Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

PBS, Keaton celebrate ‘Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od’ at 50

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- By Rob Owen PG TV writer Rob Owen: 412-263-2582 or rowen@post-gazette.com. Follow RobOwenTV on Twitter or on Facebook.

PASADENA, Calif. — Pittsburgh native Michael Keaton will host PBS’s 50th anniversar­y “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” retrospect­ive, “Mister Rogers: It’s You I Like” (8 p.m. March 6, WQED-TV).

Mr. Keaton, who worked as a stagehand and occasional­ly appeared on the “Neighborho­od” in the early 1970s, previously hosted a Rick Sebak-produced Mister Rogers retrospect­ive, 2003’s “Fred Rogers: America’s Favorite Neighbor.”

The new program, produced by Pittsburgh’s The Fred Rogers Co. and airing as a pledge special, features reactions of celebritie­s (Sarah Silverman, John Lithgow, Judd Apatow, Whoopi Goldberg, etc.) re-watching clips from “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” and the memories of those who were on set, including David Newell, who played Speedy Deliveryma­n Mr. McFeely, Joe Negri, Yo-Yo Ma and others.

“Fred said attitudes are caught, not taught,” said Mr. Newell, who traveled from Pittsburgh to be part of a press conference panel on behalf of the program during PBS’s portion of the Television Critics Associatio­n winter 2018 press tour. “He would show places and topics and let [the children watching] catch it. He never spelled it out. It was sort of caught. That was very unique. He was the real thing, I can tell you that.”

“Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” debuted nationally on Feb. 19, 1968, and ran for 900 episodes, airing its final original episode on PBS in 2001. Mr. Rogers, a Latrobe native, died of stomach cancer in 2003.

Nicholas Ma, son of cellist Yo-Yo Ma, appeared as a child on the “Neighborho­od” with his father and is featured in the retrospect­ive.

“His message to children that you are special was about saying you are unique as well,” Mr. Ma said. “Bring the best of who you are to this world, and that is enough.”

“It’s You I Like” runs an hour but will air over 90 minutes with pledge breaks inserted.

As part of the anniversar­y celebratio­n, PBS will air a week of “Daniel Tiger’s Neighborho­od” episodes paired with similarly themed episodes of “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” Feb. 26March 2 (a new “Daniel” episode on his goldfish’s death gets paired with a “MRN” episode about Mister Rogers’ dead goldfish). This will mark the first time “MRN” has aired on weekdays nationally since 2008, when PBS removed the program from its weekday program service; some PBS stations continue to carry one episode of “MRN” per week on weekends.

In addition to this retrospect­ive, a feature film documentar­y, “Won’t You Be my Neighbor?,” premieres at the Sundance Film Festival Friday and is scheduled for theatrical release on June 8 before it will likely air on PBS’s “Independen­t Lens,” a co-producer on the film. (Mr. Ma is one of producers of “Won’t You be my Neighbor?”)

“It’s the first time any filmmaker has had full access to Fred’s story,” said Lois Vossen, “Independen­t Lens” executive producer, following a PBS “Lens” press conference Tuesday. “The Rogers family fully cooperated and gave [the filmmakers] unlimited access to all of his letters and scripts from the program.”

Ms. Vossen said there’s only a small amount of overlap between the PBS retrospect­ive airing in March and the feature documentar­y.

“They were very focused on wanting to illuminate the show, and we knew right away we wanted to tell this much larger picture story about his whole life,” she said, “and how he came to be the Fred Rogers we know.”

Pittsburgh Foundation president Maxwell King has written a biography, “The Good Neighbor, the Life and Work of Fred Rogers” ($28, Abrams Press), set to be published on Sept. 11.

The United States Postal Service will issue a Fred Rogers stamp this year, and a new batch of “Daniel Tiger’s Neighborho­od” episodes, “Neighborho­od Friends Collection” ($14.99, PBS Distributi­on), will be released on Jan. 23.

Nellie Bly movie on Lifetime

Christina Ricci (”Pan Am”) will star in “Nellie Bly,” a Lifetime psychologi­cal thriller about the feminist journalist and Armstrong County native who went undercover in the lunatic asylum on New York’s Blackwell’s island.

The film chronicles Bly’s mission to expose the asylum’s deplorable conditions by feigning mental illness so she could report from the inside. Judith Light (”Transparen­t”) co-stars as torturous head nurse Matron Grady and Josh Bowman (”Revenge”) plays the more sympatheti­c Dr. Josiah.

Lifetime head of programmin­g Liz Gately said “Nellie Bly,” which filmed late last year in Winnipeg, will air this fall.

“It starts with her going into the hospital and it’s very dark,” she said. “It’s period, it actually happened, so we have to stay true to what actually happened. But the film accurately portrays the horror that was happening to women. … What’s also interestin­g is her personal journey of

thinking, ‘Am I crazy?’ and trying to get out and convincing the doctors she was actually well.”

PBS explores #MeToo

The #MeToo movement will be explored in a five-part half-hour PBS series, “#METOO, Now What?” (8:30 p.m. Feb. 2, WQED-TV), hosted by Zainab Salbi, founder of Women for Women Internatio­nal.

With sexual harassment occupying a prominent place in today’s national conversati­on, the program aims to engage women and men from all generation­s with each episode focused on a different aspect of sexual harassment. Topics include the impact of pop culture on women in the workplace, how race and class factor into the discussion and the social costs of pay inequity.

PBS president Paula Kerger said the program will be recorded just a few days before air to keep it current given the fastmoving nature of the story.

“We’ve observed in the situation thus far lots of discussion around Hollywood and stories that mushroom out, but it’s a much bigger problem that crosses every economic level and every industry,” Ms. Kerger said. “There isn’t a place I’ve seen yet to begin a conversati­on. I’m not suggesting a five-part series on public broadcasti­ng is going to solve a problem, but I think if we can begin talking to one another and do that in real time as the story is unfolding, we will do a great service.”

Syfy slots ‘Krypton’

Set 200 years before the destructio­n of Superman’s home planet, the 10-episode “Krypton” (March 21, Syfy) focuses on Superman’s grandfathe­r, Seg-El (Cameron Cuffe), who faces a difficult choice: Save his home planet or let it be destroyed to restore the fate of his future grandson. Time traveler Adam Strange (Shaun Sipos) arrives from the present to give Seg-El the news about the importance of his descendant to the future.

“A lot of people know Krypton blows up and that’s what causes Superman to come to Earth,” said executive producer David S. Goyer (“DaVinci’s Demons”). “This is really an untold story and time travel is involved so the ending of history could be changed. What happens in this show could be very different than the back story most people know.”

 ?? Courtesy of The Fred Rogers Co. ?? Fred Rogers hosting “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od.” PBS plans to air a retrospect­ive — titled “Mister Rogers: It’s You I Like” — in March in honor of the program’s 50th anniversar­y.
Courtesy of The Fred Rogers Co. Fred Rogers hosting “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od.” PBS plans to air a retrospect­ive — titled “Mister Rogers: It’s You I Like” — in March in honor of the program’s 50th anniversar­y.
 ?? PBS ?? David Newell, who played Mr. McFeely on “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od,” takes part in a press conference panel about PBS’s “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” 50th anniversar­y retrospect­ive.
PBS David Newell, who played Mr. McFeely on “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od,” takes part in a press conference panel about PBS’s “Mister Rogers’ Neighborho­od” 50th anniversar­y retrospect­ive.

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