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NOVA TELLS THE EXTRAORDINARY STORY OF MARY MALLON

AKA "TYPHOID MARY," ONCE CALLED

 

 "THE MOST DANGEROUS WOMAN IN AMERICA"

 

Tuesday, October 12, 2004 at 8 PM ET on PBS

www.pbs.org/nova/typhoid

 

 

"Woman Cook a Walking Typhoid Fever Factory,"

screamed the headline in a New York City newspaper in 1907.

 

The woman was Mary Mallon, an Irish immigrant who as "Typhoid Mary" would become a notorious symbol of a public health menace. NOVA explores the legacy of one of history's most infamous disease carriers, on The Most Dangerous Woman in America, airing Tuesday, October 12, 2004 at 8 PM ET on PBS (check local listings).

 

Based on Typhoid Mary: Captive to the Public's Health, by Judith Walzer Leavitt, NOVA's dramatization stars:

Marian Tomas Griffin (As the World Turns) as Mallon

Jere Shea (Tony nomination for Guys and Dolls) as George Soper

Natalie Rose as Dr. Josephine Baker.

 

The Story:

Mary Mallon's ordeal took place at a time when the new science of bacteriology was shaping public health policies in America for the first time, and her case continues to hold lessons amid today's heightened concerns about communicable diseases.

The story, which unfolds like a detective novel, opens with a mysterious cluster of typhoid fever cases in August 1906 in a very unlikely setting: a summer house in wealthy Oyster Bay, Long Island.

 

Typhoid fever is a bacterial disease spread by poor sanitation. At the turn of the twentieth century, it was associated with slums and poverty. About 10 percent of those infected died.

Alarmed, the owner of the house hired civil engineer George Soper to track down the source of the infection. Soper ruled out the water supply and local shellfish, and began to focus on the new cook, Mary Mallon, who had arrived in the house shortly before the epidemic broke out. She had since left, but Soper traced her employment history and learned that typhoid outbreaks followed her wherever she went. 

After Soper located Mallon, his repeated attempts to get her to submit to testing were met with the same response: a brandished meat fork and threats. It took health department worker Dr. Josephine Baker and five police officers to apprehend Mallon. After typhoid bacilli were found in her feces, she was sent to a quarantine island in New York's East River.

But the case was far from open and shut, says Leavitt. "We see it today, certainly with multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, with HIV-AIDS, now with SARS; you see where individuals are quarantined, isolated, whose liberty is taken away in the name of protecting the public health. Mary Mallon gives us an example of that at an extreme level, because she was healthy. She wasn't even sick."

Mallon was what's known as a healthy carrier-a person who is contagious but has no symptoms. She had probably come down with a mild, undetected case of typhoid fever in 1900 and had retained active germs ever since. 

While preparing food, she shed bacteria from her hands, and it never occurred to her that she was spreading disease. When her condition was explained to her, she refused to believe it and fought back by secretly hiring a private laboratory, whose results reportedly showed that she was free from infection.

Nonetheless, her tests in quarantine continued to show typhoid bacteria, and she was detained until 1910, when authorities released her on condition that she not work in food handling and that she check in regularly with health officials.

Mallon returned to freedom. But that was not the last the public would hear of "Typhoid Mary," who would turn up again in circumstances that shocked even those who sympathized with her plight.

 

Senior executive producer: Paula S. Apsell

Written and directed by Nancy Porter

Produced by Peter Frumkin 

Senior producer is Laura LeMarr 

A film by Nancy Porter Productions for NOVA in association with WGBH/Boston.

 

(c) 2004 Nancy Porter Productions, Inc. and WGBH Educational Foundation.

 

Visit the NOVA pressrooms to download promotional photography:

http://pressroom.wgbh.org/nova

http://pbs.org/pressroom

 

Press contacts 

Jonathan S. Renes Diane Buxton

NOVA, WGBH Boston NOVA, WGBH Boston

617-300-4427 617-300-4274 

jonathan_renes@wgbh.org diane_buxton@wgbh.org


Photography contract

Amanda Hanson

NOVA, WGBH Boston

617-300-5345

amanda_hanson@wgbh.org


Now in its thirty-first year of broadcasting, NOVA is produced for PBS by the WGBH Science Unit. The director of the WGBH Science Unit and senior executive producer of NOVA is Paula S. Apsell. Major funding for NOVA is provided by the Park Foundation, Sprint, and Microsoft. Additional funding is provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and public television viewers. Major funding for The Most Dangerous Woman in America was provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the National Library of Medicine. Funding for the development of The Most Dangerous Woman in America was provided by The New York Council for the Humanities, Open Society Institute and Wyeth Laboratories. NOVA is closed captioned for deaf and hard-of-hearing viewers, and described for people who are blind or visually impaired by the Media Access Group at WGBH. The descriptive narration is available on the SAP channel of stereo TVs and VCRs.

 

WGBH Boston is America's preeminent public broadcasting producer, the source of one-third of PBS's primetime lineup and companion online content as well as many public radio favorites. WGBH is a pioneer in educational multimedia (including the Web, broadband, and interactive television) and in technologies and services that make media accessible for people with disabilities. WGBH has been recognized with hundreds of honors: Emmys, Peabodys, duPont-Columbia Awards . . . even two Oscars. In 2002 WGBH was honored with a special institutional Peabody Award for fifty years of excellence. For more information visit www.wgbh.org.