Los Angeles Times

‘Won’t You Be My Neighbor?’

Doc shows how Mr. Rogers made goodness desirable.

- KENNETH TURAN

had a simple set and minimal production values. As a host, it employed an ordained Presbyteri­an minister whose flashiest move was changing into a cardigan sweater. A likely candidate for legendary television success “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” was not.

Yet for more than 30 years, Fred Rogers’ Pittsburgh-based public television half-hour was a smallscree­n powerhouse, entrancing generation­s of wee fans and even influencin­g public policy. Not bad for a man who believed “love is at the root of everything ... love or the lack of it.”

Although Rogers died in 2003 at age 74, the excellent “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” is the first documentar­y on him, and Morgan Neville is the ideal filmmaker to do the job.

A documentar­y veteran who won the Oscar for the entrancing “Twenty Feet From Stardom,” Neville is an experience­d profession­al who knows what questions to ask and, working with editors Jeff Malmberg and Aaron Wickenden, how to assemble the answers.

Neville’s goal here is not so much to tell the story of Rogers’ personal life, though that does get some play, but rather to detail the how and why of his success, to show the way someone whose formidable task was, in his own words, “to make goodness attractive” was able to make it happen.

Neville has interviewe­d Rogers’ widow, sister and two sons as well as key players behind and in front of the camera, in the process telling us things about the show we may have forgotten or never knew in the first place.

But the key to the documentar­y’s success is, paradoxica­lly, the same thing that made “Neighborho­od” a hit in the first place, and that is the man himself.

For it turns out that a glimpse of Fred Rogers working his magic has the same persuasive effect on today’s adults as it had on children aged 2 to 5 back in the day.

Quite simply, Rogers’ palpable goodness and caring, the purity of his respect for children and ability to meet them on their own terms, as well as a determiers nation to provide understand­ing and safety, are all apparent within a minute of seeing him on camera.

“His inner child,” explains son Jim Rogers, “never really went away,” and that made being one with tiny tots considerab­ly easier.

Yet as “Won’t You Be My Neighbor” makes clear, Rogers’ success didn’t just happen. In fact, in addition to his personalit­y, Rogers’ combined specific attributes — a sense of ministry and a child developmen­t background as well as television experience — to create his successful program.

Not surprising­ly for someone so sensitive, RogIt did not have a particular­ly happy childhood. He was scathingly teased by his peers as “Fat Freddy” and ended up having to “make up a lot of my own fun.”

Rogers was all set for divinity school, wife Joanne says, when he was attracted by the potential of television and appalled by the crass nature of programmin­g for kids. “Why,” she remembers him asking, “is a wonderful tool being used this way?”

Being in Pittsburgh gave Rogers access to the University of Pittsburgh’s wellregard­ed program for child developmen­t and child care, which also attracted luminaries like Erik Erikson and Dr. Benjamin Spock.

Rogers returned to television after his ordination, and his program was such an early success for PBS that he was asked to testify before Congress when the network’s funding was threatened with eliminatio­n.

Seeing Rogers win over crusty Rhode Island Sen. John Pastore with his 1969 testimony is one of this film’s highlights.

Another interestin­g aspect of “Won’t You Be My Neighbor?” is that it reminds us that Rogers never hesitated to take on tough material, even putting on a show that dealt with the concept of assassinat­ion after Sen. Robert F. Kennedy was shot.

And though it is unquestion­ably an admiring film, “Neighbor” finds time to show clips from savage Rogers parodies by the likes of Eddie Murphy and Johnny Carson and listen in when son Jim talks about what it was like having a father who was viewed by the public as “a second Christ.”

Among the Mr. Rogers shows excerpted, probably none has more power than his time with 10-year-old quadripleg­ic Jeff Erlanger, especially their duet of one of the show’s standards, “It’s You I Like.” That is definitely a moment to remember.

 ?? John Beale ?? FRED ROGERS, left, kicks back with Officer Clemmons, played by François Scarboroug­h Clemmons, on “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od.”
John Beale FRED ROGERS, left, kicks back with Officer Clemmons, played by François Scarboroug­h Clemmons, on “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od.”

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