White House workers.