Get on the Bus
Brief Synopsis
Cast & Crew
Spike Lee
Andrt Braugher
Bernie Mac
Ossie Davis
Charles S. Dutton
Richard Belzer
Film Details
Technical Specs
Synopsis
"Get On the Bus" tells the story of a group of men who board a bus headed for the historic Million Man March as strangers but emerge three days and thousands of miles later as brothers: an estranged father struggling to connect with his teenage son; an aspiring actor who is filled with hate; a cop desperate to end the slaughter he sees on the streets of his city; a devout Muslim whose nightmares echo with the blast of gunfire; an old man who has made an honest living but never truly lived; a film student who wants to capture it all on tape; and the driver whose job it is to get them from one side of the nation to the other.
Director
Spike Lee
Cast
Andrt Braugher
Bernie Mac
Ossie Davis
Charles S. Dutton
Richard Belzer
Isaiah Washington
Alexander Vselensky
Milton Cardona
Winterton Garvey
William Barillaro
Marshall Cold
Gary Lowery
Joie Lee
De'aundre Bonds
Hill Harper
Gina Ravera
Dr. Hosea Brown Iii
Stanley Runte
Edward Simon
Bob Orwig
Debra Lynn Rogers
Yuri Vodovoz
Frank Clem
Susan Baston
Kristen Wilson
Guy Margo
Roger Guenveur Smith
Paula Jai Parker
Albert Hall
Rob Mcgraw
Harry Lennix
Dale Stuckenbruck
Deborah Thomas
Sanford Allen
Gabriel Casseus
Steve White
Jadi Mccurdy
Corrin Huddleston
Thomas Jefferson Byrd
Gerald Tarack
Wendell Pierce
Crew
Dr & A
Lea Adams
Alan Aguilar
Nmadilaka Ahaghotu
Gina R. Alfano
Bryant Allen
Pedro Amaya
Don Anderson
Karen Anderson
Alex Applefeld
Merc Arceneaux
Larkin Arnold
Dwayne Bailey
Philip Bailey
Julian Barber
William Barillaro
Donna Barrett
Lennon Bass
Chris Bennet
Ken Berstein
Blackstreet
John Blackwell
Terence Blanchard
Terence Blanchard
Terence Blanchard
John Blenkhorn
Steve Blenkhorn
Tina Boayue
Charles Fred Bobbit
Harry Peck Bolles
David Bolton
Amanda Bonner
Mark Booker
Bill Borden
Zelmer Bothic
Edwin Bowden
Micheline Bowman
Stephanie Boyd
Danny Bracht
Scott Brinson
Ed Brooks
Alfred Brown
Dr. Hosea Brown Iii
James Brown
James Brown
Rasheed Brown
Rasheed Brown
Samuel E Brown
Charles J Broyles
Charles Broylles
Christopher Buchanan
Garrnett Burk
David A Burr
Jheryl Busby
Kate Butler
Reggie Rock Bythewood
Reggie Rock Bythewood
Linda Cannon
Reuben Cannon
Reuben Cannon
Reuben Cannon
Leonard Caston
Alan Caudillo
Kam Chan
Ben Cheah
Richard Clark
Johnnie L Cochran
Jossette Cooke
John Corso
D'angelo
Lemuel Daniels
Nick Daniels
Brother Robert C Davidson Jr.
Elliot Davis
Marvin Davis
Stacie N Davis
Troy Davis
Carlos De La Torre
Blaise Delacroix
Paolo Deleon
Mike Delorenzo
Paul Delorenzo
Robert Deschane
Kerwin Devonich
Cassandra Williams Dickerson
Donald Diggs
Marc Dorsey
Leonard Drake
Lena Drobot
Michael Dunn
Trey Eckles
Kenneth Edmonds
Bob Ellis
Michael Ellis
Sonny Emory
Don Everly
Chris Fielder
Tom Fleischman
Brian Fleming
Spencer Foster
Walter Foster
Kirk Franklin
Kirk Franklin
Aaron J Galang
Cherisse Gardner
Ben Gaskin
Rodrick S Gaskin
Michael Gerlock
Debra Glass
Danny Glover
Mary E Glynn
Mary E Glynn
Michael Granata
Melinda Gray
Michael Gregg
Calvin Grigsby
Ed Guerkie
Robert Guillaume
Daniel Hale
Scott A Hale
Lumos Hamilton
Chauncey Hannibal
Creighton T Harris
Terence Harris
George Harvell
Mike Haynes
Jamal Henry
Sandra Hernandez
Van Drey Herron
Tracey Hinds
Gershon F. Hinkson
Dave Hodgan
Danielle Hollowell
Patricia Holmes
S Beth Horton
Donovan Howard
Jim Humphreys
Mark Jackson
Michael Jackson
Michael Jackson
Shelly Jaime
Mark A James
Tim Jameson
Ali Jd
William Jefferson
Debra D Jeffreys
Debra D Jeffreys
Randy Jeter
Bobby Johanson
Carl Johnson
Hardwick Johnson
Robert Johnson
Di Jones
Kathy Mcdonald Jones
Raymond Jones
Susan Jones
Dave Joseph
Steven Kates
Steven Kates
Michael Kelch
Patrick Kennedy
Frank Kern
Kristina Kilpe
E Othell King
Donene Kistler
Arnie Knapp
John R Koth
Farrah Landry
Tendaji Lathan
Katherine Leather Leatherwood
Kevin Lee
Olden Lee
Spike Lee
Spike Lee
Tonya Lewis Lee
Peter Levin
Jesse Levine
Hal Levinsohn
Don Light
Lester Louise
Melissa Lundgren
James M'tume
Andy Malcolm
Jenny Manriquez
Guy Margo
Bob Marley
Richard Martinez
Curtis Mayfield
Curtis Mayfield
Ina Mayhew
Kimberly R Mccord
Anthony Mccovey
Walter Mccovey
Jadi Mccurdy
Patt Mccurdy
Kip Mcdonald
Rod Mcgrew
Gabriel Mckail
Gearey Mcleod
Diallo Mclinn
Film Details
Technical Specs
Articles
Get on the Bus
Lee knew that the mostly single-set script would prove to be thorny in terms of visual interest, and after the film's release, he admitted that the piece was "a little too talky." So he relied on a cast of distinguished veterans, such as Ossie Davis and Charles S. Dutton, as well as talented newcomers and lesser-known performers, to make the confined setting as lively and compelling as possible. Davis, who had acted in Lee's School Daze (1988), Do the Right Thing (1989), Jungle Fever (1991), and Malcolm X (1992), had reservations about participating, largely due to ideological differences with Farrakahn and the general direction of the Nation of Islam. Nevertheless, Davis and his wife, actress Ruby Dee, had contributed to the March by financing a bus and supported the overall goal of it. And he was eager to work with Lee again, especially given the character of Jeremiah, an older man who has been through a lot personally and witnessed a great deal of his people's history and who is a mouthpiece for some of the film's most stirring words about pride and responsibility.
The limits imposed on him by the script weren't Lee's only challenge in getting Get on the Bus made. The budget was not huge, the schedule short (18 days, necessitated not only by the logistics of shooting on a traveling bus but by the need to have a finished piece in time for the one-year anniversary of the march), and the production difficulties potentially daunting. Sound mixer Tom Fleischman, noting the run-and-gun nature of the shoot, said the finished result was more like a documentary, grabbing sound and image on the fly and having to accept whatever was captured. But it's that very quality that gives the movie its appeal, and it opened to some of the best reviews of any of Spike Lee's films. The downside is that it has often been overlooked, in no small part, perhaps, because many people perceive it to be a documentary and not a reality-based but completely crafted work of fiction.
Perhaps the most noteworthy aspect of Get on the Bus, however, is the way it was initiated and financed. Lee had no thought of making a film about the march until he was contacted by producer Reuben Cannon, who had a writer, Reggie Rock Bythewood (a former actor who had written only for TV series up to this point) and the idea for the story. Lee agreed, but only if it could be financed solely with African-American funding. "When you think about the principles of the Million Man March, that was right," Lee said. "Black seed investment for a black business. I didn't want to approach the same people who had given money to Malcolm X, so we made a new list." In addition to himself and Bythewood, Lee got production investment funds from famed attorney Johnnie Cochran; actors Wesley Snipes, Danny Glover, and Will Smith; and several other black businessmen and financiers. In all, he raised $2.5 million, all of which, thanks to pre-selling the finished product, was returned to investors right before the picture opened.
Producer: Bill Borden, Reuben Cannon, Spike Lee, Barry Rosenbush
Director: Spike Lee
Screenplay: Reggie Rock Bythewood
Cinematography: Elliot Davis
Film Editing: Leander T. Sales
Art Direction: Ina Mayhew
Music: Terence Blanchard, Common, Kenneth 'Babyface' Edwards, Roxanne Seeman
Cast: Ossie Davis (Jeremiah), Richard Belzer (Rick), De'aundre Bonds (Junior), Andre Braugher (Flip), Albert Hall (Craig).
C-121m. Letterboxed. Closed captioning.
by Rob Nixon
Get on the Bus
Ossie Davis (1917-2005)
He was born Raiford Chatman Davis on December 18, 1917 in Cogdell, Georgia. His parents called him "R.C." When his mother registered his birth, the county clerk misunderstood her and thought she said "Ossie" instead of "R.C.," and the name stuck. He graduated high school in 1936 and was offered two scholarships: one to Savannah State College in Georgia and the other to the famed Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, but he could not afford the tuition and turned them down. He eventually saved enough money to hitchhike to Washington, D.C., where he lived with relatives while attending Howard University and studied drama.
As much as he enjoyed studying dramatics, Davis had a hunger to practice the trade professionally and in 1939, he left Howard University and headed to Harlem to work in the Rose McClendon Players, a highly respected, all-black theater ensemble in its day.
Davis' good looks and deep voice were impressive from the beginning, and he quickly joined the company and remained for three years. With the onset of World War II, Davis spent nearly four years in service, mainly as a surgical technician in an all-black Army hospital in Liberia, serving both wounded troops and local inhabitants before being transferred to Special Services to write and produce stage shows for the troops.
Back in New York in 1946, Davis debuted on Broadway in Jeb, a play about a returning black soldier who runs afoul of the Ku Klux Klan in the deep south. His co-star was Ruby Dee, an attractive leading lady who was one of the leading lights of black theater and film. Their initial romance soon developed into a lasting bond, and the two were married on December 9, 1948.
With Hollywood making much more socially conscious, adult films, particularly those that tackled themes of race (Lonely Are The Brave, Pinky, Lost Boundaries all 1949), it wasn't long before Hollywood came calling for Davis. His first film, with which he co-starred with his wife Dee, was a tense Joseph L. Mankiewicz's prison drama with strong racial overtones No Way Out (1950). He followed that up with a role as a cab driver in Henry Hathaway's Fourteen Hours (1951). Yet for the most part, Davis and Dee were primarily stage actors, and made few film appearances throughout the decade.
However, in should be noted that much of Davis time in the '50s was spent in social causes. Among them, a vocal protest against the execution of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg, and an alignment with singer and black activist Paul Robeson. Davis remained loyal to Robeson even after he was denounced by other black political, sports and show business figures for his openly communist and pro-Soviet sympathies. Such affiliation led them to suspicions in the anti-Communist witch hunts of the early '50s, but Davis, nor his wife Dee, were never openly accused of any wrongdoing.
If there was ever a decade that Ossie Davis was destined for greatness, it was undoubtly the '60s. He began with a hit Broadway show, A Raisin in the Sun in 1960, and followed that up a year later with his debut as a playwright - the satire, Purlie Victorious. In it, Davis starred as Purlie, a roustabout preacher who returns to southern Georgia with a plan to buy his former master's plantation barn and turn it into a racially integrated church.
Although not an initial success, the play would be adapted into a Tony-award winning musical, Purlie years later. Yet just as important as his stage success, was the fact that Davis' film roles became much more rich and varied: a liberal priest in John Huston's The Cardinal (1963); an unflinching tough performance as a black soldier who won't break against a sadistic sergeant's racial taunts in Sidney Lumet's searing war drama The Hill (1965); and a shrewd, evil butler who turns the tables on his employer in Rod Serling's Night Gallery (1969).
In 1970, he tried his hand at film directing, and scored a hit with Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970), a sharp urban action comedy with Godfrey Cambridge and Raymond St. Jacques as two black cops trying to stop a con artist from stealing Harlem's poor. It's generally considered the first major crossover film for the black market that was a hit with white audiences. Elsewhere, he found roles in some popular television mini-series such as King, and Roots: The Next Generation (both 1978), but for the most part, was committed to the theater.
Happily, along came Spike Lee, who revived his film career when he cast him in School Daze (1988). Davis followed that up with two more Lee films: Do the Right Thing (1989), and Jungle Fever (1991), which also co-starred his wife Dee. From there, Davis found himself in demand for senior character parts in many films throughtout the '90s: Grumpy Old Men (1993), The Client (1994), I'm Not Rappaport (1996), and HBO's remake of 12 Angry Men (1997).
Davis and Dee celebrated their 50th wedding anniversary in 1998 with the publication of a dual autobiography, In This Life Together, and in 2004, they were among the artists selected to receive the Kennedy Center Honors. Davis had been in Miami filming an independent movie called Retirement with co-stars George Segal, Rip Torn and Peter Falk.
In addition to his widow Dee, Davis is survived by three children, Nora Day, Hasna Muhammad and Guy Davis; and seven grandchildren.
by Michael T. Toole
Ossie Davis (1917-2005)
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Released in United States on Video May 6, 1997
Released in United States 1996
Released in United States 1997
Released in United States February 1997
Released in United States August 1997
Released in United States March 1999
Shown at Newark Black Film Festival June 18 - July 30, 1997.
Shown at Berlin International Film Festival (in competition) February 13-24, 1997.
Began shooting April 1, 1996.
Completed shooting April 23, 1996.
Fifteen prominent African American men, including Johnnie Cochran, Robert Guillaume, Danny Glover, Will Smith, Wesley Snipes, and BET head Bob Johnson have provided financing.
Columbia Pictures is releasing "Get on the Bus" on October 16th, 1996--the one year anniversary of the Million Man March. Although the national media have communicated widely varying estimates on the number of men in attendance at the October 1995 march--with projections as high as 1.5 million, and as low as 835,000--what's most noteworthy is the environment of peace and goodwill between those who traveled to Washington, D.C. from near and far, to discuss strategies for initiating positive changes in their communities and homes.
Released in United States Fall October 16, 1996
Released in United States on Video May 6, 1997
Released in United States 1996 (Recipient of a Special Mention award at the 1996 Berlin International Film Festival.)
Released in United States 1997 (Shown at Newark Black Film Festival June 18 - July 30, 1997.)
Released in United States February 1997 (Shown at Berlin International Film Festival (in competition) February 13-24, 1997.)
Released in United States March 1999 (Shown in Los Angeles (American Cinematheque) as part of program "Out in the Streets: The Films of Spike Lee" March 15-20, 1999.)
Released in United States August 1997 (Shown in New York City (Adam Clayton Powell Gallery) as part of program "Harlem Week 1997" August 1-15, 1997.)
Released in United States Fall October 16, 1996