Los Angeles Times

For actors, it was a mind-blowing series

- By Meredith Blake meredith.blake@latimes.com

If you were anywhere near a television in January 1977, you were probably watching “Roots.” The ABC miniseries was a surprise smash that attracted a record-setting audience and won nine Emmys. Members of the original cast recently gathered to discuss the inf luence of “Roots,” which will be released on Blu-ray on June 7.

Executives at ABC were worried “Roots” would flop. Did you have a sense that it was going to be huge?

Georg Stanford Brown (Tom Harvey): I don’t think that anyone could really imagine that it would be that successful. It hasn’t been matched since, nor will it be.

Leslie Uggams (Kizzy Reynolds): What I thought was interestin­g was the fact that you got to see all these wonderful black actors and actresses. We were on television, making a guest appearance here or doing something. Now we were all in one story, and it blew my mind.

Lynne Moody (Irene Har vey): It gave us something to grab a hold of and put our all into for the first time. We were all young actors and performers who were hungry. Uggams: It changed television. There were advertisem­ents in bars: “We have a big-screen television, you can watch here.” Ben Vereen (Chicken George): It was right after the civil-rights movement. We didn’t do it because we wanted a hit show. We wanted to do a document about [our] people. Louis Gossett Jr. (Fiddler): The thing that I remember distinctly is that on a day-to-day basis, I did not have to lie in my portrayal of a black character in history. What did you learn from “Roots”?

Brown: I think it opened up the whole idea of family, not just to black Americans, but to everyone. As I’ve traveled around the world and seen “Roots” in so many languages, I know that most people have an affinity to the idea of their family and finding out where they came from.

Moody: Because of “Roots,” I was able to embrace where I came from and know that the languages that were spoken in Africa were comparable to any European culture or language, which was robbed from my youth, because they taught black history in a paragraph.

Uggams: My grandmothe­r looked white. I could never figure out how she could be my grandmothe­r. She didn’t want to talk about things. Later on, I started finding out that the plantation owner had 10 children by her mother… And [when I played Kizzy], I finally understood why my grandmothe­r didn’t talk about her life growing up. I’d come home and I’d have so much rage.

Brown: There’s a scene where I get whipped and Lloyd Bridges had to do it. He was just broken up at the thought of having to go through that. We had a lot of white actors that were greatly affected as well.

Sandy Duncan (Missy Anne Reynolds): Absolutely. I watch parts that I know are safe. I can’t look at any of those brutal scenes. What are your memories from the week it aired?

John Amos (Kunta Kinte as an adult): I was on the freeway and this big brother pulls up next to me in this piece of ancient Detroit steel. He said, “Man, pull over!” So I pulled the car over. He said, “Hey, man, I watched that ‘Roots’ on TV last night, man. Man, it really affected me… I was halfway through it and I went and got my .38 and I went and shot the TV!” That was the funniest thing that happened. I hope he wasn’t looking for me to reimburse him. [Laughs] Did it feel revolution­ary to have so much black talent working on the same show?

Uggams: I looked around and went, “Thank you, Jesus.” Look at all these fabulous actors and actresses.

Brown: Thank God for Joe Wilcots, our cinematogr­apher, who was black.

Vereen: And [director] Gilbert Moses. You know what it was like working with two black men? That was amazing.

Moody: People said to [producer] Stan Margulies, “Doesn’t it make you feel good to employ so many blacks?” And he said it was bitterswee­t because they have nowhere to go from here.

Gossett: When Madge Sinclair [who played Kunta Kinte’s wife, Belle] went up to ABC again, they looked at her and they said, “We’ve done our quota for black people.”

Brown: When you look at what’s being made, you say, “Where am I included?” Still, to this day, we are the minority in the industry.

Amos: It’s not a level playing field, but it has improved appreciabl­y.

Moody: It was heartbreak­ing not to have anything to do. My white girlfriend­s had two auditions a day. I maybe had one a month.

Gossett: Thank God for television. They came to the plate earlier than motion pictures. You have to make an emotional and spiritual adjustment in order to continue on. Otherwise, it’ll eat you up. Between the “Roots” remake, “Undergroun­d” and “12 Years a Slave,” it seems like pop culture is ready to revisit slavery. Why now?

Gossett: There’s such an incredible history that we need to speak about, and we can’t wait for somebody to do it for us. Our children desperatel­y need to know on whose shoulders they stand.

Vereen: I was watching something last night called “Gods of Egypt.” They were all white people. They’re telling the story, but they’re telling the lie.

Vereen: You know the reason “Hamilton” is such a big hit on Broadway now? It’s because it’s collective. I look at “Hamilton,” I see myself. I say, “Wow, I’m a part of America. I helped build it.”

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