South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

How ‘Touched by an Angel’ got its wings

God-infused series that debuted 26 years ago became one of TV’s biggest shows

- By Sandi Dolbee San Diego Union-Tribune

Twenty-six years ago this month, Martha Williamson smashed a hole in the stained-glass ceiling of prime-time television when she debuted a God-infused drama series starring a white angel who spoke with an Irish lilt and her Black supervisor, who spoke with equal measure sass and reverence, sang like a heavenly host and drove a red Cadillac convertibl­e.

Over its nine-year run, “Touched by an Angel” would reach upwards of 25 million viewers a week, becoming one of the top shows in the CBS stable.

As its head writer and executive producer, Williamson asked the tough questions, like where was God when your baby died, when skinheads tore up a synagogue, when racial injustice turned deadly. And why, why, why?

“We had to ask that question right off the bat or else no one was going to trust us,” Williamson said.

Williamson says the message of “Touched by an Angel” wasn’t that God was going to fix things, but that God was going to help you get through it. Its theology was a trinity, of sorts: “God exists; God loves you; God wants to be part of your life.

Williamson adds, “And at some point, you have decisions to make in your life because God gave you free will.”

Episodes were uplifting even when the topics — from suicide to AIDS — were painful. A white dove became the signature closing scene, a punctuatio­n mark of peace and hope.

But the story of how Williamson and her angels came to be part of our weekly existence for nearly a decade (and continues on in reruns) is a bit miraculous. angel even brought a dog back to life.

To her, angels are messengers of God, created specifical­ly for that purpose. “What I don’t believe is that we die, and then we have to accomplish something to get our wings and then a bell tinkles,” she says.

And bringing something back to life? That was way above an angel’s pay grade.

So she made her pitch. She shared a survey about how most Americans believe in a higher power. “And then I said, ‘You can capture a lot of those if you just take the God that people share, the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob. That very God is worshipped by Islam, Judaism and Christiani­ty. Why make something up when you’ve got so much to draw directly from those faiths?’ ”

And just like every successful series has a bible, a guidebook of characters and rules, she already had one. “Just go to the Bible, and see how angels are depicted. You’ve got a world of potential right there. They bring messages.

They bring hope. They bring healing. They fight battles. As long as there are people, there will be stories.”

On Sept. 21, 1994, the first episode aired, with Reese — already a wellknown, Grammy-nominated artist — singing the theme song, “Walk With You.” We were introduced to Monica (Downey), an angel who had just been promoted from searchand-rescue to caseworker, and to Tess (Reese), her supervisin­g angel.

Guest stars read like a who’s who of contempora­ry Americana, including civil rights icon Rosa Parks, boxer Muhammad Ali and writer Maya Angelou, who penned a special poem for her episode. Other celebritie­s included Patty Duke, Neil Patrick Harris, Celine Dion, Randy Travis, Wynonna Judd and younger versions of Paul Walker and Jack Black.

Along the way, Williamson added actor John Dye to the ensemble, in the role of Andrew, the angel of death, and later, Valerie Bertinelli was created (literally) as Gloria, a novice angel.

The show spawned a spinoff, “Promised Land,” making Williamson the first woman to be the sole executive producer of two one-hour dramas simultaneo­usly. Oprah Winfrey interviewe­d her. So did Larry King and Ed Bradley. In Bradley’s “60 Minutes” interview, he prodded her about whether she was using the show to get people to believe in God. Her response: “I think it’s a nice dividend.”

Today, she insists she was not proselytiz­ing. “I never walked into CBS and said I can’t wait to do a show about angels,” she says. “They asked me. And so I chose the best message I possibly could that angels could bring.”

If it encouraged people and got them thinking about their own faith journey, that was fine. “But never did I say, let’s use this show to convert people to Christiani­ty. Never did. That’s assuming an awful lot about my ability.”

In 2003, with failing ratings, CBS dropped the series. When asked if she thinks the show could make a comeback, Williamson doesn’t hesitate.

“We dealt with homosexual­ity, we dealt with abortion, we dealt with hate crime. We had Rosa Parks asking truly difficult questions in the wake of a terrific hate crime that was taken right out of the headlines.”

Reruns of the series can be found on CBS All Access and on the Hallmark Drama channel.

 ?? TONY ESPARZA/CBS ?? Roma Downey, left, as Monica and Della Reese as Tess in the finale of “Touched by an Angel.”
TONY ESPARZA/CBS Roma Downey, left, as Monica and Della Reese as Tess in the finale of “Touched by an Angel.”
 ?? FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY ?? Martha Williamson, shown in 2014, was head writer and executive producer on “Touched by an Angel.”
FREDERICK M. BROWN/GETTY Martha Williamson, shown in 2014, was head writer and executive producer on “Touched by an Angel.”

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