Color bind
Television has struggled at portraying African-American life for more than 50 years
IF YOU COULD bring back the icons of black television history and cast them in
a single program, it wouldn't take long to discern how distressing the
presentation of African-Americans has been during prime time. Let's set the
show in a middle-class household: there's Amos, Andy, and the Kingfish from
The Amos 'n' Andy Show, sitting at the kitchen table with George
Jefferson and Fred Sanford, waiting for a meal prepared by Beulah, a domestic
servant and the star of her own self-titled 1950s sitcom. In the living room,
just off her nursing shift, is Julia, played by Diahann Carroll in the late
1960s, explaining to Nat King Cole why she was condemned by black activists for
being a "white Negro." Cole, in turn, is seated at the piano, wondering aloud
why his acclaimed variety show was canceled after just one season. In the den
is Good Times's J.J. Evans, decked out in disco paraphernalia, shaking
his long limbs and exclaiming "Dyn-o-mite!" as Tootie from The Facts of
Life passes by in her prep-school skirt. Upstairs in the bunkroom, little
Webster of Webster is commiserating with Arnold and Willis from
Diff'rent Strokes, while Nell Harper of Gimme a Break! changes
their sheets. And around the corner, in the study, we would probably find
Cosby, wearing a colorful sweater, puffing on a $20 cigar, and shaking his head
in disgust.
It's not a pretty picture. But since the postwar debut of network fare like
American Minstrels of 1949, featuring blackface comics Pick
Malone and Pat Padgett, television has consistently failed to present
African-Americans (or any minority group, for that matter) as positively as it
has whites. In the 1950s, as sitcoms like Father Knows Best and Ozzie
and Harriet offered a pristine model of white middle-class life, Amos
'n' Andy lampooned blacks as hapless, scheming buffoons. Beulah, the
first program with a black female lead, was essentially Father Knows
Best with an African-American maid added for levity. Despite vociferous
protests from the NAACP, however, these shows were very popular; both Harry
Truman and Dwight Eisenhower made casting recommendations for Amos 'n'
Andy. (As J. Fred MacDonald recalls in his 1983 book Blacks and White
TV, Truman suggested picking an actor from the all-black Texas University;
Eisenhower recommended a black soldier he knew.)
Even as the civil rights movement of the 1960s brought racial struggles to the
forefront, prime-time television continued to operate in a separate, unknowing
universe. The two major black characters introduced during the decade, Cosby's
Alexander Scott (on the secret-agent drama I Spy) and Carroll's Julia,
were criticized as raceless assimilationists -- nonthreatening blacks designed
to assuage white audiences' fears during a tumultuous period. While blacks and
whites clashed in America's streets, characters like Scott and Julia -- with
their perfect manners and comfortable means -- moved effortlessly through the
white world on the little screen.
The 1970s began with African-American standup comedian Flip Wilson achieving
major crossover success as the host of his own variety series, The Flip
Wilson Show. But it took a bigot like Archie Bunker to give networks the
courage to portray African-American family life for the first time. The success
of All in the Family -- Norman Lear's confrontational, sometimes
discomforting, sitcom about a blue-collar family in Queens -- gave Lear the
clout to develop several black-oriented successors: The Jeffersons (an
All in the Family spinoff), Good Times, and Sanford and
Son. Here, for the first time, television presented black characters whose
lives didn't revolve around whites. More important, the programs, though based
in comedy, didn't shy away from addressing racial insensitivities. Nor,
obviously, did serious dramatic programming: Roots, the hyperpopular
1978 miniseries based on Alex Haley's best-selling book about his slave
ancestors, was unquestionably the biggest television event of the decade.
"The 1970s were a time when television tried to grapple with real social
issues -- more so than we're seeing 25 years later," says James Cullen, a
Harvard lecturer and the author of Art and Democracy: A Concise History of
Popular Culture in the United States (Monthly Review Press, 1996).
Indeed, though the black-oriented shows of the 1970s had their flaws --
Esther Rolle, who played Florida Evans on Good Times, quit the show for
a year, charging that Jimmie Walker's J.J. character had descended into
minstrelsy -- they represented a solid step forward. The late 1970s and early
1980s, however, witnessed a discouraging return to African-American characters
whose lives orbited around whites. One of the biggest shows of the time,
Diff'rent Strokes, featured two smart-alecky ghetto kids in the keeping
of a rich widower. (Webster, another hit, was essentially Diff'rent
Strokes with an even more diminutive star, Emmanuel Lewis.) And in Gimme
a Break!, Broadway star Nell Carter was an unabashed Beulah for the 1980s:
a black domestic catering to a white family in the suburbs and giving them a
dose of black sass.
When The Cosby Show arrived in 1984 and became an immediate hit, it
revived some of the momentum that black-oriented programming had lost since the
Lear sitcoms of the 1970s. The success of The Cosby Show paved the way
for a smash spinoff, A Different World, and a handful of black-themed
shows in the late 1980s, including Amen, 227, and
Family Matters. Another notable program of that period was Frank's
Place, a half-hour "dramedy" starring Tim Reid as a Boston history
professor who moved to New Orleans after inheriting a Creole restaurant from
his late father. Smart, well-written, and richly textured in its discussion of
racial politics, Frank's Place was a critics' darling but a commercial
bomb.
The early 1990s brought a new batch of black sitcoms on the Big Three
networks, including The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and Hangin' with Mr.
Cooper. The decade has also witnessed black performers assuming many lead
roles on popular drama series, including ER and NYPD Blue. But
the biggest development of the '90s by far was the rise of the Fox network, and
the subsequent launch of two additional networks, WB and UPN. All three new
networks invested heavily in black-oriented programming; Fox had modest hits
with such shows as In Living Color, Martin, and Living
Single. But while these programs have given new networks a niche audience,
they are often wanting in quality. Says one African-American actress: "I go on
auditions for these shows, and a lot of the time the complaint that comes back
is `Oh, you're so great, but could you be more black, could you be more
street?' It's gotten to the point where I just said to my new agent, `If all
the projects I'm going to be sent are UPNs and WBs, then forget it. Most of
those shows are total shit.' "
--J.G.
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