The Morning Call

Director wrestles with dueling images of Cosby in docuseries

- By Lorraine Ali

Director W. Kamau Bell kicks off his four-part Showtime docuseries, “We Need to Talk About Cosby,” with a question that makes everyone uncomforta­ble: Who is Bill Cosby?

His interview subjects curse under their breath and squirm in their seats as they attempt to formulate responses: A monster. America’s dad. An alleged rapist. Someone to believe in, someone to trust. An intelligen­t, malignant narcissist. A tragedy.

In the compelling new series, which recently premiered at the Sundance Film Festival and kicks off Jan. 30 on Showtime, comedian and host Bell wrestles with our dueling images of Cosby the Black pioneer and cultural icon and Cosby the alleged serial sexual predator. Can and should we separate the man from his art? What is his effect on generation­s of Black Americans? And can we honor pieces of his shattered legacy while still recognizin­g the damage he wrought? Nothing is tied up in a neat bow, and that’s largely what’s so engrossing about this series. It struggles with where to put Cosby.

“This is hard,” admits Bell. “There are times when making this I wanted to quit. I wanted to hold onto my memories of

Bill Cosby before I knew about Bill Cosby.”

Bell narrates the series off-camera, explaining that he felt compelled to make “We Need to Talk About Cosby” as a 1970s kid who felt a connection to the actor through “Fat Albert,” “Picture Pages” and later, “The Cosby Show.” Black academics, journalist­s, comedians and “Cosby Show” cast members are among those interviewe­d here, as well as numerous women who’ve accused Cosby of sexual assault dating back as early as the

1960s. Archival news footage and clips from Cosby’s various shows, films and TV interviews are used to illustrate the chasm between the lovable, upstanding dad on screen and the alleged abuser of more than 60 women.

Each episode is loosely structured so the first half chronicles Cosby’s successes: becoming the first Black lead in a TV series with “I Spy” in 1965; pioneering the hiring of Black stunt men

(as opposed to white men in blackface); diversifyi­ng Saturday morning cartoons; countering the stereotype of the broken African American family with “The Cosby Show.”

The remainder of each episode chronicles what was happening behind the endearing Jell-O pudding commercial­s and smiling talk show appearance­s. Former Playboy bunny and playmate Victoria Valentino recalls being drugged by Cosby in the late 1960s at a Sunset Strip restaurant, shuttled to a town house in the

Hollywood Hills, then raped by the star. Former model Lise Lotte-Lublin details a similar story, decades later. The sheer number of allegation­s amassed here is overwhelmi­ng and the similariti­es between the accounts are sickening. (Cosby has consistent­ly denied all allegation­s of sexual assault.)

There is a notable lack of film and TV luminaries in the series, and Bell explains there were many who just weren’t willing to talk. Several “Cosby Show” alumni do appear, including writer Matt Williams and Doug E. Doug, who played Griffin Vesey. Lili Bernard and Eden Tirl had bit parts on the show after being handpicked by Cosby. They describe being drugged and assaulted backstage. Comments from journalist Jemele Hill, television host Roland Martin, Boston Globe editor Renee Graham, comedians Godfrey and Chris Spencer, academic Jelani Cobb and dozens more build out the case that there is not one correct way to think about Cosby.

“You cannot truthfully speak about Black America in the later half of the 20th century and not talk about the influence of Bill Cosby,” says Martin. Even accuser Tirl said she wasn’t happy when Cosby was taken away in handcuffs: “(It was) a sad day in the history of Black culture.”

The series wraps up just as Cosby’s conviction is overturned on a technicali­ty in June 2021, and he’s released from prison. It’s the only time we see Bell on camera. He looks exhausted and wonders what the film is even about anymore. The answer, of course, is that there’s no easy answer.

Which is exactly why we need to talk about Cosby.

 ?? MICHAEL BRYANT/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER 2018 ?? Bill Cosby is the subject of“We Need to Talk about Cosby.”
MICHAEL BRYANT/PHILADELPH­IA INQUIRER 2018 Bill Cosby is the subject of“We Need to Talk about Cosby.”

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