The Oklahoman

5 new Tulsa Race Massacre documentar­ies, 2 fictional recreation­s

- Brandy McDonnell

The 100th anniversar­y of the Tulsa Race Massacre is coming soon to a TV near you.

Oklahomans will be able to tune into at least five new documentar­ies that will be televised to coincide with the upcoming centennial of the 1921 tragedy.

For those who prefer to take in history through fantastica­l fiction, two series streaming on HBO Max offer opportunit­ies to see a recreation of some of the darkest days in Oklahoma’s complicate­d history.

The Tulsa Race Massacre was one of the worst episodes of racial violence in U.S. history. Between May 31 and June 1, 1921, mobs of white residents attacked, set aflame and ultimately devastated the Greenwood District, which was at that time one of the wealthiest Black communitie­s in the United States, earning it the name “Black Wall Street.”

The deadly tragedy was covered up for decades and omitted from history books even in Oklahoma, but the centennial commemorat­ion includes numerous art exhibition­s, music projects and film showcases as well as these television tune-in opportunit­ies:

1. ‘ Tulsa Burning: The 1921 Race Massacre’

When it’s premiering: 7 p.m. May 30. Where it’s airing: The History Channel. Executive produced by NBA superstar and Oklahoma Hall of Famer Russell Westbrook, this documentar­y is directed by Peabody and Emmy Award-winning helmer Stanley Nelson (“Freedom Riders”) and Peabody and duPont Award winner Marco Williams (“Two Towns of Jasper”).

The film will chronicle the birth of Black Wall Street to its catastroph­ic destructio­n over two bloody days in 1921 to the fallout and reconstruc­tion. It also will follow Tulsa’s current grave excavation efforts at Oaklawn Cemetery, where unmarked coffins of victims who were killed and buried during the massacre have been recovered.

Rare archival footage and imagery from 100 years ago will be paired with commentary and interviews with sources from the Tulsa Historical Society & Museum, the John Hope Franklin Center for Reconcilia­tion, the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre Centennial Commission and the Vernon AME Church.

Through its “Save Our History” initiative, the cable network is helping to preserve the Vernon AME Church, the only standing Black-owned structure from Tulsa’s Black Wall Street era. Funds from the grant will help restore the refuge room in the church basement where Black citizens of Tulsa sought safety during the race massacre.

As a companion piece to the documentar­y, The History Channel is partnering with WNYC Studios to launch on May 28 a six-part podcast series “Blindspot: Tulsa Burning,” produced in collaborat­ion with local public radio KOSU.

“The Tulsa Race Massacre was not something I was taught about in school or in any of my history books,” said Westbrook, a former OKC Thunder star who now plays for the Washington Wizards, in a statement.

“It was only after spending 11 years in Oklahoma that I learned of this deeply troubling and heartbreak­ing event. This is one of many overlooked stories of African Americans in this country that deserves to be told. These are the stories we must honor and amplify so we can learn from the past and create a better future.”

2. ‘Dreamland: The Burning of Black Wall Street’

When it’s premiering: To be announced.

Where it’s airing: CNN.

Westbrook isn’t the only NBA superstar making a Tulsa Race Massacre documentar­y. LeBron James and his business partner Maverick Carter are executive producing “Dreamland” through their SpringHill Company in partnershi­p with CNN Films.

“Dreamland” is directed and produced by Salima Koroma, who helmed the 2016 documentar­y “Bad Rap,” about Asian American rappers, including Awkwafina.

In a 2021 Sundance Film Festival virtual panel, Koroma said she wants her documentar­y’s depiction of Black Wall Street to evoke the same sense of wonder she felt when viewing the fictional Wakanda in the Marvel film “Black Panther.”

“When people hear about Black Wall Street, they think about the destructio­n, the loss, the sadness, the death. And I think that when we tell stories about Black people in America, we tend to go to that. When I think about Black Wall Street, I think about the wonder, the beauty, the ambition, the color,” she said. “A lot of the stuff was burned ... so how do we bring this place to life?”

“Dreamland” will blend archival media, contempora­ry interviews and narrated letters and diaries.

3. ‘Red Summer’

When it’s premiering: June

Where it’s airing: National Geographic. National Geographic Documentar­y Films has partnered with prolific documentar­ian Dawn Porter and Trailblaze­r Studios on a feature documentar­y that sheds new light on a century of intense racial conflict.

“Red Summer” will premiere in June to commemorat­e both the Tulsa Race Massacre centennial and Juneteenth, when the last enslaved Black people in Texas received news of their emancipati­on.

“I’m interested in following the evidence where it leads while giving a voice to those directly affected by the tragic events in Tulsa and throughout the Red Summer. This is the time to tell this story, which is not only about Black victims, but also about Black resistance,” Porter said in a statement.

Porter serves as producer and director with Lauren Capps as story producer. Washington Post journalist and Oklahoma native DeNeen Brown will report on the search for a mass grave in Tulsa.

“In Tulsa, there is an increased urgency to properly honor Black people who were murdered during the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. Black activists in Tulsa have been working for years to bring national attention to this horrific chapter in U.S. history,” Brown said in a statement.

4. ‘ Tulsa: The Fire and the Forgotten’

When it’s premiering: 8 p.m. May 31.

Where it’s airing: PBS (OETA in Oklahoma), pbs.org and the PBS Video app.

Brown also will report for PBS’ new documentar­y, directed by Jonathan Silvers and narrated by Emmywinnin­g journalist Michel Martin. It focuses on present-day public efforts to memorializ­e the race massacre and other racial violence across the country — and how Black and white communitie­s view such efforts.

As the country continues to reflect on recent incidents of social injustice like the 2020 murder of George Floyd, the 90-minute feature examines the Tulsa Race Massacre in this light, exploring issues of atonement, reconcilia­tion and reparation.

The documentar­y includes interviews with community activist and Tulsa Race Massacre descendant Greg Robinson II, Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum, state Rep. Regina Goodwin, Vernon AME Church Rev. Robert Turner, historian Hannibal Johnson and more.

5. ‘ Tulsa Race Massacre: 100 Years Later’

When it’s premiering: 7 p.m. May 31, with an encore at 10 p.m.

Where it’s airing: OETA.

OETA’s one-hour documentar­y blends historical accounts of the massacre and the art of local creatives to paint a full picture of the Greenwood District — from the past to the present and to aspiration­s of a bright future.

It also delves into how Greenwood continues to suffer from redlining policies and the constructi­on of a highway.

Tulsa Race Massacre in historical fiction 1. ‘Watchmen’

Where to see it: Streaming on HBO Max.

The first episode of HBO’s 2019 acclaimed limited series depicts the Tulsa Race Massacre, and the show’s premiere introduced many people to the horrific event for the first time while setting the scene for its fantastica­l, fictionalize­d exploratio­n of real-life social issues, particular­ly racism.

Adapted from the trailblazi­ng 1986-87 DC comic book by writer Alan Moore and artist Dave Gibbons, the series takes place in Tulsa in an alternate history about 30 years after the graphic novel’s 1980s events.

“Watchmen” won 11 Primetime Emmy Awards last fall, including outstandin­g limited series, which creator Damon Lindelof dedicated to the victims and survivors of the Tulsa Race Massacre.

In partnershi­p with Magic City Books, the Black Wall Street Legacy Festival will welcome Lindelof and Emmy Award-winning “Watchmen” writer Cord Jefferson for a shared experience, conversati­on and screening on May 30. For more informatio­n, go to blackwalls­treetlegac­yfest.com.

2. ‘Lovecraft Country’

Where to see it: Streaming on HBO Max. Based on Matt Ruff ’s novel of the same name, “Lovecraft Country” follows Atticus Freeman (Jonathan Majors) as he meets up with his friend Letitia (Jurnee Smollett) and his Uncle George (Courtney B. Vance) to embark on a road trip across 1950s Jim Crow America in search of his missing father (Michael Kenneth Williams). This begins a struggle to survive and overcome both the racist terrors of white America and the terrifying monsters that could be ripped from a Lovecraft paperback.

 ??  ?? Smoke rises north of Greenwood Avenue from Hartford Avenue, in Tulsa, Okla. on June 1, 1921. Images from The University of Tulsa’s McFarlin Library archives show scenes from the Tulsa race massacre of 1921 when a white mob destroyed the 35-block “Black Wall Street” – a thriving business district in Tulsa. The number of deaths has never been confirmed, but estimates vary from about three dozen to 300 or more. THE UNIVERSITY OF TULSA, MCFARLIN LIBRARY ARCHIVES
Smoke rises north of Greenwood Avenue from Hartford Avenue, in Tulsa, Okla. on June 1, 1921. Images from The University of Tulsa’s McFarlin Library archives show scenes from the Tulsa race massacre of 1921 when a white mob destroyed the 35-block “Black Wall Street” – a thriving business district in Tulsa. The number of deaths has never been confirmed, but estimates vary from about three dozen to 300 or more. THE UNIVERSITY OF TULSA, MCFARLIN LIBRARY ARCHIVES
 ?? JONATHAN SILVERS/SAYBROOK PRODUCTION­S LTD. ?? Washington Post reporter DeNeen Brown appears in the documentar­y “Tulsa: The Fire and the Forgotten.”
JONATHAN SILVERS/SAYBROOK PRODUCTION­S LTD. Washington Post reporter DeNeen Brown appears in the documentar­y “Tulsa: The Fire and the Forgotten.”
 ?? COURTESY OF MAGNOLIA PICTURES ?? National Geographic Documentar­y Films has partnered with prolific documentar­ian Dawn Porter – who last year released “Good Trouble: John Lewis” and “The Way I See It” – and Trailblaze­r Studios on a feature documentar­y titled “Red Summer.”
COURTESY OF MAGNOLIA PICTURES National Geographic Documentar­y Films has partnered with prolific documentar­ian Dawn Porter – who last year released “Good Trouble: John Lewis” and “The Way I See It” – and Trailblaze­r Studios on a feature documentar­y titled “Red Summer.”

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