THIRTEEN's AMERICAN MASTERS series and Pittsburgh PBS affiliate WQED join forces to explore the life and legacy of playwright August Wilson (April 27, 1945 - October 2, 2005) -- the man some call America's Shakespeare -- from his roots as an activist and poet to his indelible mark on Broadway. AMERICAN MASTERS -- August Wilson: The Ground on Which I Stand premiered Friday, February 20, 2015, at 9 p.m. on PBS in honor of the 70th anniversary of Wilson's birth, the 10th anniversary of his death and Black History Month. The DVD is available today, February 24 from PBS Distribution. The documentary is now available to view online.
Watch the trailer below:
Unprecedented access to Wilson's theatrical archives, rarely seen interviews and new dramatic readings bring to life his seminal 10-play cycle chronicling each decade of the 20th-century African-American experience; including the Tony Award- and Pulitzer Prize-winning Fences and Pulitzer Prize-winning The Piano Lesson.
Film and theater luminaries, including
Viola Davis,
Charles Dutton,
Laurence Fishburne,
James Earl Jones,
Suzan-Lori Parks and
Phylicia Rashad, share their stories of the career- and life-changing experience of bringing Wilson's rich theatrical voice to the stage. Wilson's sister Freda Ellis; his widow, costume designer
Constanza Romero; friends; colleagues and scholars trace Wilson's influences, creative evolution, triumphs, struggles and quest for cultural determinism before his untimely death from liver cancer.
Filmed in the cities where Wilson made his mark, the documentary begins in Pittsburgh's Hill District, where the future playwright, a brainy, bi-racial child raised in poverty, dropped out of high school because of bullying and prejudice. Self-educated in the city's public library and streets, Wilson was influenced by the rising black consciousness of the 1960s and became an activist young poet. The film follows his transition to a successful playwriting career, from the founding of the Black
HORIZON Theater (Pittsburgh) and his early work at the Penumbra Theatre (St. Paul, Minn.), to his big break at the Eugene O'Neill Theater Center's National Playwrights Conference (Waterford, Conn.). There he began his life-changing collaboration with mentor-director
Lloyd Richards, leading to nine original Broadway productions.
Launched in 1986,
AMERICAN MASTERS has earned 28 Emmy Awards -- including 10 for Outstanding Non-Fiction Series since 1999 and five for Outstanding Non-Fiction Special -- 12 Peabodys, an Oscar, three Grammys, two Producers Guild Awards and many other honors. Now in its 29th season on PBS, the series is a production of THIRTEEN PRODUCTIONS LLC for WNET and also seen on the WORLD channel.
To take
AMERICAN MASTERS beyond the television broadcast and further explore the themes, stories and personalities of masters past and present, the series' companion website (http://pbs.org/americanmasters) offers streaming video of select films, interviews, photos, outtakes, essays and more. For
August Wilson: The Ground on Which I Stand, educational resources include a teaching guide, interactive map and biographical timeline with additional materials available via
PBS LearningMedia. The goal is to equip high school educators with tools to explore Wilson's cultural impact with students through the themes prevalent in his work: community, identity, diversity, activism, self-reliance and resilience. In Pittsburgh, Atlanta, Chicago and Washington, DC, WQED's The
August Wilson Education Project will conduct additional outreach in partnership with local
PBS stations, schools, libraries, theaters and other community organizations. This national education outreach effort is supported by The PNC Foundation.
AMERICAN MASTERS --
August Wilson: The Ground on Which I Stand is a co-production of WQED and THIRTEEN PRODUCTIONS LLC's
AMERICAN MASTERS for WNET. Sam Pollard is director and producer. Stephen Stept is writer. Frank Caloiero is director of photography. Steve Wechsler is editor.
Kathryn Bostic is composer. Darryl Ford Williams and Susan Lacy are executive producers. Michael Kantor is executive producer for American Masters.
Major funding for
August Wilson: The Ground on Which I Stand is provided by PNC Bank, National Endowment for the Humanities, The Heinz Endowments, and Kitty Hawks and
Larry Lederman.
AMERICAN MASTERS is made possible by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting,
Rosalind P. Walter, The Blanche & Irving Laurie Foundation, Rolf and Elizabeth Rosenthal, Vital Projects Fund,
Rhoda Herrick, Jack Rudin; The André and Elizabeth Kertész Foundation, the Michael & Helen Schaffer Foundation and public television viewers.