The Commercial Appeal

Netflix documentar­y explores RFK’s legacy 50 years later

- Alanna Durkin Richer ASSOCIATED PRESS

BOSTON – He was once called the most likely American in the 20th century to become president. But Robert F. Kennedy’s bid to follow in his older brother’s footsteps as commander in chief was cut short the same way John F. Kennedy’s White House term was: by a man with a gun.

Fifty years later, Bobby Kennedy’s life and transforma­tion into a liberal hero are coming to Netflix in a new fourpart documentar­y series available Friday. Through archival footage and interviews with friends and staffers, “Bobby Kennedy for President” takes an indepth look at what drove him to seek public office, the events that shaped him and his legacy decades after his assassinat­ion.

“If we want to understand why Bobby Kennedy was so important to people, we have to understand all of it,” said Dawn Porter, director and executive producer, also known for “Gideon’s Army” and “Trapped.”

The series opens with a broadcaste­r’s prediction that “no American in this century has ever been so likely to be president as Robert Francis Kennedy.” It takes viewers through Kennedy’s combative time as attorney general, his depression after his brother’s death, entry into the 1968 presidenti­al race and assassinat­ion 83 days later.

The documentar­y explores Kennedy’s growth on issues like civil rights, through the guidance of black leaders like John Lewis, now a Democratic congressma­n. In documentin­g Kennedy’s journey from a “cop-at-heart” lawyer to polished politician, it highlights experience­s that affected him, like a trip to the Mississipp­i Delta that opened his eyes to rural hunger.

Viewers hear from key figures in Kennedy’s life, including Paul Schrade, who was shot in the head when 24-year-old Sirhan Sirhan fired at Kennedy on June 5, 1968. The series, produced by RadicalMed­ia, Trilogy Films and LooksFilm, also features interviews from Sirhan’s brother, Munir Sirhan, and Juan Romero, the Ambassador Hotel busboy who was at Kennedy’s side as he uttered his last words: “Is everybody OK?”

For Romero, a Mexican immigrant, it was one of the few times he has openly spoken about Kennedy’s death – something he had felt guilty about for years since Kennedy stopped to shake his hand before the gunshots. Romero had met Kennedy the day before while delivering room service. Kennedy thanked him and shook his hand then, too.

“I never felt so American,” Romero told The Associated Press.

Filmmakers spent more than a year gathering footage from museums, news outlets and presidenti­al archives.

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