[For this year’s
July
4th series, I’ll be AmericanStudying cultural representations of
the Revolution and its era. Leading up to a special post on Hamilton!]
Paralleling
yesterday’s post, three Revolutionary-focused TV shows that reflect the
medium’s evolution.
1)
The Swamp Fox (1959-60): I’m not gonna lie, I’m including this show partly because
I wanted to share clips like that initial hyperlinked one, of a very young
Leslie Nielsen as the titular hero (he even sang the show’s theme song!). But
The Swamp Fox also reflects an
interesting moment in TV history—produced by Disney, in a direct attempt to
build on the success of its Davy Crockett miniseries (1954-1955), The Swamp Fox didn’t achieve that level of prominence but
nonetheless represented (to my knowledge) the first TV show to focus on the
American Revolution. It did so in part by translating many elements of the
era’s hugely popular TV westerns (including Crockett,
but also and especially late 1950s contemporaries like Gunsmoke, Rawhide, Bonanza, and many more) into Revolutionary-era
South Carolina. Yet at the same time, The
Swamp Fox was set during a war, and as such its gun-toting heroes and
villains (like the British officers played by John Sutton and Patrick Macnee)
played very different roles than those on the westerns. Even without dashing
young Leslie, this is a show well worth watching (and all eight episodes are
currently available in full on YouTube).
2)
George Washington (1984): It took a quarter-century for another
TV miniseries focused on a Revolutionary historical figure to air, and when it
did it was with the very different George
Washington (as well as its 1986 sequel, George Washington II: The Forging of a Nation). Starring Barry
Bostwick as George, Patty Duke as Martha, and an all-star cast (including Hal
Holbrook as John Adams and, in keeping with the Zucker Brothers comedies
thread, Lloyd Bridges as Caleb Quinn), George
Washington was a sweeping epic melodrama, set over more than 30 years (from
the French and Indian War to the end of the Revolution) and featuring the same
kinds of historicl and romantic intrigues featured in other 80s miniseries
(perhaps most similarly, the following year’s Civil War epic North
and South). Although historical miniseries had been a popular TV genre since
at least Roots
(1977), I would argue that George
Washington is at least as close to its contemporary primetime soaps like Dynasty and Dallas (both of which were dominating the airwaves in 1984) as to a
historical drama like Roots. This was
the American Revolution via 1980s bombast and excess—which, to be very clear,
isn’t at all a critique, and makes for a fun eight hours of binge-watching
pleasure.
3)
Turn: Washington’s Spies
(2014-present): The 21st century has seen its share of historical
miniseries, including the hugely successful HBO production John
Adams (2008) and the more critically mixed History Channel show Sons of Liberty (2014-15).
But I would argue that the recent (in fact, ongoing) show which better reflects
our current TV moment is Turn, the
AMC spy drama that premiered
its fourth and final season just a few weeks back. Combining elements of
contemporary historical spy dramas like The
Americans, historical action melodramas like Vikings,
historical resistance dramas like Underground, and stories
of family and loyalty and crime like Sons
of Anarchy, Turn reflects the
breadth and depth of what longtime critics like Alan
Sepinwall have taken to calling Peak TV (full disclosure: because of that
quantity and quality, I’ve only seen a few moments of Turn as of this writing). Yet at the same time, the cancellation
of Underground (which looked like
it might
get picked up by Oprah’s OWN, but unfortunately was not), which both
garnered higher ratings and was more critically acclaimed than Turn, suggests that Peak TV is still
influenced by complex issues of race and audience in frustrating ways. Which is
to say, we might not be ready for the Elizabeth
Freeman and Quock Walker miniseries that would be my ideal next cultural
representation of the Revolution.
Special Hamilton post this weekend,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Revolutionary representations you’d highlight?
I just searched for Turn and Underground to stream them online, and while Turn is included in my Netflix subscription, Underground is only available through Amazon and is *not* included in my Prime subscription - I have to pay extra.
ReplyDeleteYuck, I'm sorry to hear that. Underground is kind of in-between networks, which might be part of that. Hopefully it will end up on some streaming service--I haven't watched the whole run, but what I've seen is really excellent.
ReplyDeleteBen