Mary Church Terrell, a leader in the anti-lynching movement and a founder of the NAACP
(BlackPast.org)
(BlackPast.org)
American Masters – Unladylike2020: The Changemakers
Highlights Women in the U. S. Who Fought for
Civil Rights and Women’s Suffrage, and Premieres Nationwide July 10, 2020 on PBS
The
program spotlights women who pioneered social change and equal rights
100 years ago – including the first women in the U.S. Congress and State
Senate,
and a co-founder of the NAACP – as part of PBS’ summer celebration of
women trailblazers
Timed with the 2020 presidential election and the women’s suffrage centennial,
American Masters – Unladylike2020: The Changemakers, narrated by award-winning actor
Julianna Margulies (ER, The Good Wife, Billions), and featuring the
voice of Lorraine Toussaint (Selma, Orange is the New Black, The Glorias), premieres
nationwide Friday July 10 at 9 p.m. on PBS (check local listings)
pbs.org/unladylike2020 and the PBS Video app, as part of PBS’ summer
celebration of women trailblazers. This hour-long documentary focuses
on political change, examining
the ways women accomplished amazing
milestones over 100 years ago, overcoming incredible odds and great
resistance, to map a national future of equality and to improve life for
Americans. It features the rich biographies
of five little-known trailblazers, including some of the first women to
hold elected office, and women who fought to ensure that citizens are
treated equally and protected by the same rights. The lives of these
unsung heroes are brought back to life through
captivating original artwork and animation; rare archival imagery; and
interviews with historians, descendants, and accomplished women and
modern-day thought leaders, who reflect on the influence of these
pioneers, and the status of suffrage and equality today.
A
little over a century ago, women in the United States did not have
universal suffrage. From the 1890s to 1920s, the country experienced
rapid industrialization, urbanization, technological innovation, and
reform that resulted in increased opportunities for women, including
their participation in political institutions. It was also a time of
resistance to change, defined by the rise of the
Ku Klux Klan, racial violence and Jim Crow, efforts to limit
immigration from non-Anglo nations, and campaigns to assimilate American
Indians and immigrants. Overcoming unthinkable challenges, some women
used their voices and power to become changemakers –
running for elected office, organizing for civil rights, citizenship
rights and anti-lynching campaigns, and fighting for the right to vote.
The women highlighted in
American Masters – Unladylike2020: The Changemakers are Martha Hughes Cannon, the country's first female state senator;
Jeannette Rankin, the first woman elected to the U.S. Congress; Mary Church Terrell, a leader in the anti-lynching movement and a founder of the NAACP;
Jovita Idar, a journalist, and president of the first Mexican American women's civil rights organization; and
Zitkála-Šá, also known as Gertrude Simmons Bonnin, who lobbied
for U.S. citizenship, voting rights, and sovereignty for American
Indians a century ago.
The
hour concludes with the perspectives of contemporary women thought
leaders, who consider the lasting impact of these trailblazers’
accomplishments on
our nation, and the work they began 100 years ago that is unfinished
today. Interviewees include Rep. Deb Haaland (NM-01), one of the first
American Indian women in Congress; former Rep. Mia Love (UT-04), the
first African American Republican woman in Congress;
Ai-jen Poo, executive director of the National Domestic Workers
Alliance; and Brittany Packnett-Cunningham, member of the Ferguson
Commission formed following
the police shooting death of Michael Brown, Jr. in Ferguson, Missouri.
Unladylike2020
Executive Producer and series creator Charlotte Mangin describes the history featured in the special as timely and current: “Our
Unladylike2020 changemakers were critical to making the equality
agenda part of the national fabric of this nation.” Executive Producer
Sandra Rattley also states, “Two of our heroines, Mary Church Terrell
and Jovita Idar, took a stand against lynching.
In 2020, Congress is still debating the Justice
for Victims of Lynching Act after 120 years of trying to make lynching a
federal crime. I have no doubt these unladylike women would be
protesting for justice today.”
Charlotte Mangin and Sandra Rattley directed, wrote and produced the special which is based on the
Unladylike2020 multimedia series of 26 documentary shorts that launched in March on the
American Masters YouTube channel
and continues Wednesdays through August 26, Women’s Equality Day. Executive Producer for
American Masters is Michael Kantor.
Major funding for American Masters — Unladylike2020: The Changemakers is
provided by the National Endowment for the Humanities and the
Corporation for Public
Broadcasting. Support is also provided by the National Endowment for
the Arts, HumanitiesDC, The Leslie and Roslyn Goldstein Foundation,
Humanities Montana, South Dakota Humanities, Utah Humanities, and Ohio
Humanities.
Support for American Masters is
provided by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, AARP, Rosalind P.
Walter, Judith and Burton Resnick, Cheryl and Philip
Milstein Family, Vital Projects Fund, Lillian Goldman Programming
Endowment, The Blanche & Irving Laurie Foundation, Seton J. Melvin,
The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation, Ellen and James S. Marcus, The
André and Elizabeth Kertész Foundation, and public
television viewers.
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