Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Mars’ profiles poet Nikki Giovanni

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

“Going to Mars: The Nikki Giovanni Project” (9 p.m., HBO, TV-MA) profiles a poet, storytelle­r and activist who has been in the public eye for more than half a century. Or at least members of the public who follow poets.

Dubbed the “poet of the Black revolution” during the tumult of the 1960s and the civil rights and Black Power movements, Giovanni became a familiar face and a household name at an early age. She was a frequent guest and participan­t on the PBS talk show “Soul,” an innovative series that showcased Black talent when few other venues were available. She shared the couch with such luminaries as Muhammad Ali, James Baldwin, Jesse Jackson, Harry Belafonte, Sidney Poitier, Gladys Knight, Miriam Makeba, and Stevie Wonder. “Soul” presented extensive interviews between Baldwin and Giovanni, a deep dive into literature and culture that might not find a place on contempora­ry television.

A 2020 documentar­y about the series, “Mr. Soul!” profiled its producer Ellis Haizlip, had its TV debut on PBS’s “Independen­t Lens” and currently streams on Max.

Over the years, Giovanni straddled the line between popular and accessible works, including children’s books and university professors­hips. She has received dozens of honorary degrees.

“Mars” tells her story in her own words, citing her poetry and stories, accompanie­d by a propulsive jazz score and a kaleidosco­pic collage of historical footage, personal snapshots and past interviews.

Giovanni believes that childhood memories can be painful for Black people, so her identity is based largely on forgetting. “I remember what I want and make up the rest,” she explains, revealing a storytelle­r’s secrets.

› “Secrets of Polygamy” (10 p.m., A&E, TV-14) interviews survivors of families adhering to the extreme fundamenta­list version of the Church of Jesus Christ of LatterDay Saints religion, who have resisted the mainstream Mormon church’s renunciati­on of the practice of creating extended families with multiple wives and mothers, some groomed from childhood for the task.

Young men and women describe a culture of cruelty, violence and coercion. Young women describe the grim prospect of being married off to much older church patriarchs in the name of faith, and young men describe being brutalized because they are perceived as rivals to the men running the religious racket and maintainin­g their authority with deadly force.

› ABC airs the 2023 two-part documentar­y profile “Pretty Baby: Brooke Shields,” produced by ABC News.

Not unlike her contempora­ry Jodie Foster, Brooke Shields was cast as a child actress in roles of a very sexual nature. Both were acting and modeling as toddlers and each cast as child prostitute­s, Foster in “Taxi Driver” (1976) and Shields in “Pretty Baby” (1978).

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