Las Vegas Review-Journal

‘Finding Your Roots’ unlocks more family secrets

- By Lynn Elber The Associated Press

If there’s a bigger cheerleade­r for genealogy research than Henry Louis Gates Jr. it’s unlikely they’re nearly as well-connected.

The prominent Harvard professor once again lures the famous and celebrated to PBS’ “Finding Your

Roots,” which shares their ancestry and family stories as uncovered by impressive research and science.

In the fourth season beginning at 8 p.m. Tuesday, the three dozen subjects include Scarlett Johansson, Lupita Nyong’o, Sean

Combs, Amy Schumer, Garrison Keillor, Aziz Ansari, filmmaker Ava Duvernay, author Ta-nehisi Coates and Christophe­r Walken.

Larry David, whom Gates said he’d “bugged” for three years to go under the “Roots” microscope, finally agreed and discovered that he’s related to Bernie Sanders, whom David memorably impersonat­ed on “Saturday Night Live.” Their separate family stories are chronicled in the season opener.

David said he was reluctant to have personal details disclosed on TV but was glad he finally took part, lauding the “incredible job” done by researcher­s.

There were other revelation­s that took him aback, he said. David learned of ancestors who settled in Birmingham, Alabama, in the 1840s, owned two slaves and fought for the Confederac­y in the Civil War. A hundred years later, many aunts, uncles and cousins on the maternal side of his family died in the Holocaust.

But “Finding Your

Roots” is aimed at more than satisfying individual curiosity and telling an engrossing story, said Gates, an executive producer and writer as well as host of the series: It carries a message of shared origins that he argues can benefit society.

The science of DNA proves that “there aren’t four or five biological­ly distinct races. We’re all from one race, the human race, geneticall­y,” Gates said. “And we know that geneticall­y we all … descended from common ancestors that left the

African continent 50,000 years ago. That’s a fact.”

Detailing how different ethnic groups contribute­d to world history and how their experience­s “merged or conflicted” with those of other groups is also of immense value, he said.

“It’s part of a larger education process to make us all realize we’re fully human,” Gates said.

Among the stars with standout stories:

■ Carly Simon, who was eager to find out whether her maternal grandmothe­r, who came to the United States from Cuba, had her lineage right: She claimed to be the offspring of the king of Spain and a Moroccan slave.

Researcher­s traveled to Cuba to search out Catholic church records unavailabl­e online and found “an amazing family tree,”

Gates said, one different than expected. Simon’s grandmothe­r was found to be 40 percent black, making the singer-songwriter 10 percent black.

Her grandmothe­r “invented this crazy story, this fabricatio­n, because she knew she was from a mixedrace heritage, and that was very unpopular in the 1950s and ’60s,” Gates said.

■ Tea Leoni, who asked the show to focus on finding the family of her mother, Emily Patterson, an adoptee who never knew the names of her biological parents.

Over a period of months, Patterson’s DNA was run through databases that hold DNA results for some 6 million people, Gates said. A match would show they had a common ancestor.

The candidates were narrowed to a pair of sisters, one of whom proved to be Patterson’s mother and who, at 96, was still alive, Gates said. A private meeting was arranged with her for Leoni, Patterson and Leoni’s daughter.

Research also revealed Leoni’s biological mother’s father and traced his family back to her seventh greatgrand­father, born around 1690, and his Virginia-born son who at one point lived near George Washington.

■ Questlove, the musician, producer and writer born Ahmir Khalib Thompson, found his family has an extraordin­ary place in U.S. history.

In 1860, five decades after the slave trade to the United States was abolished, a ship commission­ed by a Southern planter illegally brought about 110 slaves to Mobile Bay, Alabama, from a port now located in the Republic of Benin, Gates recounted.

It was the last known slave ship to arrive in the United States, Gates said. Aboard was a couple who would take the names Charlie and Maggie Lewis and who were recorded on the 1880 census as African-born.

As freed people, they settled in an Alabama town largely made up of others on the ship, and Questlove’s distant cousins who live in the area shared with him a photo of Charlie Lewis, Gates said.

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 ?? Stephanie Berger ?? PBS Henry Louis Gates Jr. returns as host of “Finding Your Roots,” which opens its fourth season at 8 p.m. Tuesday on PBS.
Stephanie Berger PBS Henry Louis Gates Jr. returns as host of “Finding Your Roots,” which opens its fourth season at 8 p.m. Tuesday on PBS.

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