Thursday, July 26, 2012
Turner Classic Movies showingdisability films
TCM to Examine Hollywood's Depiction of People with Disabilities in
The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film in October
Lawrence Carter-Long Joins TCM's Robert Osborne for Historic
Month-Long Film Exploration, Presented in Collaboration with
Inclusion in the Arts
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Turner Classic Movies (TCM) will dedicate the month of October to
exploring the ways people with disabilities have been portrayed in
film. On behalf of Inclusion in the Arts, Lawrence Carter-Long will
join TCM host Robert Osborne for The Projected Image: A History of
Disability in Film. The special month-long exploration will air
Tuesdays in October, beginning Oct. 2 at 8 p.m. (ET).
TCM makes today's announcement to coincide with the 22nd
anniversary of the signing of the Americans with Disability Act
(ADA) on July 26. And in a first for TCM, all films will be
presented with both closed captioning and audio description (via
secondary audio) for audience members with auditory and visual disabilities.
The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film features
more than 20 films ranging from the 1920s to the 1980s. Each
night's collection will explore particular aspects, themes, or
types of disability, such as blindness, deafness and psychiatric or
intellectual disabilities. In addition, one evening of programming
will focus on newly disabled veterans returning home from war.
TCM's exploration of disability in cinema includes many
Oscar(r)-winning and nominated films, such as An Affair to Remember
(1957), in which Deborah Kerr's romantic rendezvous with Cary Grant
is nearly derailed by a paralyzing accident; A Patch of Blue
(1965), with Elizabeth Hartman as a blind white girl who falls in
love with a black man, played by Sidney Poitier; Butterflies Are
Free (1972), starring Edward Albert as a blind man attempting to
break free from his over-protective mother; and Gaby: A True Story
(1987), the powerful tale of a girl with cerebral palsy trying to
gain independence as an artist; Johnny Belinda(1948), starring Jane
Wyman as a "deaf-mute" forced to defy expectations; The Miracle
Worker (1962), starring Anne Bancroft as Annie Sullivan and Patty
Duke as Helen Keller; One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest (1975), with
Jack Nicholson as a patient in a mental institution and Louise
Fletcher as the infamous Nurse Ratched; The Best Years of Our Lives
(1946), the post-War drama starring Fredric March, Myrna Loy and
real-life disabled veteran Harold Russell; and Charly (1968), with
Cliff Robertson as an intellectually disabled man who questions the
limits of science after being turned into a genius.
The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film also
features several lesser-known classics ripe for rediscovery,
including the atmospheric Val Lewton chiller Bedlam (1946), the
intriguing blind-detective mystery Eyes in the Night (1942); A
Child is Waiting (1963), with Burt Lancaster and Judy Garland; the
British family drama Mandy (1953); and a bravura performance by
wheelchair user Susan Peters in Sign of the Ram (1948). A complete
schedule is included.
Each year since 2006, TCM has dedicated one month toward
examining how different cultural and ethnic groups have been
portrayed in the movies. Several of the programming events have
centered on Race and Hollywood, with explorations on how the movies
have portrayed African-Americans in 2005, Asians in 2008, Latinos
in 2009, Native Americans in 2010 and Arabs in 2011. TCM looked at
Hollywood's depiction of gay and lesbian characters, issues and themes in 2007.
"The Projected Image: A History of Disability in Film is a
valuable opportunity to take a deeper look at the movies we all
know and love, to see them from a different perspective and to
learn what they have to say about us as a society," said Osborne.
"We are very proud to be working with Inclusion in the Arts on this
important exploration. And we are especially glad to have Lawrence
Carter-Long of the National Council on Disability with us to
provide fascinating, historical background and thought-provoking
> insight on how cinematic portrayals of disability have evolved over time."
"From returning veterans learning to renegotiate both the
assumptions and environments once taken for granted to the rise of
independent living, Hollywood depictions of disability have
alternately echoed and influenced life outside the movie theater,"
said Carter-Long, who curated the series. "Twenty-two years after
the passage of the ADA and over a century since Thomas Edison
filmed 'The Fake Beggar,' TCM and Inclusion in the Arts provide an
unprecedented overview of how cinematic projections of isolation
and inspiration have played out on the silver screen - and in our
> lives. When screened together, everything from The Miracle Worker
to One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest reveals another layer where what
you think you know is only the beginning."
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