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Screening:
Friday April 28, 10:15 AM, Charles 3
Synopsis:
"And
I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, and segregation forever
!" George Wallace was a fascinating and important part of American
20th Century politics, and this film documents the whole texture
of his life with an unblinking eye. The man who stood in the schoolhouse
door and therefore personified resistance to the sweeping changes
of the Civil Rights Movement, Wallace started his political career
as a populist known for championing the little guy and ended his
career reconciling with many in the African-American community he
had made his enemy.
His angry message
reached far beyond the South; in 1968 his 3rd party candidacy almost
threw the presidential election before the U.S. Congress, and in
1972 he won the most primary votes of any Democratic candidate.
As Pat Buchanan asserts in the film, Wallace was the first spokesman
for a specific kind of anger against the federal government that
is part of our political scene to this day.
Tidbit:
" I have no problem forgiving George Wallace. I will not forget
George Wallace because we must deal with the reality of Wallace.
How is it that a demagogue, insulting twenty million black people
daily on the television, can rise to the heights that Wallace did
?" --J.L. Chestnut, a black attorney from Selma.
Bios:
Daniel McCabe has won two Peabody Awards, and he has worked as director,
producer, and writer on episodes of the PBS series Rock and Roll.
He coproduced and edited Nixon: The Fall and Eisenhower: Soldier.
Paul Stekler
has won two Emmys, two Peabody Awards, and three Alfred J. Dupont-Columbia
Journalism Awards. He has directing credits on Eyes on the Prize
II, Vote for Me: Politics in America, and Louisiana Boys: Raised
on Politics.
Taylor Branch
is a Pulitzer Prize winning historian best known for his work on
the Civil Rights Movement, Parting the Waters, and its successor,
Pillar of Fire. Taylor is a graduate of UNC-CH where he was a Morehead
Scholar, and he holds a degree from the Woodrow Wilson School at
Princeton. Among many awards he is the recipient of a MacArthur
Foundation "genius" grant. He is also Executive Producing (with
Harry Belafonte and Jon Avnet) an eight-hour mini-series about the
Civil Rights Movement adapted from his books.
Dr. Levi Watkins
is the Associate Dean of the Johns Hopkins University School of
Medicine and Professor of Cardiac Surgery, and is the first African
American to achieve these positions at Hopkins. Dr. Watkins graduated
from Tennessee State University, and was the first African American
admitted to and to graduate from the Vanderbilt University School
of Medicine. In a distinguished medical career, Dr. Watkins has
developed several techniques for the implantation of the automatic
implantable defibrillator, surgical techniques that have saved over
100,000 lives. As a child in Montgomery, Alabama, Watkins attended
First Baptist Church with Pastor Ralph Abernathy and Dexter Avenue
Church with Pastor Martin Luther King Jr. Dr. Watkin's father and
brother had many dealings with George Wallace.
Click
here for tickets.
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