| Index | 5 reviews in total |
6 out of 8 people found the following review useful:
Educational story that needed to be told!, 6 September 2000
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Author:
Bobubas (bobubas@aol.com) from Illinois
Excellent account about the impact McCarthyism had on several of the Black Americans in Hollywood at the time. Archived video and photographs provide you with an in depth feel for what these individuals were subjected to during this tumultuous time in American history.
1 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
details of the movie, 7 November 2007
Author:
imrankhankhan from United States
Please somebody start commenting on this movie... I need it to write a
paper for my racism class..
Scandalize My Name provides a searing examination of how "Red Scare"
politics were used to hinder America's civil rights movement. This
powerful film documents the first-hand experiences of African-American
performers faced with blacklists, loyalty oaths and other
discrimination. It explores the impact these tactics had on the
performers' careers and on civil rights as a whole. Paul Robeson,
Jackie Robinson, Harry Belafonte, Ossie Davis, and Dick Campbell are
just a few of the notable personalities featured. ~ Scott Albright, All
Movie Guide Scandalize My Name provides a searing examination of how
"Red Scare" politics were used to hinder America's civil rights
movement. This powerful film documents the first-hand experiences of
African-American performers faced with blacklists, loyalty oaths and
other discrimination. It explores the impact these tactics had on the
performers' careers and on civil rights as a whole. Paul Robeson,
Jackie Robinson, Harry Belafonte, Ossie Davis, and Dick Campbell are
just a few of the notable personalities featured. ~ Scott Albright, All
Movie Guide
3 out of 5 people found the following review useful:
Educational story that needed to be told!, 6 September 2000
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Author:
Bobubas (bobubas@aol.com) from Illinois
Excellent account about the impact McCarthyism had on several of the Black Americans in Hollywood at the time. Archived video and photographs provide you with an in depth feel for what these individuals were subjected to during this tumultuous time in American history.
Brilliant and terribly sad, 14 September 2010
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Author:
blanche-2 from United States
"Scandalize My Name" is a documentary from 1998 that details the
blacklisting during the Communist era of prominent blacks who held some
of the same beliefs that Communists did, and therefore were a great
target for McCarthy. You know, beliefs like equality, subversive things
like that.
Hosted by Morgan Freeman, there are interviews with Ossie Davis,
Rosetta LeNoire, Dick Campbell (who had a black theater company), Harry
Belafonte and others about that time in America, post-war, when blacks
believed that after serving their country, their role in society would
change. It did - they were branded communists.
The focus is on, for one, the great singer and actor Paul Robeson.
Treated like a god when he gave concerts in the Soviet Union and not
really having an idea of what was going on there, some of his
statements were taken as commie-loving, and his career was pretty much
ruined, although eventually the state department gave him a passport so
he could continue performing in Europe, where he was revered. After his
career in the U.S. dried up, he attempted suicide and turned to drugs.
Because of his influence and fame, he was a good one to stomp on, and
stomp the Hoover-McCarthy side did.
Another focus is on the beautiful, vivacious, and talented Hazel Scott,
who had her own radio show and made films. As the wife of Adam Clayton
Powell, she, too became a target and was silenced, and eventually
continued her career in Paris. Fortunately she lived long enough to
enjoy a comeback in the U.S. in the '60s. Another target was the
brilliant stage and film actor Canada Lee, whose death in 1953 was
surely exacerbated by the blacklist and heartache over the accusations.
Scott and Lee were proactive - though not subpoenaed, they stated their
cases before the House of Unamerican Activities. It did them no good.
Willie Mays, pressured to speak out against Robeson, didn't help
either. At the end of the documentary, Freeman reads what was left out
of the Mays testimony in the newsreel, which certainly tempered what he
said.
I admit that this is a side of the blacklist that I didn't know much
about, and it's shameful and disturbing. Sometimes I read comments on
this board and realize that people don't understand what went on. Yes,
there probably was Communist influence in the entertainment industry.
And there's no doubt that people were terrified of Communism when I was
growing up. But you could make the book "Red Channels" if you went to
the funeral of a suspected Communist. You could get in there over
nothing and be denied work. If you went to a communist meeting in the
1930s, just to see what it was about, in the 1950s you could be
blacklisted. Hazel Scott was accused of entertaining Russian troops
during World War II...when they were our allies and she entertained
combined forces.
If you get a chance to see this, don't miss this documentary about a
very, very ugly time.
0 out of 1 people found the following review useful:
Decent Documentary But Subject Needs More, 7 April 2010
Author:
Michael_Elliott from Louisville, KY
Scandalize My Name: Stories from the Blacklist (1998)
** 1/2 (out of 4)
Documentary that shows the impact that McCarthyism had on several black
actors and musicians in Hollywood. We get to hear the stories of the
likes of Canada Lee, Paul Robeson and others who were labeled as
communist and pretty much forced out of the business. Morgan Freeman
hosts this documentary that includes interviews with Ossie Davis, Harry
Belafonte, Dick Campbell, Frederick O'Neal and Rosetta LeNoire. There's
certainly a story that needs to be told but unfortunately this
documentary just touches the surface and if you know nothing about the
subject than this here will give you a few ideas as to what was going
on but at only 45-minutes there just isn't enough time to dig into
everything that was going on. The film starts off talking about some of
the black studios in Harlem after the war and how several blacks were
hoping the country would change after returning home from WWII. We hear
from Davis about those early days and everyone shares their opinions on
legends like Robeson. The comments Robeson made about no blacks going
to stand up against Russia is debated to a point as is Jackie
Robinson's testimony that went against what Robeson said. I really wish
the documentary had been more focused but considering how short it was
I'm going to guess that the filmmakers tried to get in as much as they
could. Sometimes those speaking go off topic and in the end I just felt
there wasn't enough meat here to be fully satisfying.
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