Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Series offers new look at first president

- Lynn Elber

PASADENA, Calif. – George Washington is the leading man in historian Doris Kearns Goodwin’s first venture as a TV producer, a docudrama that follows his growth from ambitious young soldier to statesman.

Spoiler alert for “Washington,” airing at 7 p.m. Central Time Sunday through Tuesday on the History channel: The future president does tell a lie, and it’s a dismaying whopper. In the series that combines reenactmen­ts with expert commentary, myth gives way to checkered reality without diminishin­g his stature.

Nicholas Rowe (“The Crown,” “Young Sherlock Holmes”) plays Washington in re-creations of pivotal moments in his adult life, with historians including Jon Meacham and Annette Gordon-Reed and former Secretary of State Colin Powell among those providing context and insights.

Although producing is new to Kearns Goodwin, her knack for narrative is on display in books including the Pulitzer Prize-winning Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt chronicle, “No Ordinary Time,” and “Team of Rivals,” about President Abraham Lincoln’s wartime cabinet that included William Seward and Salmon Chase. The latter was adapted for Stephen Spielberg’s Oscarwinni­ng “Lincoln.”

Goodwin spoke recently about the making of a leader and connecting the dots between history and current events.

Question: Why did you choose to profile George Washington, and why now?

Answer: In any kind of difficult time like now, being able to look back at leadership that was strong, that got us through troubled times, that you can learn from how that leader worked, is a good thing. We lived through a time when we might not have become the country we have. What ends the series is (Washington’s) farewell address, and it is so timely a warning against party strife and what that can do for possible corruption or the influence of foreign nations, and the importance of retaining that sense of an American patriotism. Q: You don’t mention the current president, Donald Trump, or his administra­tion in interviews. Are you leaving it to your readers and audience to contrast the past and present?

A: I like to use the echo of history. There’s such similariti­es between the turn of the 19th century, the turn of the 20th century and now. There was a gap between the rich and the poor, immigrants coming in from abroad. There’s new inventions that are making people nervous. There’s people in the country feeling cut off from people in the city. There’s a nostalgia for an earlier way of life.

Q: In researchin­g the Washington series, what surprised you about him?

A: I knew the facts about George Washington, but I never conjured him alive in my mind. I think in part it has to do with the pictures we see. He’s old, he’s stiff. I now can picture Washington as a young man. He’s young, and he’s making mistakes and he’s covering them. He wasn’t born great.

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