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Crisis at Central High

 
Movies:

Crisis at Central High

  • Director: Lamont Johnson
  • AMG Rating: starstarstarstar
  • Genre: Historical Film
  • Movie Type: Social Problem Film, Docudrama
  • Themes: Race Relations
  • Release Year: 1980
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 120 minutes

Plot

Crisis at Central High is the sort of film that fully justifies the existence of made-for-TV movies. This superior effort is a dramatization of the court-ordered integration of Little Rock, Arkansas' Central High School in 1957. With threats of violence mounting (and some carried out), it becomes necessary for the government to send in Federal troops to escort the nine black teenagers who have been chosen to break the color barriers. Covering events from the beginning of the scholastic year to the graduation exercises, the film is based on the journals of Central High teacher/administrator Elizabeth Hucksby, who is here played by Joanne Woodward. Adapted (with precisely no political axes to grind) by Richard Levinson and William Link, Crisis at Central High made its triumphant debut on February 4, 1981. ~ Hal Erickson, All Movie Guide

Cast

Charles Durning; Henderson Forsythe; Tony Frank - Hildebrand; John Galt - Mr. Kirby; Irma P. Hall - Lulu Richards; Jerry Haynes - General; Rosanna Huffman - Mrs. Farrow; Suzie Humphreys - Mrs. Kirby; Ray LePere - George Truitt; Calvin Levels; William Russ; Tamu - Caroline Fuller; Regina Taylor; Annabelle Weenick - Dorothy Truitt; Joanne Woodward; Robert A. Ginnaven - Gen. Thomas Woods; Norma Young - Miss Opie; Lori Grupe - Marlene; Shannon John - Donna Kirby; Pat Long - Billie Hobbs; Riona Martin - Carlotta Walls; Bill Moray - Virgil Blossom; Bonnie Pemberton - Maggie Armstrong; Nina Wilson - Miss Pettijohn

Credit

Lamont Johnson - Director, Billy Goldenberg - Composer (Music Score), Donald M. Morgan - Cinematographer, William Link - Screenwriter, Richard A. Levinson - Screenwriter

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All God's Children; Mississippi Burning; Separate But Equal; To Sir, With Love; For Us, The Living: The Story of Medgar Evers; Ghosts of Mississippi; Rosewood; The Heart of Dixie
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Wikipedia: Crisis at Central High
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Crisis at Central High
Directed by Lamont Johnson
Produced by Robert Papazian
Written by Elizabeth Huckaby (memoir)
Richard Levinson
William Link
Starring Joanne Woodward
Charles Durning
Henderson Forsythe
Calvin Levels
William Russ
Tamu Blackwell
Shannon John
Music by Billy Goldenberg
Cinematography Donald M. Morgan
Editing by John Wright
Distributed by CBS
Release date(s) February 4, 1981
Running time 125 min.
Country USA
Language English

Crisis at Central High was a 1981 made-for-television movie about the Little Rock Integration Crisis of 1957, based on a draft of the memoir by the same name by former assistant principal Elizabeth Huckaby.[1]

William Link and Richard Levinson wrote the screenplay and were executive producers together with David Susskind of Time-Life Productions.[2] The film starred Joanne Woodward as Huckaby and told the events from that character's point of view, although one obituary at the time of Huckaby's death cited her as saying the TV-movie enlarged her role.[3] Woodward was nominated for an Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Limited Series or a Special and a Golden Globe Award for Best Performance by an Actress in a Mini-Series or Motion Picture Made for TV, in 1981 and 1982 respectively.[4][unreliable source?]

Contents

Critical reception

Reviewer John O'Connor of The New York Times observed, "In the end, of course, the real heroes of this piece are the nine black students," whom O'Connor described as "played to quiet perfection." Actors highlighted for their portrayals included Calvin Levels as Ernest Green (the only senior in the group) and Regina Taylor as Minnijean Brown, launching that actress' professional career.[5] Other principal actors in the film included Charles Durning as the principal and Henderson Forsythe as Huckaby's husband, Glenn.

Composite characters

Like many docudramas, Crisis included some composite characters; at least one reviewer (O'Connor) criticizes the vague disclaimer to that effect, arguing that in a piece about such controversial events, alterations to the truth should be identified more specifically.[2] In addition to the creative license already mentioned with regard to her role in the crisis, Huckaby was reported to have said the film showed some events are out of sequence and slightly altered others.[3]

Filming locations

The movie was filmed on location in Little Rock[6] and at Woodrow Wilson High School in Dallas, Texas.[citation needed] Many local Dallas actors had featured roles in the film, including radio personality Suzie Humphreys, TV and theater actor Jerry Haynes, teacher and actress Irma P. Hall, and Theater Three director Norma Young, as well as Taylor, a native Dallasite who was attending Southern Methodist University at the time the film was being cast.

See also

References

  1. ^ News Releases, 40th Anniversary web Site
  2. ^ a b John O'Connor. TV: Little Rock, 1957: 'Crisis at Central High,' The New York Times (review), Feb. 4, 1981
  3. ^ a b Linda S. Caillouet.Central High crisis diarist dies, Arkansas Democrat-Gazette, March 20, 1999 (retrieved November 3, 2006)
  4. ^ Awards and Nominations for Crisis at Central High (1981) on Internet Movie Database
  5. ^ Regina Taylor at Hollywood.com
  6. ^ Elizabeth Paisley Huckaby (1905–1999), Encyclopedia of Arkansas

Additional references

Huckaby, Elizabeth. Crisis at Central High, Little Rock, 1957–58. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1980.

External links


 
 

 

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