I 
                  have always found this 
                  YouTube clip of Franklin Delano Roosevelt extremely fascinating. 
                  It appears to have been taken from a Yazoo DVD entitled Times 
                  Ain't Like They used to Be-Early Rural and Popular Music from 
                  Rare Original Film Masters. You'll notice that when 
                  to film begins, the banjo player to the right of FDR asks "Governor, 
                  is there a special piece you want us to play?" He doesn't 
                  call him "Mr. President." That's because the film 
                  was made on January 26, 1933. Roosevelt had already been elected 
                  to his first term in November, but it would be five more weeks 
                  before his inauguration in early March, when he would deliver 
                  his famous line, "We have nothing to fear but fear itself." 
                  At this time, however, he was still the Governor of New York 
                  state, probably taking a much needed break after a very hard 
                  fought presidential election. Herbert Hoover was still officially 
                  in the White House, though yesterday's news. This would be the 
                  last time a president would be inaugurated in March. The Twentieth 
                  Amendment was to be ratified later in 1933, which moved up the 
                  date to January 20th.
                The film was made 
                  at the Roosevelt's retreat in Warm Springs, Georgia, near Pine 
                  Mountain, just south of Atlanta. While he had been coming to 
                  Warm Springs since 1924, where the naturally warm spring waters 
                  gave him some improvement for his polio, the building which 
                  came to be known as the "Little White House" had just 
                  been constructed the previous year, during the election campaign. 
                  It looks like they set up two separate shots for the Soldier's 
                  Joy short, and you can see the house portico very clearly in 
                  the long shot:
                
                  Bun Wright's Fiddle Band playing Soldiers Joy
                
                  The Little White House, at Warm Springs
                The character to 
                  the left of Roosevelt is playing on a Gibson harp guitar. In 
                  the limited close up shots which include this musician, you 
                  never see him tickle the extra strings. I wonder if they were 
                  just supposed to ring in sympathy, or if there was an established 
                  technique for incorporating them into a piece.
                
                Starting at .33 
                  or so, the camera pans across the line of musicians, ending 
                  just at it gets to the last picker, the one with the resonator 
                  banjo. It sure looks like a Gibson to me, but the frame below 
                  is the very last one in the sweep, and it stops before you see 
                  the peghead. One interesting thing, all three banjo pickers 
                  appear to me to be playing in an up-picking two finger style, 
                  not a clawhammer adherent among them. The first might be playing 
                  clawhammer style with a middle finger lead, but it looks to 
                  me more like he is picking lead with his index finger, then 
                  brushing with his middle, or maybe middle and ring. The other 
                  two have their right hands anchored, and are picking up with 
                  the index. More proof that it is a myth that clawhammer style 
                  was the predominant old time banjo picking style.
                
                Okay, now I am going 
                  to really go out on a limb. I think the Mastertone picker might 
                  be Fate Norris, the banjo picker who played with the pioneer 
                  old time band, Gid Tanner and the Skillet Lickers. Norris lived 
                  in Resaca, Georgia, about 120 miles north of Warm Springs. He 
                  left the Skillet Lickers sometime in 1931, and lived close enough 
                  to Warm Springs to make the trip for such a weighty command 
                  performance. I've put the image above next to the famous, but 
                  fuzzy image of the Skillet Lickers. If I'm right, we may know 
                  a little bit more about how he picked, since he is generally 
                  inaudible on the Skillet Licker recordings. I don't know, looks 
                  like the same guy to me...
                
                The film's editor 
                  took some liberties when putting the piece together. At .20, 
                  the woman in the striped shirt and cap standing behind FDR is 
                  not yet in the picture.
                
                One second later, 
                  she shows up. The image from .25 shows her looking directly 
                  at the camera.
                
                The young woman 
                  is Anna Roosevelt, FDR's only daughter, then 26. Twelve years 
                  later, when her husband was away at war, she moved into the 
                  White House to take over her mother's roll as hostess, due to 
                  Eleanor's frequent travels. Alarmed about both the severe emotional 
                  and physical toll which his presidential responsibilities were 
                  taking on her father, the devoted Anna was to help arrange a 
                  number of clandestine reunions between FDR and an old mistress, 
                  Lucy Mercer Rutherford, in order to bring him comfort. Rutherford 
                  was with the President at the Little White House when he died 
                  in April, 1945, but was spirited away before the press arrived, 
                  to avoid scandal. Eleanor immediately learned of Rutherford's 
                  reemergence in her husband's life, and her daughter's role as 
                  enabler, which led to an estrangement between the two that continued 
                  for many years. Anna died in 1975, at the age of 69.
                The day before he 
                  died, FDR spoke to his daughter by telephone. Some local friends, 
                  he told her, including the Mayor of Warm Springs, Frank Allcorn, 
                  had planned a barbeque for him the next day. They were going 
                  to cook him up some Brunswick Stew. There was going to be some 
                  music, he said, including some tunes from his favorite fiddler, 
                  Bun Wright.