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Old 02-23-2002, 10:57 AM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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Arrow ROSA PARKS -- Sunday 2/24/02

Tomorrow is the presentation of the Rosa Parks movie. IN today's Columbus Dispatch there was an article about the movie which stars ANGELA BASSETT & Dexter King, son of MLK playing his dad.

http://www.dispatch.com/features-sto...2/1107887.html

Unlikely hero
Civil-rights pioneer wouldn't have thought she'd inspire TV shows
Saturday, February 23, 2002
Tim Feran
Dispatch TV-Radio Critic

Almost 50 years ago, a quiet black woman named Rosa Parks refused to relinquish her seat on a bus to a white man.

This weekend, a veritable Rosa Parks festival arrives through the CBS series Touched by an Angel, featuring a cameo by the civil-rights heroine, and the made-for-TV movie The Rosa Parks Story.

Angela Bassett, who stars in the CBS movie, understands why the actions of the low-key Parks have spoken to people throughout the world.

"I'm so proud of her and so grateful to her for the sacrifice she made of her life to black America," Bassett said recently. "She was probably unaware of how important she was to the world and how much an inspiration it rang out beyond Montgomery -- to the far places of South Africa, Russia; all around the world.

"Really, I don't think there are words enough to express how thankful we all should be."

In December 1955, Parks boarded a bus in segregated Montgomery, Ala., and took a seat near the front -- instead of the back, where blacks were expected to sit.

Her simple protest sparked a 381-day bus boycott, a nonviolent effort partly led by the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. (portrayed by his son, Dexter Scott King).

While her involvement in the civil-rights movement is well-known, the movie also looks at her personal life and the influences that shaped her.

"I think it stays pretty close to the story," Bassett said. "If anyone was very reasonable and calm and reserved, it was Mrs. Parks. To jazz her up, people would have gone screaming into the street."

The two women met briefly in 1994, when both were attending a Southern Christian Leadership Conference event in Atlanta.

"It never crossed my mind they would do her story and I would play it," the actress said. "I didn't have the vision to see down the road that far. My impression, though, just from meeting her is that she's a very giving, very kind, very unselfish, very sweet individual."

Bassett read biographies of Parks, "a frail 89," and noted similarities in their upbringings.

In particular, both had parents with high standards.

"My mother had very strong ideas for my sister and me, especially about the role of education," Bassett said. "I remember I got a C on my report card once, and I thought I could tell my mother that it wasn't so bad, that C just meant average. Well, I presented my argument, and she looked me in the eyes and said, 'I don't have average children.'

"It affected me, and I remembered that for the rest of my growing up and education. Being average, being mediocre was not an option that you could be proud of."

To prepare for the role, Bassett watched film footage of Parks from 1955 "over and over again -- hopefully to get her rhythm, her carriage. It doesn't hurt to be a Southern girl myself."

Also aiding her performance was the setting: Instead of shooting the film on a studio lot in California or in a less-expensive locale such as Canada, the producers took the cast to Alabama.

"The air is different; the people are different; the sensibility is different," Bassett said. "Canada doesn't have the history of southern America.

"To be able to stand in the spot where Mrs. Parks stood before she got on the bus, I had a sense of pride and power and empowerment in knowing this is where it began, where a great deal of my freedom began, why I am able to come back as an actor and re-create this moment -- because she said no in that place.

"It was going back and paying homage to it and being proud of it."
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Old 02-24-2002, 10:30 PM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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Angry PISSED OFF

Water Fountain Flashback scene -- dog drinking "COLORED" water --

the 1942 BUS DRIVER SCENE!!! Bus DRIVER

VOTER REGISTRATION -- I mighta had to pistol whip that blond SUSIE!!
That SCALLYWAG knows she was low down in "flunking" ROSA.


Funny how the only thing we ever learned about ROSA is the 1955 bus incident but SO MUCH more happened.

ELIJAH --

You know the bus driver needs to ride the bus straight to hell for what he did. Low Down Scallywag!!
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Last edited by CrimsonTide4; 02-24-2002 at 11:19 PM.
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Old 02-25-2002, 12:41 AM
tickledpink tickledpink is offline
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Seeing Rosa go to get her voter's registration over and over again.... Then the wench charged her $12.00 when she charged others $1.50.

I had my children watch this and reiterated to them the importance of voting... look at what we had to go thru!

How about when she walked into that jail just as prim and proper... and ended up having her ridiculers on their knees praying with her? You go!
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Old 02-25-2002, 12:47 AM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by tickledpink
How about when she walked into that jail just as prim and proper... and ended up having her ridiculers on their knees praying with her? You go!
Yeah I was digging that as well.
This movie totally opened my eyes. All my life you only learn about DECEMBER 1 but she was involved looooong before 1955.
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Old 02-25-2002, 04:44 PM
JJSP01 JJSP01 is offline
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I thought the movie was very good...It stirred up some emotions...all I can say is thank the Lord she didn't give up her seat.
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Old 02-25-2002, 09:51 PM
c&c1913 c&c1913 is offline
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I must say that I don't like to watch movies in that time setting, but I felt compelled to watch this one.

Don't forget you couldn't try on shoes. You had to trace your feet on a piece of paper.

That Raymond Parks was persistent, borderline stalker come to think of it.

It was hard to accept Angela Bassett playing a high school student. I read in a magazine that she's over 40.

She's played Rosa Park, Betty Shabazz, Tina Turner, and Katherine Jackson. She ought have playing famous people down.
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Old 02-25-2002, 10:02 PM
CrimsonTide4 CrimsonTide4 is offline
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Quote:
Originally posted by c&c1913
I must say that I don't like to watch movies in that time setting, but I felt compelled to watch this one.

Don't forget you couldn't try on shoes. You had to trace your feet on a piece of paper.

That Raymond Parks was persistent, borderline stalker come to think of it.

It was hard to accept Angela Bassett playing a high school student. I read in a magazine that she's over 40.

She's played Rosa Park, Betty Shabazz, Tina Turner, and Katherine Jackson. She ought have playing famous people down.
Girl I had said the same thing -- Angela is like 45 years old but was playing a high school chick. She is the quintessential actress. She really did look like Tina to me.

That shoe tracing was UN FREAKInG BELIEVABLE!!!

Her husband pissed me off the way he was acting when she was working for NAACP and the aftermath of the bus boycott. His behind needed to get a house for him and Rosa.
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Old 02-26-2002, 08:07 AM
Eclipse Eclipse is offline
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I enjoyed the protrayal as well, but was a little put off with some of the historical inaccuracies (sp?) I remember reading that Rosa Park's husband was also involved in the NAACP. I found it interesting that they protrayed his as being so against her involvement. I also read that the "sit down" was more calculated. Mainstream history likes to protray Mrs. Parks as a "seamstress who's feet hurt", but the NAACP inner circle had many conversations about when, who, etc. They mentioned it briefly in the movie, but Rosa was picked because she was such an upstanding citizen. How else do you think we have those pictures of her getting finger printed? I don't think it was considered "News" for a "Negro" woman to get arrested back in those days! Also, if I am remembering my history correctly, the 15 year old that was arrested a week or so earlier was also unmarried and pregnant, so she was not deemed a "suitable" symbol for the movement.

All in all though, a good movie!!
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