| Issue #33, November
10, 2006 |
Chasing America: Notes of a Rock n’ Soul
Integrationist

In the world of crystal-clear HD TVs,
filled with hundreds of channels featuring people from all over
the globe, grainy images of the freedom marches and civil rights
protests from the 1970s appear to be set in the very distant past.
It is hard to remember that it was less than forty years ago when
Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. was brutally murdered on his motel balcony
for trying to ensure that people of color were allowed into our
nation’s public schools. And even harder still to imagine
that the Civil Rights Acts he fought to have passed needed to be
legally re-affirmed in 1988, then again in 1991.
Perhaps the most effective way to
remember how recently our country decided that Americans of all
skin colors could live, work and study together, is by meeting and
talking to one of the many pioneers of the movement that helped
to bring these decisions to fruition. And not just any 1970s picketer,
but a civil-rights pioneer who successfully integrated into White
American society, and can eloquently describe the process by which
a young, underprivileged man grew to become an award-winning writer,
while participating in the greatest civil rights battle in our country’s
history. On Saturday, November 11th, at Canio’s Books in Sag
Harbor, true civil rights pioneer, Emmy Award and Golden Eagle Award-winning
writer and actor Dennis Watlington will read from his recently published
memoir, Chasing America: Notes of a Rock n’ Soul Integrationist.
Watlington, a Sag Harbor resident, will be on hand to answer questions
about his life, his book, and his many experiences writing for film,
television, and numerous publications, most notably Vanity Fair
and The New York Times, and fighting for his rightful place as not
only a great black writer, but first and foremost, a great American
writer.
Watlington became an integrationist-in-training
at the tender age of eleven, when he was selected to take part in
a neighborhood boy’s club that helped its members prepare
for and apply to the country’s most prestigious private schools.
His mentor and program leader, Chick Griffin, believed “you
want the kids they call incorrigible [for the program], because
if you can peel back that layer, you will find an incredibly competitive,
resourceful person.” And, indeed, Dennis Watlington was one
of the most incorrigible with a string of robberies and drug addictions
under his belt by the time he reached high-school age. These obstacles
plagued the intelligent young man throughout his youth, and eventually
led to his expulsion from the program. However, a chance meeting
with a trustee from the Hotchkiss School, and the full scholarship
to the challenging private boarding school that resulted from that
meeting, put him back on the road to success. When legendary writer
Gail Sheehy met Dennis as a teenager, she was so taken by him that
she wrote a chapter about him, the “spirit inextinguishable,”
in her 1976 critically-acclaimed book Passages. Watlington’s
friendship with activists such as Sheehy and writer Gail Kopple,
coupled with his liberal Hotchkiss and New York University education,
molded him into an eloquent, passionate activist for black rights
with a penchant for translating his feelings into gripping stories
with universal appeal.
In 1979, Watlington wrote and directed
his first play, produced by the American Theater of Actors. The
play, titled Bullpen, was the play that “Bruce Willis came
out of, Denzel had a shot in, Giancarlo Esposito came out of it,
that is the play where it started,” he explained. This play
was one of the first instances where black themes appealed to mixed
audiences, and helped to open the floodgates for black writers,
directors, and producers who dreamed of entering the exclusive worlds
of backstage Broadway and back-lot Hollywood. After his success
as a playwright, Watlington began reporting for Vanity Fair, and
also penned scripts for the daytime soap operas “All My Children”
and “One Life to Live.” Watlington explained that when
he first started writing for television many people thought that
it was “loony to hire a black writer to write a White script…
I was termed a ‘Blackologist,’ which means that when
they had a black theme they would dial me up.”
Now, with his success as an award-winning
documentary film writer, with masterpieces such as Zahira, the story
of a Spanish girl affected by the 2004 bombings in Spain, and The
Untold West: The Black West, under his belt, Watlington is not only
a pioneer for black rights, but “one of the beneficiaries”
of those rights and privileges for which he fought. Now, fifteen
years after the latest Civil Rights Act was signed, our country
is once again in turmoil, and our ability to retain many of our
rights is in question. During these confusing and daunting times,
the words of a true soldier in the United States’ last battle
for freedom may be exactly what we need to stay strong and uncompromising,
and to keep in mind that once victory is had, the spoils are indeed
worth the fight.
Dennis Watlington will read selections
from Chasing America: Notes of a Rock n’ Soul Integrationist,
on Saturday, November 11th, at 6 p.m. The reading will take place
at Canio’s Books, 290 Main St., in Sag Harbor. The reading
is free; reservations are not required. For more information, please
call (631) 725-4926, or visit www.caniosbooks.com.
–Sabrina C. Mashburn
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