In 1952 CBS, in conjunction with the Ford Foundation, launched Omnibus, a remarkable experiment in television. The objective was to raise the programming standards of an emerging medium that figured to profoundly influence American life. The centerpiece of Omnibus during its inaugural season was "Mr. Lincoln," a series of five films about the early life of our foremost political icon. James Agee, the distinguished American author, was the principal creator of "Mr. Lincoln." At the time, his scripts were hailed as 'the most beautiful writing ever done for television," and even today Agee's characterization of Lincoln remains " among the finest--perhaps the finest--film about Abraham Lincoln ever made." Regrettably, this important and sensitive work, a revealing expression of American culture at mid-century, has been consigned to the archives and has not been available to the public for many years. Author William Hughes aims to keep alive Agee's neglected masterpiece, placing "Mr. Lincoln" in the context of the period's prevailing ideology (Cold War liberalism) and conveying the institutional framework in which the work originated. In addition, Hughes takes into account Agee's personal experiences, his social and political views, and his related writings (for and about film), all of which came into play when he reworked the Lincoln legend for the television age. Based on extensive archive research and an interview with Norman Lloyd, who directed the five films, this book fully documents the cultural and historical importance of "Mr. Lincoln."
... The Dark Days of Abraham Lincoln's Widow as Revealed by Her Own Letters, ed. Jason Emerson (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 2012). Emerson is the leading authority on Mary Lincoln historiography. 4. Quoted in W. A. Evans, ...
... Allan, 244n, 273 New Biographical Dictionary ofFilm, The, 4 New Critical Essays on James Agee and Walker Evans (Blinder), xxii New Deal, 6, 7, 80 New England, 13 New England Holiday (Smart), 17 New Jersey, 5, 240 New Leader, 211 New ...
He also throws a fresh light on Agee's collaboration with photographer Walker Evans on Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and reevaluates A Death in the Family in light of recent scholarship that has produced an almost entirely new version of the ...
... James Agee—A Portrait” (recording), 35n James Agee and the Legend of Himself (Spiegel), 231n James Agee: Promise and Fulfillment (Seib), 122n James Agee: Reconsiderations (Lofaro), 35n, 58n James Agee Rediscovered (Lofaro and Davis), 63 ...
In Lincoln in American Memory, historian Merrill Peterson provides a fascinating history of Lincoln's place in the American imagination from the hour of his death to the present.
“Mary Wallace Bow, Ex-slave 81 Years,” in Born in Slavery, vol. 11, North Carolina Narratives, 150. 6. “Susan Snow, Ex-slave, Lauderdale County,” in Born in Slavery, vol. 9, Mississippi Narratives, 138. William H. Wiggins, O Freedom!:
Mr. Lincoln, produced by Richard de Rochemont, written by James Agee, and largely directed by Norman Lloyd, was a docudrama commissioned for the newly conceived Omnibus series, which was financed by the Ford Foundation's TV-Radio ...
It was this moment of reinvention, its character greatly determined by the rapidly assembled consensus machine of Cold War ideology, that most profoundly shaped how and what television would teach its audience about culture and economy ...
... Mark Strong (Wells Fargo Agent), Charlie Stevens (Injun Charlie), Arthur Aylesworth, Douglas Wood, George Cleveland (Van Ellyn's Assistants), Lona Andre (Southern Belle), Leila McIntyre (Mary Todd Lincoln), Harry Stubbs (John ...
Dance 'Til Dawn was a prom movie with Alyssa Milano, Christina Applegate, Tempest Bledsoe, and Tracey Gold. Ricki Lake is a chubby girl in love in Babycakes. My Boyfriend 's Back at least placed an adult-age cast with Schneider.