Henry Louis Gates' Acclaimed PBS Docu-Series, 'Many Rivers To Cross,' Heads To DVD

Henry Louis Gates' Acclaimed PBS Docu-Series Heads To DVD
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The 2008 election of Barack Obama as the 44th president of the United States symbolized for some Americans an end to the 500-year history of subjugation that has defined the African American experience.

It was the last river that African Americans had to cross before achieving true historical liberty.

"Yes . . . and no," said Harvard University literary critic and scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., the writer, executive producer, and narrator of African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross. The magisterial, six-hour documentary traces the history of African Americans since the first slaves landed in the Americas in the 16th century.

The PBS documentary, which aired last fall in six weekly episodes, was released on DVD Tuesday.

"[Obama's] second campaign and his reelection was even more important," said Gates by phone from his office in Cambridge, Mass. Winning a second term showed that Americans -- at least, some of them -- had given their imprimatur to their first black leader.

For Gates, Obama's victory fulfills a promise, that a people who once were denied the most basic human rights could thrive in a hostile environment and eventually reach positions of power.

Yet both elections were marked by some of the most rabid racist rhetoric seen in the country since the 1960s.

"None of us could anticipate the scale and the depth of animosity heaped upon our first black president," said Gates, 63, a West Virginia native who was a teenager during the civil rights movement.

If there is one theme that persists through the six parts of Many Rivers to Cross, it's this very dialectic: As Gates documents, each historical advancement achieved by black Americans was coupled with a backlash that was often violent.

Armed slave rebellions were crushed without mercy; the progress of black and white abolitionists in the 18th and 19th centuries was met with harsh local and federal crackdowns and eventually a cataclysm in the 1860s, the Civil War, that left 620,000 dead.

Similarly, Gates' episode on the civil rights movement shows how its success in changing legislation came at the cost of police brutality and the assassinations of the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X.

Many Rivers to Cross marks a refreshing break from the run-of-the mill documentary: No airtime is given to static shots of talking heads rambling on about academic abstractions.

For Gates, the best way to study history is through stories about events and the people who shaped them.

"I went looking for the canonical stories that shaped African Americans," he said. "What are the indispensable canonical stories?" Gates and his coproducers asked 40 scholars to pick "stories they thought would work for each period."

They received "a list of thousands," Gates exclaims. "Eventually, we came up with 80, then had to cut it to 71 or 72 during filming."

Instead of interviewing experts, Gates takes his experts -- historians, authors, poets, chefs, musicians -- to the locations where the events they're describing happened. Segments are shot at locations from Sierra Leone to the Caribbean to Massachusetts and Florida.

The series follows not just the political life of black Americans, but the remarkable way in which they helped shape American society. Nowhere in history, Gates says on-camera, has an enslaved people so thoroughly transformed the master's culture -- from its cuisine to its music, drama, and literature.

That transformation was costly. Freedom eluded black Americans not only because of racist prejudice, but also because of economic exigencies: America could not have been built without the free labor provided by slaves, Gates says in the documentary.

In one scene, he stands before the Capitol building and describes with elegant detail how slaves had to quarry, shape, carry, and install the white marble pieces that make up the dome.

For Gates, to confront the history of African Americans requires confronting, head on, what he calls "our nation's fundamental hypocrisy": that a country founded on the ideals of universal liberty and equality would quite literally never have been built -- not its roads, houses, farms, bridges, and cities -- without the enslavement of an entire people.

Obama's election is among the stories that conclude the sixth episode of African Americans: Many Rivers to Cross, but so is the story of Terrence Stevens, a paralyzed New York man with muscular dystrophy who was sentenced to 15 years to life for a nonviolent drug offense. Gates said his conviction and sentence were a travesty of justice.

"We have all these black men in prison for ridiculous sentences for drugs," he said, "while almost as many black children live in poverty as when Martin Luther King was living."

Juxtaposing Obama and Stevens' stories makes for a bittersweet ending. "We could not end on a note of false triumphalism," said Gates.

"I wanted to reflect the true temper of the times: The black middle class has quadrupled, yet there are still so many terrible things affecting the black population."

tirdad@phillynews.com

215-854-2736 ___

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Before You Go

Powerful Photos Of Black History
February 1(01 of28)
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In this May 3, 1963 file photo,a 17-year-old civil rights demonstrator, defying an anti-parade ordinance of Birmingham, Ala., is attacked by a police dog. Bill Hudson, an Associated Press photographer whose searing images of the civil rights era documented police brutality and galvanized the public, died Thursday, June 24, 2010 in Jacksonville, Fla. He was 77. (credit:AP Photo/Bill Hudson, File)
February 2(02 of28)
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1968 Olympic Games, Mexico City, Mexico, Men's 200 Metres Final, USA gold medalist Tommie Smith (C) and bronze medalist John Carlos give the black power salute as an anti-racial protest as they stand on the podium with Australian silver medallist Peter Norman (credit:Photo by Popperfoto/Getty Images)
February 3(03 of28)
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The Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X waiting for an unspecified press conference on March 26, 1964. (credit:Library of Congress)
February 4(04 of28)
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Teenager Elizabeth Eckford (L) w. snarling white parents following as she is turned away fr. entering Central High School by Arkansas National Guardsmen under orders fr. Gov. Orval Faubus. (credit:(Photo by Francis Miller//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images))
February 5(05 of28)
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Left to right: George E.C. Hayes, Thurgood Marshall, and James M. Nabrit following Supreme Court decision declaring segregation unconstitutional (credit:AP)
February 6(06 of28)
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Rosa Parks, right, is kissed by Coretta Scott King, as she received the Martin Luther King, Jr. Non-violent Peace Prize in Atlanta, Jan. 14, 1980. Parks, who refused to give up her seat on a Montgomery, Ala., bus nearly 25 years ago, is the first woman to win the award. (AP Photo) (credit:AP)
February 7(07 of28)
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18th November 1968: Elizabeth, the Queen Mother (1900 - 2002) goes backstage to meet the Supremes, Engelbert Humperdinck, Frankie Howerd and Petula Clark after a Royal Variety Performance at the London Palladium. The show is in aid of the Variety Artistes' Benevolent Fund. (Photo by Douglas Miller/Keystone/Getty Images) (credit:Photo by Douglas Miller/Keystone/Getty Images)
February 8(08 of28)
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US pop star and entertainer Michael Jackson performs with Sammy Davis Junior August 14, 1988 in Monaco. (Photo credit: AFP/Getty Images) (credit:AFP/Getty Images)
February 9(09 of28)
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Betty Shabazz at her husband, Malcolm X's funeral in Hartsdale, New York in 1965. (credit:AP)
February 10(10 of28)
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In this May 25, 1965, file photo, heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali stands over fallen challenger Sonny Liston, after dropping Liston with a short hard right to the jaw in Lewiston, Maine. (AP Photo/John Rooney, File) (credit:AP Photo/John Rooney, File)
February 11(11 of28)
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TAMPA, FL - JANUARY 27: Whitney Houston sings the National Anthem before a game with the New York Giants taking on the Buffalo Bills prior to Super Bowl XXV at Tampa Stadium on January 27, 1991 in Tampa, Florida. The Giants won 20-19. (Photo by George Rose/Getty Images) (credit:Photo by George Rose/Getty Images)
February 12(12 of28)
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In this January 1, 1945 photo, Lena Horne visits with the Tuskegee Airmen. (credit:AP)
February 13(13 of28)
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In this March 1, 1964, photo, heavyweight boxing champion Muhammad Ali, right, is shown with black muslim leader Malcolm X outside the Trans-Lux Newsreel Theater in New York, after viewing the screening of a film about Ali's title fight with Sonny Liston. (AP Photo/File) (credit:AP)
February 14(14 of28)
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Georgia native son, singer Ray Charles, rocks to the ovation he received from a joint session of the Georgia Legislature in Atlanta, March 7, 1979. The Assembly made his version of the song "Georgia On My Mind" the official state song after he sang it to the session. (AP Photo/Charles Kelly) (credit:AP)
February 15(15 of28)
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John H. Johnson, publisher of Jet and Ebony magazines, left, and actor Bill Cosby, center, join the Rev. Jesse Jackson at a benefit reception for Operation PUSH, in Chicago, Ill., on April 1, 1982. (AP Photo) (credit:AP)
February 16(16 of28)
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American singer Michael Jackson (1958 - 2009) is granted a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, Los Angeles, 20th November 1984. (credit:Getty Images)
February 17(17 of28)
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Day of Pilgrimage protest begins on December 5, 1955, with black Montgomery citizens walking to work, part of their boycott of buses in the wake of the Rosa Parks incident. (Photo by Grey Villet//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images) (credit:Grey Villet//Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
February 18(18 of28)
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In this Aug. 1922 file photo, Marcus Garvey is shown in a military uniform as the "Provisional President of Africa" during a parade on the opening day of the annual Convention of the Negro Peoples of the World at Lenox Avenue in Harlem, New York City. A century ago, Garvey helped spark movements from African nationalist independence to American civil rights to self-sufficiency in black commerce. Jamaican students in every grade from kindergarten through high school have began studying the teachings of the 1920-era black nationalist leader in a new mandatory civics program in schools across this predominantly black country of 2.8 million people. (AP Photo/File) (credit:AP)
February 19(19 of28)
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Los Angeles Lakers' Wilt Chamberlain, left, stands beside a backboard and hoop trophy that was presented to him after he became the all-time leading rebounder in NBA history, in Los Angeles, Jan. 31, 1972. (AP Photo) (credit:AP)
February 20(20 of28)
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Broadway was a snowstorm canyon as proud Manhattanites feted returned U.S. Olympic stars with a fleecy ticker tape parade in New York on Sept. 3, 1936. The fellow with the broad grin in the foreground is Jesse Owens, who won three gold medals and helped other athletes win another for the U.S. (AP Photo) (credit:AP)
February 21(21 of28)
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Black Nationalist ldr. Malcolm X at podium during rally w. others in bkgrd. Malcolm X was later assassinated on February 21, 1965, by members of the Nation of Islam. (credit:Photo by Burt Shavitz/Pix Inc./Time Life Pictures/Getty Images)
February 22(22 of28)
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At the funeral for slain Civil Rights leader Medgar Evers, his wife, Myrlie Evers (second right), comforts their son, Darryl Kenyatta Evers, while daughter Reena Denise Evers (center, in white dress) wipes her own tears, Jackson, Mississippi, June 15, 1963. (credit:Photo by Express Newspapers/Getty Images)
February 23(23 of28)
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1958: A Caucasian policeman speaks with African-American protesters during a sit-in at Brown's Basement Luncheonette, Oklahoma. (credit:Photo by Shel Hershorn/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
February 24(24 of28)
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American actress Hattie McDaniel (1895 - 1952) with her Academy Award of Merit for Outstanding Achievement, circa 1945. McDaniel won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in 'Gone With The Wind', making her the first African-American to win an Academy Award. (credit:Photo by John Kobal Foundation/Getty Images)
February 25(25 of28)
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The First Colored Senator and Representatives, in the 41st and 42nd Congress of the US. Top standing left to right: Robert C. De Large, M.C. of S. Carolina; and Jefferson H. Long, M.C. of Georgia. Seated, left to right: U.S. Senator H.R. Revels of Mississippi; Benj. S. Turner, M.C. of Alabama; Josiah T. Walls, M.C. of Florida; Joseph H. Rainy, M.C. of S. Carolina; and R. Brown Elliot, M.C. of S. Carolina. Lithograph by Currier and Ives, 1872. (credit:Alamy)
February 26(26 of28)
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Black Panther Party co-founder Huey P. Newton (1942 - 1989) (center) smiles as he raises his fist from a podium at the Revolutionary People's Party Constitutional Convention, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, early September 1970. (credit: Photo by David Fenton/Getty Images)
February 27(27 of28)
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Attendees at the Million Man March raise their hands in fists and peace/victory signs October 16, 1995 in Washington, DC. The purpose of the march was to galvanize men to respect themselves and others spiritually, morally, mentally, socially, politically and economically. (credit:Photo by Porter Gifford/Liaison)
February 28(28 of28)
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Anti-apartheid leader and African National Congress (ANC) member Nelson Mandela (C, L) and his wife Winnie raise fists upon Mandela's release from Victor Verster prison on February 11, 1990 in Paarl. AFP PHOTO ALEXANDER JOE (credit:Photo credit ALEXANDER JOE/AFP/Getty Images)