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'Black Magic' debuts on ESPN

Courtesy of ESPN

Issue date: 2/11/08 Section: Sports
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A Winston-Salem State player blocks an opponent's shot while guard Ted Blunt watches on in Whitaker Gym. WSSU will feature prominently on ESPN's
A Winston-Salem State player blocks an opponent's shot while guard Ted Blunt watches on in Whitaker Gym. WSSU will feature prominently on ESPN's "Black Magic," which was co-produced by Earl Monroe.

ESPN Original Entertainment, in collaboration with Shoot the Moon Productions and award-winning director Dan Klores, has announced plans for ESPN to televise a two-part, four-hour film tentatively titled "Black Magic" about the injustice which defined the civil rights movement in America, as told through the lives of basketball players and coaches who attended Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCU). Co-produced by basketball legend and Winston-Salem State University graduate Earl "The Pearl" Monroe and former New York Times film critic Elvis Mitchell. The film will be aired on ESPN?on March 16 and 17th in two two-hour long excerpts.

""Black Magic" is an important story that we look forward to telling on all of our platforms," said John Skipper, ESPN executive vice president, content. "It's a living history of sports and culture that invites a broader discussion about race, society and how we think about modern day athletes and sports. It's the kind of project we embrace wholeheartedly. Dan Klores continues to prove his mettle as a filmmaker and his rare ability to reveal what we thought we knew, but turns out we didn't know at all."

"This is a story of injustice, refuge and joy," said Klores, "It's an epic that has not been told." Klores added that Ben Jobe, the 75-year-old retired coach at six HBCUs, and the 15th child of Tennessee sharecroppers, best summarized the film when he said, "I remember when it went from 'Whaddya want?' to 'May I help you?'"

From more than 200 hours of interviews and footage, the film reveals the plight of these players and coaches as a stark but proud one, filled with obstacles at every turn. From separate leagues and facilities, to championship games and titles that never qualified for the history books, all the way to secret games played between blacks and whites in defiance of the law, players and programs at HBCUs not only thrived, but laid the groundwork for the proliferation of the modern athlete. Klores conducted interviews with Willis Reed, Avery Johnson, Ben Wallace, John Chaney, Bob Love, Al Attles, PeeWee Kirkland, Earl Lloyd, Dick Barnett, Woody Sauldsberry, Cleo Hill, Bob Dandridge, Sonny Hill, Perry Wallace, Dave Robbins, Harold Hunter, Miriam Samuels, Charles Oakley, Donnie Walsh, Bobby Cremins, Howie Evans, the widows of coaches Clarence "Big House" Gaines and John McLendon, historians Skip Gates, Cleveland Sellers and Milton Katz, amongst others.

Klores's directing credits include "The Boys of Second Street Park" and "Ring of Fire: the Emile Griffith Story" which both premiered at the Sundance Film Festival. In addition, his recent film, "Viva Baseball" captured the 2006 BANFF global award and the Imagen Foundation's 2006 "Best Documentary for TV or Film" award. His feature length documentary, "Crazy Love," to be released on June 1 by Magnolia Films, also was premiered at Sundance. "Crazy Love," the rollicking and disturbing story of an obsessive relationship between a married man and single woman, won the Jury Prize at the Santa Barbara Film Festival.
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j

posted 3/16/08 @ 11:06 PM EST

I just watched Black Magic on ESPN and learned of Perry Wallace and so many other great players. I was born four days before the first black team ever won a championship game in 1966, and therefore never knew of the prejudice and inequality these men faced. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

gcb1

posted 3/18/08 @ 6:41 PM EST

This was a documentary that should be seen over and over. Will it be re-broadcast?

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