10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, February 9, 2000 ARTS DGA retires Griffith award; 'Simpsons' set for erscandal during Ferurysweeps racist iss Los Angeles Times It had been weighing on his mind for more than a year, ever since sever- al black directors expressed concern that the Directors Guild of America's prestigious life achievement award was named for D.W. Griffith, whose l9[5 film, "The Birth of a Nation," glorified the Ku Klux Klan and seared racial stereotypes into the collective conscience of moviegoers every- where. Jack Shea, the president of the guild, came away from that encounter unsettled. He had never really thought of it in those terms, he would later recall. "The Birth of a Nation," after aIf, was considered a masterpiece of the -silent era whose innovative tech- niques such as cross-cutting and deep focus are still studied in introductory film courses. Yet, Shea also knew there was no denying the film's racist content. Based on a popular book and stage play titled "The Clansman" by the Rev. Thomas Dixon, Griffith's sweep- ing film of the Civil War and Recon- struction contains many degrading images of blacks and depicts the Ku Klux Klan riding to the rescue of white Southerners imperiled by Northern Negroes and white carpet- baggers. When shown in a large theater to theccompaniment of a live orches- ta;white audiences of the era often stood and cheered. It even led to a revival of the KKK. But the film was so controversial that it triggered riots in theaters, was banned in some cities and became the focus of street protests by the then-fledging National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which has been bat- tling the film ever since. -In November, Shea went before the giI1d's national board in New York asking it to endorse his decision to ;ue key rename the D.W. Griffith Award. With little debate and no input from the guild's nearly 12,000 members, the board unanimously concurred. Steven Spielberg, who has won Oscars for "Schindler's List" and "Saving Private Ryan" and whose body of work also includes "Jaws," "E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial," the "Indi- ana Jones" trilogy and the black- themed saga, "The Color Purple," received the guild's newly renamed DGA Lifetime Achievement Award. Indeed, some of the harshest critics of the guild's decision are respected film critics, university professors and authors who abhor the racism con- tained in "The Birth of a Nation" but believe Griffith's silent epic is a land- mark achievement despite its content. The guild's action was hailed by many as long overdue and morally justified. But it also touched a raw nerve in the film community at large, leading to a vigorous debate over age- old questionsabout censorship, intol- erance and whether great art in the service of hateful ideology should be praised or damned. "It's very childish to start picking on something somebody did 85 years ago and say, 'That represents the man and, therefore, we are not going to use his name again,' said London-based film historian Kevin Brownlow. "This is a man who made 400 films before he made 'The Birth of a Nation,' let alone all the films he ;made after- wards." The 53-member National Society of Film Critics issued a statement deplor- ing the board's action: "The recasting of this honor, which had been awarded appropriately in D.W. Griffith's name since 1953, is a depressing example of 'political correctness' as an erasure, and rewriting, of American film histo- ry, causing a grave disservice to the reputation of a pioneering American filmmaker." Courtesy of Oreamworks Steven Spielberg, Griffith award winner, directs "Saving Private Ryan." "It's ridiculous to rewrite history that way," White added, arguing that the DGA's decision "suggests there is no more racism today or racism in the, film industry, when we all know the problem still exists in the film indus- try." But those who defend the board's action argue that Griffith's pioneering work behind the camera cannot erase the racist images flowing from "The Birth of a Nation." "There is no question that D.W. Griffith was a great pioneer and, in America, the father of the modern film industry," said black actor and director LeVar Burton, who starred in the landmark TV miniseries "Roots" and is now a DGA board alternate. "The work for which he is probably best known - 'The Birth of a Nation' - is, without question, a powerful piece of filmmaking, but in terms of the content, there can be no question that it is ... a racist tract." Concerned that one day an African- American - or a director of any color - would win the award and refuse to accept it, Shea conferred with former guild presidents, Griffith biographer Richard Schickel and either personal- ly or by letter with all nine living recipients of the award, including Francis Ford Coppola, Robert Altman, Sidney Lumet and Robert Wise. All agreed the time had come to retire the D.W. Griffith Award. In December, the guild announced its decision, praising Griffith as a "brilliant pioneer filmmaker" but adding "it is also true that he helped foster intolerable racial stereotypes." For Barclay. the decision to retire the D.W. Griffith Award was sweet news. Barclay remembered the first time he ever saw "The Birth of a Nation" and the powerful, frightening pull it had on the audience. As an English major at Harvard University, Barclay recalled, he had stepped into a campus theater to attend a screening of the silent classic. "I knew it was an important film to see," Barclay said, "but I was not pre- pared for what it contained. I did not know that the KKK would be the heroes and people in the audience would be cheerin for the KKK. That is what is so. scarv about it. (The audi- ence) found themselves cheering for the KKK to get those bad black guys and lynch them." Still, Barclay stressed that by taking its action, the DGA board was not endorsing censorship. "We are not saving 'The Birth of a Nation' should be banned and never shown again and that D.W. Griffith's name be besmirched," Barclay explained. "What we are saving is that the DGA should not name its highest honor after that particular filmmaker." Los Angeles Times As Fox's long-running animated hit "The Simpsons" gets set to kill off a character during February sweeps, the actress who voiced the role of Maude Flanders is saying her character's rumored demise is a case of death-by-corporate-greed. Maggie Roswell, who played Maude, wife of Simpsons neighbor and Christian do-gooder Ned Flan- ders, said she left the show last spring because 20th Century Fox Television, the studio that produces "The Simpsons," refused to give her a raise. In previous reports on Roswell's departure, Fox has said the actress left the show because she no longer wanted to commute to Los Angeles from her Denver home. "There's a presence that I helped create in Springfield," said Roswell, referring to the show's hometown. An actress and writer from Los Angeles, Roswell has lived the last four years in Denver, where she and her husband run a recording studio for voice-over work. Before leaving the show last spring, she had been with "The Simpsons" since its inception as a prime-time series in 1989. In addition to Maude Flanders, Roswell voiced other Springfield residents, including Helen Lovejoy, wife of Rev. Lovejoy, and Miss Hoover, one of Lisa Simpsons' schoolteachers. This season Maude's appearances on the show have been minimal, with another voice actress filling in. "Simpsons" producers haven't revealed who will be rubbed out in the show's Feb. 13 episode, but the show's title provides a potential clue that Maude will be offed. The episode is called "Alone Again, Natura-Diddly," a reference to Ned Flanders' particular way of speak- ing. Mike Scully, executive producer of the show, was in transit and could not be reached for comment. Roswell's contract grievance isn't new to "The Simpsons" - or to Fox, which has seen squabbles with actors go public on other shows,- including "The X-Files." Two years ago, the five major voice actors op "The Simpsons" - Dan Castellan- eta (Homer), Nancy Cartwright (Bart), Yeardley Smith (Lisa), Harry Shearer (Mr. Burns, Smithers) and Hank Azaria (Moe the bartender, Chief Wiggum, Apu) - held out for big raises, eventual- ly winning multimillion-dollar packages to stay on the show. Roswell, by contrast, said she was asking for S6,000 an episode - an increase from the $1,500 to. S2,000 an episode she earned the last three seasons for her recurring guest voices, she said. When Fox offered a raise of S150, she decided to quit, because the raise didn't even cover the cost of having to fly to Los Angeles to record her portions of the scripts, she said. Pamela Hayden, who voic- es the role of Bart's friend Mil- house, threatened a similar walkout earlier this season before receiving. a raise. Roswell's tactics, however, fell, short, perhaps proving what "Simp- sons" fans may discover on Feb. 13th that Maude is an expendable character. "I was part of the backbone of 'The Simpsons,' and I didn't think (the requested raise) was exorbi- tant," Roswell said. "I wasn't ask- ing for what the other cast members make. I was just trying to recoup all the costs I had in travel. If, they'd flown me in, I'd still be working." 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