Embed

Two Homelands. The Life of George Watts

Khrushchev’s translator who became the golden voice of RT

The extraordinary story of a Canadian from a working-class family who became Khrushchev's translator, and later the golden voice of RT. In the softly clipped tones of a bygone era, George Watts looks back over a life shaped by the twists of history and rich in human encounters.

George Watts was born in Winnipeg, Canada, during the Great Depression. His parents were immigrants from Soviet Russia, which had been recently devastated by civil war. He talks about the Canadian government’s homesteading programme, which kept him from going hungry as well as his first unpromising attempts at learning a foreign language.

George Watts has some amazing stories to tell, as a broadcaster and translator whose career spanned from the 1950s Soviet Union to 21st century Russia.

His father wasn’t a communist, but his progressive ideals inspired him to return to the Soviet Union with his family, to help rebuild it after the Second World War. George Watts recalls his father’s emotion as he set foot on his native soil and the unexpected kindness of ordinary people in a country the young man was taught to distrust.

The veteran broadcaster explains why his Canadian English was initially seen as a liability before it turned into his greatest asset. He became the translator for Soviet and post-Soviet leaders from Khrushchev to Yeltsin, a leading commentator at international sports events and the voice-over on Soviet films. He also tells the unlikely tale of how he ended up as a drinking buddy of the mastermind of the Soviet victory in World War II.

George Watts' old school Canadian English has long been the warm and distinctive voice of Russia around the world.

After the fall of the Soviet Union, George Watts could have retired. Instead, he joined RT and became the unmistakable voice of the channel, translating world leaders, narrating documentaries and passing on his experience to a new generation of journalists.

Although Canada and Russia are oceans apart, George Watts doesn’t feel torn, but grateful. “I’m a rich man actually, I have two homelands”, says the Russian-Canadian through whom the Soviet Union, and then Russia, has been speaking to the world.

WATCH TRAILER
Please rate this film

9.10(10 users)

Published: 05 August 2019 11:24

View: 870

Duration

41:29

Tags

don't miss

26:33 501
History 14 October 2020 20:00

Tula: 500 Years Of Heroism. The history of an ancient Kremlin in Tula and more

26:33 3291
Discovering Russia 08 May 2012 00:00

Kremlin Inside

26:33 289
Lifestyle 10 December 2021 12:00

Inside TikTok House. Life and art of a blogger commune

26:33 1329
Military and War 02 March 2022 17:31

Donbass War: Airport. Part 1. 2014. Donetsk Airport as the face of a war

26:33 2093
Human Rights 30 October 2020 20:00

Black in the USSR. Stories of black Americans, who fled to the Soviet Union to escape race discrimination

26:33 907
Emergencies and Disasters 09 August 2020 15:37

Beirut: After the Blast . Unique footage of the aftermath of the blast in Beirut and first-hand accounts of people who were injured

26:33 3628
Discovering Russia 10 September 2012 00:00

Russia's holy wood. Ancient Russian architecture through a British photographer’s lens

26:33 1166
History 17 August 2015 00:00

Gangut: The Tide Breaker. Re-enactment of Peter the Great's first naval victory

26:33 1968
History 27 July 2016 00:00

Semirechye on Fire. A Story of Rebellion

26:33 1256
History 09 February 2018 00:00

Champions of the Spirit. Unknown stories of 1st Soviet Olympic medalists

26:33 1756
History 02 March 2020 18:34

Find My General! The incredible quest for Napoleon's favourite general lost in Russia

26:33 2168
History 01 August 2014 00:00

Attack of the Dead Men. WWI soldiers launched their final offensive after being fatally poisoned by a gas

26:33 5556
Arts and Culture 27 October 2014 00:00

Soviet Paradise. Restorers re-discover the magnificence of Stalin-era architecture

26:33 6678
History 08 May 2017 00:00

Immortal Letters. Private letters give a touching glimpse of lives lived and lost in WWII

26:33 6558
Personalities 19 May 2017 00:00

Skybound. Downed in the wilderness, he lost both legs but kept on flying

26:33 7864
Military and War 08 August 2018 00:00

Georgia’s Gamble Revisited . South Ossetia's war victims, 10 years later of trying to heal

26:33 202
Emergencies and Disasters 10 August 2020 18:00

Good Deed Heroes. The volunteer rescue service that gets pets and pensioners out of scrapes

26:33 47
RT Interview 07 August 2020 16:00

Vladimir Spivakov interview: "Music is love"

26:33 660
Health 13 November 2020 20:00

Self-Harm - the Pandemic of Youth . When it's your BPD child who's self-harming

26:33 515
Meeting with Nature 09 April 2021 17:00

Aurora Hunters. Chasing nature’s fantastic light shows

VIEWER’S CHOICE: 1,000,000 VIEWS AND MORE

VIEW ALL