l_ t was 1948, and London, still in the So his approach is to look behind the throes of rations and rebuilding af- medal stand and the endorsement notices, ter World War II, hosted the interna- to find the small triumphs of the human tional spectacle of an Olympic Games. spirit that the Olympic Games magnify. "You can win by losing, and by making Bud Greenspan, attending his first Olympiad, doesn't remember the London the attempt," says the deep-voiced 69-year- old. 'There are no great people; rather there Games for its geopolitical statement. "I remember Karoli Takasz, a shotput- are great challenges that ordinary people ter who had had his hand shot off in the meet. Honor should not go to those who have not fallen, but to war and won the gold g medal with the other g those who fall and rise up again." hand," says the Emmy rg Award-winning film- 5,- A New York native maker in a telephone ,_ with a shiny, Kojakesque interview from New t pate, Greenspan was a York. childhood baseball nut Greenspan's latest who yearned to play in tribute to the Olympics, cz, the big leagues. By adult- "America's Greatest hood, he realized this Olympians," premieres dream was of the pipe va- on TBS at 9 p.m. Sun- riety, so he turned to day, June 30. 'The hu- sports broadcasting. By manity of sports 21, he was sports director intrigues me — I've al- at WMGM radio, covering ways seen sports from New York area teams and the outside, never the sporting events. "I was inside," he says. not very good as a broad- As Atlanta prepares caster, but knowledge- for the centennial Olympic obsession: Filmmaker Bud able," he recalls. In 1967, Olympic Games next Greenspan explores the human stories he and his late wife, Cap- month, Greenspan fo- behind the medal stand in "America's py Petrash Greenspan, cuses again on the hu- Greatest Olympians" premiering Sunday formed their own compa- man spirit amid the at 9 p.m. on TBS. ny to produce sports docu- spectacle. "America's mentaries. He and his Greatest Olympians" explores the triumphs crew arrived in Atlanta this month to be- of stars like Mary Lou Retton, Dick Fos- gin documenting the centennial Olympics. In his documentaries, Greenspan offers bury, Bob Beamon and Wyomia Tyus but also discusses the struggles each made to as much melodrama and sentimentality as history. But the films revive forgotten he- get to the medal stand. Since the late 1940s, Greenspan has seen roes. In "America's Greatest Olympians," he sportsmanship decline so much that it now seems a quaint old custom practiced by few. tells the story of canoeing gold medalist Audibly disturbed, he criticizes the sports Frank Havens, whose father, Bill, was fa- media for sensationalizing violent, crude vored to win his own gold medal in the sport behavior. at the 1924 Olympics. But Bill stayed home "I think we're missing the boat. We're for the birth of his son Marathoner Joan accentuating the negative aspect of sports," Frank. When Frank Benoit won a gold won the gold in Helsin- he says sharply. "We're not giving young medal in the 1984 people much to emulate by giving them Id in 1956, he sent this Olympics. telegram to his father: anti-heroes." "Dear Dad. Thanks for waiting around for me to get born. I'm coming home with the Susan Bernstein is the art and culture gold medal you should have won." editor for our sister paper The Atlanta The film offers another tale of a little- Jewish Times. >- (/) UJ Through Bud Greenspan's lens, the human side of the Olympic Games emerges. SUSAN BERNSTEIN SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS