ABC THANKS NEBRASKA, THE LAND OF âAMERIKAâ
LINCOLN, Neb. â Normally, the most important envoy ABC sends here is Keith Jackson.
But Brandon Stoddard himself led a delegation of emissaries to Lincoln on Monday. Stoddard, president of ABC Entertainment, journeyed to Middle America for the world premiere of âAmerika,â the networkâs much-discussed miniseries.
The boys from Capital Cities were in Nebraskaâs Capital City to show the first four hours of the 14 1/2-hour miniseries, half of which was filmed in Nebraska. The show, which involves a Soviet takeover of this country 10 years from now, will air Feb. 15-22. It stars Kris Kristofferson, Robert Urich, Christine Lahti and Cindy Pickett.
None of the stars traveled to Lincoln for the premiere. The show was, however, represented by Donald Wrye, its writer, director and executive producer.
The people of Nebraska didnât seem upset by the absence of Kristofferson, Urich or even Mary Hart. They were quite content with Wrye, who signed his autograph many times throughout the day.
The purpose of the world premiere, Wrye said at a press conference, was to âshow some kind of expression of gratitude to the people of Nebraska.â The event was also designed to serve as part of the showâs publicity buildup.
âAmerikaâ was screened twice Monday at Lincolnâs Stuart Theater--once for residents of Tecumseh, the small town that served as the showâs primary Nebraska location, and later for other Nebraskans.
All seemed quite impressed with the $35-million miniseries: ABCâs âThe Day Afterâ might have obliterated Lawrence, Kan., but âAmerikaâ is a hit in Lincoln.
The people of Tecumseh turned out in full force for the event. âBoy, if they wanted to take over Johnson County, thisâd be the day to do it,â noted one onlooker.
Tecumseh Mayor Lavern Bartels said that âAmerikaâ has been âfantasticâ for the people of Tecumseh. The series, he said, gave many residents of the agricultural community some âmuch-needed cash.â
Bartels also enjoyed more personal benefits. The mayor, who works as a carpenter, spent five months working on set construction.
At a ceremony between screenings, Bartels thanked Wrye for bringing some excitement to his town of 1,900. âThe city of Tecumseh sometimes has a shortage of entertainment, being a small town,â he said. âThis was one thing that really livened the town up. We really had some entertainment.â
At the ceremony, Wrye received a variety of mementos and invitations to return from Gov. Bob Kerrey, Bartels and Lincoln Mayor Roland Luedtke. Wrye was similarly honored by Luedtke last May, after local filming had been completed.
By the end of February, Wrye probably will have been called everything from a dangerous reactionary to a puppet of Moscow. But in Lincoln, heâs honorary mayor.
Representatives of Nebraskans for Peace handed out leaflets at Mondayâs screenings and members of the Lincoln-based Youth for Nuclear Freeze held placards and lit candles. But other than that, ABCâs takeover of the city was peaceful.
The premiere did attract a host of reporters, whose eagerness to record the small-town viewpoint seemed to alarm the people of Tecumseh. âEntertainment Tonight,â USA Today and People magazine were among those represented. Also on hand was a reporter from Novosti, a Soviet press agency.
At the press conference, Wrye and Stoddard discussed the criticism that the series has received from both the left and the right. Both men maintained that âAmerikaâ is a 14 1/2-hour lesson in democracy and civic responsibility. The series, Wrye says, âonly indirectly has anything to do with the Soviets.â
Stoddard, who maintained that he has âno expectations about what the ratings would be on this at all,â said the network doesnât expect âAmerikaâ to provide a miracle cure for its weak prime-time ratings.
âTo get out of the ratings problem that weâre in, âAmerikaâsâ not the answer,â he said. âGetting successful series on the air is the answer to that. The reason for âAmerikaâ is because we believe very strongly in the idea of this show, that we thought it was provocative and interesting and different and fresh and all those kinds of words that one can rarely say about anything in television.â
Discussing the United Nationsâ concerns about how it is depicted in the film, Stoddard emphasized that the miniseries is fiction. âI didnât see too many Russian tanks out at the airport when we came in, and I donât think weâll see them when we leave,â he said.
He also talked about the attention thatâs been devoted to the show, which seems already to have been featured in every American magazine. Well, almost every magazine. âI saw a Popular Mechanics the other day, and it had no mention of the film at all,â Stoddard said, smiling.
Newsweek, however, hasnât joined Popular Mechanics in boycotting âAmerika.â The magazine recently reported that the miniseries is filled with âNazi-bondage porn,â an assertion that Wrye and Stoddard both aggressively denied.
âThe (film) editors are very upset because none of them has gotten to cut the Nazi porn,â Wrye said.
âThey keep looking,â Stoddard said.
Stoddard and Wrye admitted that, because of the nature of the program, they had expected âAmerikaâ to generate controversy. âI didnât think it was going to go exactly like âMe and the Chimp,â â Stoddard said. âBut I certainly didnât think, on the other side, that it was going to get as heated as it did.â
Both men were pleased with Nebraskaâs contributions to âAmerika.â The faces of the stateâs people and the land itself, Wrye said, give the film âa kind of strength and credibility it otherwise might not have had.â
âIt would have been hard to shoot this in Malibu,â Stoddard said.
The âAmerikaâ screenings were held at the same theater that hosted the premiere of âTerms of Endearmentâ in 1983. Much of that film was also shot in Lincoln, which has since established its own film and television commission in hopes of attracting additional productions.
The city apparently didnât suitably impress Shirley MacLaine, or maybe it just wasnât existential enough to lure her back for âOut on a Limb,â her two-part, autobiographical miniseries that will air on ABC Jan. 18-19. Kerreyâs experience was more memorable: The governor, who leaves office this week, had a lengthy relationship with Debra Winger, only to see it end shortly before the actress married Timothy Hutton.
Kerrey touched on that turn of events when he presented Wrye with a certificate Monday, awarding him an admiralty in Nebraskaâs mythical Navy. âOn one other occasion I presented an admiralship to someone in the entertainment industry,â Kerrey said. âDonald, I hope this one doesnât end the way the last one did.â
The âAmerikaâ premiere was, fortunately, held after the conclusion of the University of Nebraska football season. Had ABC officials heard the sound of 76,000 people chanting âGo Big Redâ in the nearby football stadium, they might have wondered what kind of fervor theyâd created.
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