The Korea Herald

피터빈트

Original ‘Roots’ still fresh and shocking, decades later

By Korea Herald

Published : May 30, 2016 - 15:17

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“Roots” premiered on ABC in January 1977, just a few months after Alex Haley published the historical novel upon which it was based -- a phenomenon on the back of a phenomenon.

Now remade for the flat-screen generations by History, the new version will surely reap the benefits of 40 extra years of technological innovation and historical research.

The accuracy of Haley’s own research has been questioned, and in settling a lawsuit, he admitted plagiarizing material from Harold Courlander’s novel “The African.” But this doesn’t lessen the cultural impact of the series, and there is much to admire in the original, as antiquated as it can now seem.

Broadcast over eight consecutive nights, it was the very definition of a television event. An estimated 100 million people watched its final episode; it was nominated for 37 Emmys and won nine. Executive producer David L. Wolper Jr., who bought the film rights while Haley’s best seller was being written, had a career encompassing Jacques Cousteau documentaries, “Welcome Back, Kotter” and, later, the opening ceremonies of the 1984 Summer Olympic Games. Screenwriter William Blinn had written the hit TV movie “Brian’s Song” and created “Starsky & Hutch”; later he would cowrite the Prince film “Purple Rain.”

It was grand, but it was also familiar, cast with actors well-known from TV and film, including “Good Times” dad John Amos, Leslie Uggams, Richard Roundtree, Scatman Crothers, Roxie Roker from “The Jeffersons,” Louis Gossett Jr., Ben Vereen, Lawrence Hilton-Jacobs, Raymond St. Jacques and Moses Gunn.

Malachi Kirby in “Roots.” (History Channel) Malachi Kirby in “Roots.” (History Channel)

Olivia Cole, then known mainly for the soap opera “Guiding Light,” won a well-deserved Emmy playing Chicken George’s wife, Mathilda; Cicely Tyson, who three years earlier had earned an Emmy for the CBS TV movie “The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman,” played his grandmother. Although that film anticipated some of the themes of “Roots,” the miniseries’ abundance of African-American leads and stories was unprecedented and its depiction of the slave trade and economy fresh and shocking.

Sympathetic, even beloved, white TV stars, including Robert Reed, Ralph Waite, Lorne Greene, Vic Morrow, Lloyd Bridges, Sandy Duncan and Ed Asner, were enlisted to play unsympathetic roles. Transforming actors who elsewhere seemed like family into people of ill or at best weak will made their characters somehow more ordinary -- and because more ordinary, more disturbing.

Though it may alienate younger viewers that “Roots” often looks like what it is -- 1970s television -- that is no failing and in many ways a plus. The boxier screen of the time made TV a medium of close-ups and two-shots, more congenial to conversation and argument than spectacle and action. It had an intimate, confidential air. Whatever is stiff or silly about “Roots” -- its opening credits look ridiculously like the cover of a romance novel -- also makes it feel more lifelike, more authentic. In its most awkward moments, it has the energy and honesty of community theater.

History is both fundamental and incidental to the story. Haley subtitled his book “The Saga of an American Family” -- his -- and though “Roots” is inevitably about the American slave trade and economy, the Civil War and Reconstruction, it is more to the point about particular people, their love stories and generational conflicts, which, though shaped by their circumstances, also transcend them. (Tribune Content Agency).

By Robert Lloyd

Los Angeles Times