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ROOTS
 Roots PRODUCER Stan
Margulies
Adapted for
Television by William Blinn
CAST
Kunta
Kinte (as a boy)............................... LeVar Burton
Kunta Kinte (Toby: adult).............................. John
Amos
Binta ........................................................Cicely
Tyson
Omoro .................................................Thalmus
Rasula
Nya Boto ................................................Maya
Angelou
Kadi Touray ............................................O. J.
Simpson
The Wrestler.......................................... Ji-Tu
Cumbuka
Kintango...................................................
Moses Gunn
Brimo Cesay ..............................................Hari
Rhodes
Fanta .........................................................Ren
Woods
Fanta (later)..............................................
Beverly Todd
Capt. Davies ............................................Edward
Asner
Third Mate Slater ........................................Ralph
Waite
Gardner................................................ William
Watson
Fiddler................................................. Louis
Gosett, Jr.
John Reynolds.......................................... Lorne
Greene
Mrs. Reynolds..............................................
Lynda Day
George Ames.............................................. Vic
Morrow
Carrington.................................................. Paul
Shenar
Dr. William Reynolds ..................................Robert
Reed
Bell.......................................................
Madge Sinclair
Grill...........................................................
Gary Collins
The Drummer ...............................Raymond St. Jacques
Tom Moore ............................................Chuck
Connors
Missy Anne............................................ Sandy
Duncan
Noah .........................................Lawrence-Hilton
Jacobs
Ordell.......................................................
John Schuck
Kizzy..................................................... Leslie
Uggams
Squire James..................................... Macdonald
Carey
Mathilda.......................................................
Olivia Cole
Mingo ................................................Scatman
Crothers
Stephen Bennett.................................. George Hamilton
Mrs. Moore ..............................................Carolyn
Jones
Sir Eric Russell......................................... Ian
McShane
Sister Sara........................................... Lillian
Randolph
Sam Bennett..................................... Richard Roundtree
Chicken George ..........................................Ben
Vereen
Evan Brent ...............................................Lloyd
Bridges
Tom............................................ Georg Stanford
Brown
Ol' George Johnson ......................................Brad
Davis
Lewis...........................................................
Hilly Hicks
Jemmy Brent........................................... Doug
MaClure
Irene........................................................
Lynne Moodu
Martha......................................................
Lane Binkley
Justin.............................................................
Burl Ives
PROGRAMMING
HISTORY
ABC
January
1977
Eight Consecutive Nights at 9:00-11:00,
or 10:00-11:00
September 1978
Five Consecutive Nights at 8:00-11:00 or
9:00-11:00
U.S. Serial Drama
Roots
remains one of television's landmark programs. The twelve-hour mini-series
aired on ABC from 23-30 January 1977. For eight consecutive nights
it riveted the country. ABC executives initially feared that the
historical saga about slavery would be a ratings disaster. Instead,
Roots scored higher ratings than any previous entertainment program
in history. It averaged a 44.9 rating and a 66 audience share for
the length of its run. The seven episodes that followed the opener
earned the top seven spots in the ratings for their week. The final
night held the single-episode ratings record until 1983, when the
finale of M*A*S*H aired on CBS.
The success of Roots had lasting impact on the television
industry. The show defied industry conventions about black-oriented
programming: executives simply had not expected that a show with
black heroes and white villains could attract such huge audiences.
In the process, Roots almost single-handedly spawned a new television
format -- the consecutive-night mini-series. (Previous mini-series,
like the 1976 hit, Rich Man, Poor Man, had run in weekly
installments.) Roots also validated the docudrama approach of its
Executive Producer, David Wolper. The Wolper style, blending fact
and fiction in a soap-opera package, influenced many subsequent
mini-series. Finally, Roots was credited with having a positive
impact on race relations, expanding the nation's sense of history.
Based
on Alex Haley's best-selling novel about his African ancestors,
Roots followed several generations in the lives of a slave
family. The saga began with Kunta Kinte (LeVar Burton), a West African
youth captured by slave raiders and shipped to America in the 1700s.
Kunta received brutal treatment from his white masters and rebelled
continually. An older Kunta (John Amos) married and his descendants
carried the story after his death. Daughter Kizzy (Leslie Uggams)
was raped by her master and bore a son, later named Chicken George
(Ben Vereen). In the final episode, Kunta Kinte's great-grandson
Tom (Georg Stanford Brown) joined the Union Army and gained emancipation.
Over the course of the saga, viewers saw brutal whippings and many
agonizing moments, rapes, the forced separations of families, slave
auctions. Through it all, however, Roots depicted its slave characters
as well-rounded human beings, not merely as victims or symbols of
oppression.
Apprehensions
that Roots would flop shaped the way that ABC presented the
show. Familiar television actors like Lorne Greene were chosen for
the white, secondary roles, to reassure audiences. The white actors
were featured disproportionately in network previews. For the first
episode, the writers created a conscience-stricken slave captain
(Ed Asner), a figure who did not appear in Haley's novel but was
intended to make white audiences feel better about their historical
role in the slave trade. Even the show's consecutive-night format
allegedly resulted from network apprehensions. ABC programming chief
Fred Silverman hoped that the unusual schedule would cut his network's
imminent losses--and get Roots off the air before sweeps week.
Silverman,
of course, need not have worried. Roots garnered phenomenal audiences.
On average, 80 million people watched each of the last seven episodes.
100 million viewers, almost half the country, saw the final episode,
which still claims one of the highest Nielsen ratings ever recorded,
a 51.1 with a 71 share. A stunning 85% of all television homes saw
all or part of the mini-series. Roots also enjoyed unusual social
acclaim for a television show. Vernon Jordan, former president of
the Urban League, called it "the single most spectacular educational
experience in race relations in America." Today, the show's social
effects may appear more ephemeral, but at the time they seemed widespread.
Over 250 colleges and universities planned courses on the saga,
and during the broadcast, over 30 cities declared "Roots" weeks.
The
program drew generally rave reviews. Black and white critics alike
praised Roots for presenting African-American characters
who were not tailored to suit white audiences. The soap-opera format
drew some criticism for its emphasis on sex, violence, and romantic
intrigue. A few critics also complained that the opening segment
in Africa was too Americanized--it was hard to accept television
regulars like O.J. Simpson as West African natives. On the whole,
however, critical acclaim echoed the show's resounding popular success.
Roots earned over 30 Emmy Awards and numerous other distinctions.
The
program spawned a 1979 sequel, Roots: The Next Generations.
The sequel did not match the original's ratings, but still performed
extremely well, with a total audience of 110 million. Overall,
Roots had a powerful and diverse impact--as a cultural phenomenon,
an exploration of black history, and the crown jewel of historical
mini-series.
-J.B.
Bird
FURTHER
READING
Adams,
Russell L. "An Analysis of the Roots Phenomenon in the Context of
American Racial Conservatism." Presence Africaine: Revue Culturelle
du Monde Noir/Cultural Review of the Negro World (Paris) 1980.
Blayney,
Michael Steward. "Roots and the Noble Savage." North Dakota Quarterly
(Grand Forks, North Dakota), Winter 1986.
Bogle,
Donald. "Roots and Roots: The Next Generations." Blacks in American
Film and Television: An Encyclopedia. New York: Garland, 1988.
Brooks,
Tim and Earle Marsh. The Complete Directory To Prime-Time Network
TV Shows: 1946-Present. New York: Ballantine, 1979; 5th edition,
1992.
Gray,
John. Blacks in Film and Television, A Pan-African Bibliography
of Films, Filmmakers, and Performers. New York: Greenwood, 1990.
Gray,
Herman. Watching Race: Television and the Struggle for "Blackness."
Minneapolis, Minnesota: University of Minnesota Press, 1995.
Haley,
Alex. Roots. Garden City, New York: Doubleday, 1976. Journal
of Broadcasting (Washington, D.C.) Special issue on Roots. 1978.
Kern-Foxworth,
Marilyn. "Alex Haley." Dictionary of Literary Biography.
Detroit: Gale, 1985. T
ucker,
Lauren R., and Hemant Shah. "Race and the Transformation of Culture:
The Making of the Television Miniseries Roots." Critical Studies
in Mass Communication (Annandale, Virginia), December 1992.
"Why
Roots Hit Home." Time (New York) 14 February 1977.
Winship,
Michael. Television. New York: Random House, 1988.
Woll,
David. Ethnic and Racial Images in American Film and Television.
New York: Garland, 1987.
See
also Adaptations;
Haley, Alex;
Miniseries;
Racism, Ethinicity, and
Television
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