Arab Times

‘Mrs America’ ERA miniseries gives women of color their due

A blessing to play an ‘unsung hero’: Nash

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By Lynn Elber

rs. America,” which dramatizes the Equal Rights Amendment fight that pitted a surprising and determined opponent against a deep bench of supporters, is a marvel in many ways.

The impressive cast includes Cate Blanchett and Margo Martindale. The miniseries was created by a woman, Dahvi Waller, and largely written and directed by women. It drills down on how the constituti­onal amendment was blocked while deftly painting both the broader and finer points of America circa 1970, when a wife, as a jaw-dropping moment illustrate­s, needed her husband to co-sign for credit.

One more achievemen­t: While the story is driven by Blanchett’s conservati­ve powerhouse Phyllis Schlafly, attention is paid to the women of color who fought for civil rights and to make “second-wave” feminism of the 1960s and ’70s - successor to the suffrage movement - address the obstacles they alone faced.

Gloria Steinem (Rose Byrne) and Betty Friedan (Tracey Ullman) are among the movement’s white luminaries featured in “Mrs. America,” but alongside them are African Americans including trailblazi­ng politician Shirley Chisholm and firebrand activist and attorney Florynce “Flo” Kennedy, who are played, respective­ly, by Uzo Aduba and Niecy Nash.

While Chisholm is best known, “there are many Shirleys of the world we have never heard of,” Aduba said. “That’s why it’s so exciting to see a project like this, telling not only Shirley’s story but quite a few of these women that, I would argue, the population at large doesn’t know their names.”

Chisholm was the first African American congresswo­man, the first major-party black candidate to seek the presidency and the first female

Democrat to run. She’s heard loud and clear in episode three, which is anchored in the 1972 Democratic convention and the machinatio­ns that pit Chisholm against what should be her sisters-in-arms.

In a revealing scene, Chisholm is pressured to end her bid in favor of eventual Democratic nominee Sen. George McGovern, with New York Rep. Bella Abzug (Martindale) chastising her for failing to get a campaign green light from the power brokers.

Aduba, a two-time Emmy winner for “Orange Is the New Black,” quotes Chisholm’s succinct reply: “I didn’t get anywhere in this life waiting on someone’s permission.”

Amazing

The first three episodes of the miniseries debut Wednesday on FX on Hulu, the streaming platform’s hub offering FX series and exclusive releases such as “Mrs. America.” The remaining six episodes will be out weekly through May 27, with an ensemble cast that includes Sarah Paulson, Elizabeth Banks, John Slattery, James Marsden and Jeanne Tripplehor­n.

Nash (“When They See Us,” “Claws”) calls it a blessing to play an “unsung hero.”

Kennedy was “absolutely amazing. And that mouth, man!” said Nash, who watched footage of her in action and used it to shape her performanc­e. “On set, I was like, ’Listen, do you want me to say these words, or do you want me to talk how this woman really spoke? Because she didn’t have a filter.”

A wealth of books by Schlafly, Steinem and others was part of the material that helped “craft this highly researched and very clear-eyed view of this time period,” executive producer Stacey Sher said during a Q&A with reporters.

Making the series inclusive, both on screen and off, was never in doubt, said writer-creator Waller (“Mad Men,” “Desperate Housewives”), also an executive producer.

“It was always obvious to me that you can’t tell the story of secondwave feminism without telling the story of intersecti­onal feminism, so it was obvious that I would include women of color leaders in the story,” Waller said. “The question for me was how to do that when your way into the series is Phyllis Schlafly?” Schlafly was a defense hawk and a onetime Republican congressio­nal candidate who is introduced in the series as intent on derailing a US-Soviet nuclear arms pact. Then the proposed ERA, approved by Congress with bipartisan support and nearing the required number of state ratificati­ons, caught Schlafly’s eye. She argued it would subvert, not secure, women’s rights and, if both sexes could be drafted, put national security at risk.

With Chisholm, the way in was to tell “the story of Phyllis’ world and the story of Shirley’s world” and depict their thematic intersecti­on ”of women, race and power,” Waller said.

Episode two, titled “Gloria,” is about Steinem but also focuses on Sloan (as she was then known), who was a lesbian, and the pivotal 1977 National Women’s Conference held in Houston, Texas. The meeting became a flash point for the “tension between whether to include (issues of) race and also gay rights in the women’s movement,” Waller said.

While she would like to have made more episodes about other leaders of color, she hopes viewers are inspired to further explore their lives and achievemen­ts. (AP)

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