Ten years after his assassination, this fine mini-series documents the adult life and
times of Martin Luther King who despite some other fine folks in the field is recognized as premier among the black civil rights leaders. So acknowledged by
the fact it is his birthday that is now a national holiday.
Paul Winfield with one magnificent voice captures the cadence and rhythm of
Martin Luther King's poetical style of preaching. His abilities as an actor cover
the inner emotions and the reasons that King is moved to do the work he did.
From being a newly minted minister and suitor for the hand of Coretta Scott
played by Cicely Tyson we see the civil rights movement of the 50s and 60s
progress through the eyes of its titular leader.
In the supporting cast I like both William Jordan and Cliff DeYoung as the
contrasting personalities of the brothers Kennedy. Jordan as the cool John F.
Kennedy and DeYoung as the passionate Robert F. Kennedy. DeYoung really
got the accent down impressively.
Martin Luther King certainly did have a private life and if he's regarded for
sainthood by some it's for his achievements in advancing civil rights as opposed to any kind of probity in his private life. I doubt most could have
stood up to the intense scrutiny he was under Said scrutiny was ordered by
that most misanthropic of men in the last century J. Edgar Hoover the 48
year head of the FBI. Things that disturbed the social order like the civil
rights movement got Hoover's attention. He spent his last years looking to
discredit the movement quite unsuccessfully, but doing a lot of damage along
the way. There's a quiet evil in the way Dolph Sweet portrayed him.
In fact some of the private behavior of King is shown in those documented
moments before he's shot on a motel balcony in Memphis. You see him among his colleagues there in some down time and these guys could be a
salty and rough house bunch, divinity degree notwithstanding.
One thing that did not make me happy was the elimination of Bayard Rustin
from the story. I'm thinking Roscoe Lee Browne as Philip Harrison is Rustin
and he's as eloquent as I remember him. I actually did meet him during the
gay rights struggle in New York City when Rustin finally made it official. In
1978 his gay story was still a hush hush matter. Had King the mini-series been
made in 1988 the year after Rustin died he no doubt would have been there
in name as well as fact.
The best thing about King is that it makes the civil rights struggle of the time
quite real and relevant. You understand the indignities that some minorities
have heaped upon them. After that you just might make the connection for
all minorities. If that happens you will have been to the mountaintop and
seen the promised land.