George Wallace
Brief Synopsis
Movie based on the life of George Wallace, the Governor of Alabama, whose segregationist views propelled him into the national spotlight from the 1960s until an assassination attempt in 1972 ended his run for the presidency and left him confined to a wheelchair....
Cast & Crew
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Gary Sinise
Angelina Jolie
Mare Winningham
Clarence Williams Iii
Joe Don Baker
Kathryn Erbe
Film Details
Also Known As
Wallace
Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Biography
Historical
Release Date
1997
Production Company
Tyson Kohut
Location
Sacramento, California, USA; Los Angeles, California, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
2h
Synopsis
Movie based on the life of George Wallace, the Governor of Alabama, whose segregationist views propelled him into the national spotlight from the 1960s until an assassination attempt in 1972 ended his run for the presidency and left him confined to a wheelchair.
Cast
Gary Sinise
Angelina Jolie
Mare Winningham
Clarence Williams Iii
Joe Don Baker
Kathryn Erbe
Beau Billingslea
Liam Sullivan
Chanel Ryan
Briana Romero
Cliff De Young
Randy Hall
Bobby Kirby
Vernon Scott
Michael Haynes
Michael Harrington
Kaye Phillips
Miata Edoga
Ron Perkins
Terry Kinney
Joseph Grafmuller
Lead Person
Kathleen Kane-macgowan
Mel Jackson
Chuck A Bernard
Robert Jones
Tiffany Salerno
Scott Brantley
Jonathan Mumm
Kent Houseman
Mark Rolston
Steve Harris
Don Blakely
Frank Jones
Clancy Imislund
Rob Roy Fitzgerald
Terrence Beasor
Race Nelson
Katherine Craig
Jan Johannes
William Sanderson
Ron Jeremy
Skipp Sudduth
Francis Guinan
Ketema Nelson
Tim Dowling
Julian Forbes
Sabrina Mance
Mark Valley
Tracy Fraim
Charles Bartlett
Vincent Henry
Crew
Dennis Adams
Key Grip
Gavin Alcott
Assistant Camera Operator
Michael Alemania
Music Supervisor
Joey Anaya
Stunts
Mark J Andresen
Swing Gang
Patricia Androff
Makeup
Frida Aradottir
Hair Stylist
Norman Ash
Electrician
Brian Edward Avery
Stunts
Dwayne Avery
Dialogue Editor
Maria Baker
Art Department Coordinator
Roger Baker
Assistant
Adam Baral
Assistant Camera Operator
Thomas Barquee
Adr Editor
Daniel W. Barringer
Stunts
Tony Beard
Special Thanks To
Jason Belsky
Transportation Coordinator
Maxine Bergen
Script Supervisor
Jessica Berman-bogdan
Assistant
Cheryl Bermeo
Stunts
David Bernstein
Color
Steve Blalock
Stunts
May Boss
Stunts
Jon Boyden
Costumes
Adam Braid
On-Set Dresser
Colleen Broderick
Swing Gang
Neil Brody
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Jeffrey S Brown
Other
Ray Brown
Grip
Tony Brubaker
Stunts
Derek Bruyere
Other
Dale Caldwell
Color Timer
Phil Cane
Location Assistant
Jay Caputo
Stunts
Mark Carliner
Executive Producer
Jack Carpenter
Stunts
Alan Caso
Director Of Photography
Nino Centurion
Music Editor
Gary Chang
Music
Joe P Clarke
Dolly Grip
Winnifred Clements
Costumes
Eddie Conna
Stunts
Gregory Conway
Dialogue Editor
Robert Ritchie Copenhaver
Stunts
Katherine S B Craig
Set Production Assistant
Charles Cresap
Medic
Richard Cresse
Stunts
David Crone
Steadicam Operator
Charlie Croughwell
Stunt Coordinator
Sean Crowell
Grip
Shannon Curfman
Props Assistant
Kristie Ann Daigel
Other
Mike Daigle
Foreman
Jack Daro
Music
Bud Davis
Stunt Coordinator
Gary Charles Davis
Stunts
Vince Deadrick
Stunts
Carlos Delarios
Sound Re-Recording Mixer
Gay Difusco
Music Coordinator
David Dion
Special Effects Coordinator
Reuben Domingo
Assistant Sound Editor
Danny Downey
Stunts
Charles Drake
Craft Service
Jessica Drake
Dialect Coach
Joe Dunne
Stunts
Miata Edoga
Set Production Assistant
Billy Edwards
Costume Supervisor
Bob Elmore
Stunts
Linda Emmons-cunningham
Location Assistant
Peter Emschwiller
Swing Gang
Alison Engel
Office Assistant
Mitch Engel
Line Producer
Rachel Flackett
Set Production Assistant
John Fleishman
Other
Clay Fontenot
Stunts
Clayton Fowler
Grip
Marshall Frady
Screenplay
Marshall Frady
Book As Source Material
John Frankenheimer
Producer
Kristi Frankenheimer-davis
Location Manager
David Frederick
Transportation Co-Captain
Terri Fricon
Music Supervisor
Shana Fruman
Hair Stylist
Darren Genet
Assistant Camera Operator
Gary Giambo
Other
Anthony Gibbs
Editor
Sherrye Gibbs
Assistant Editor
Larry Greene
Music
Barbara Gregson
Stock Footage
Cindy J Grey
Production Coordinator
Iris Grossman
Casting
Danielle Gschwendtner
Costumes
Lance Gunnin
Other
Steve Hagberg
Construction Manager
Ronald E. Hairston
Craft Service
Randy Hall
Stunts
Michael Z. Hanan
Production Designer
Hugh Hanna
Props
Tom Harper
Stunts
Barbara Harris
Adr Voice Casting
Pamela Harris
Assistant
Janice Hayen
Music
Todd Hayen
Original Music
Marvin Lee Hayes
Office Assistant
Michael Haynes
Stunts
Benjamin J Heath
Assistant
Cynthia S Holladay
Assistant Production Coordinator
Kent Houseman
Music Supervisor
C J Hsu
Avid Editor
Doug Hyun
Photography
John Jackson
Makeup
Frank Jones
Advisor
Morgan Jones
Transportation Captain
Thomas A. Keith
Assistant Director
Jamie Kelman
Hair Stylist
Jamie Kelman
Makeup Artist
Hubie Kerns Jr.
Stunts
Tyson Kohut
Cable Operator
Kim Koscki
Stunts
Hannah Kozak
Stunts
Julian Krainin
Producer
Jarad Krywicki
Accounting Assistant
Robert Krywicki
Accountant
Robert Kushner
Wig Supplier
Edmund J Lachmann
Dialogue Editor
Charles M Lagola
Art Director
Randy Lawrence
Other
Lance Laymen
Assistant Camera Operator
Mike Le Mare
Sound Designer
Bob Lee
Production Accountant
Michael Legrande
Location Assistant
Karen Leigh
Office Assistant
Aaron J Lemos
Other
Ranate Leuschner
Wig Supplier
Ron Licari
Props Assistant
Shirley Barela Lipscomb
Wardrobe
Chris Lisoni
Other
Steve Livingston
Sound Effects Editor
Juan Lopez
Set Costumer
Tim Magaraci
Best Boy
David Marcus
Assistant Sound Editor
Keith Markham
Grip
Adam Martin
Set Production Assistant
Johnny Massora
Electrician
Denver Mattson
Stunts
Ken Mazur
Music Editor
Monty Mccrea
Other
Jim Mchugh
Photography
Peter Merwin
Assistant Director
Jeff Miller
Medic
Vito Mirabella
Grip
Paul Monash
From Story
Paul Monash
Screenplay
Francine Morris
Stunts
William Morts
Stunts
Douglas Mowat
Set Decorator
Matthew W. Mungle
Prosthetic Makeup
Stewart Nelson
Sound Effects Editor
Cheryl Nick
Makeup Artist
Onofrio Pansini
Assistant Camera Operator
Craig Persky
Accounting Assistant
Dan Plum
Stunts
John Pratt
Music Supervisor
Sally Protiva
On-Set Dresser
Joe Pure
Electrician
Cindy Rebman
On-Set Dresser
Brian Reeves
Music
Amy Elise Roberts
Costumes
Jimmy N. Roberts
Stunts
Robin A Roberts
Set Costumer
Suzy Robertson
Wardrobe
Danny Rogers
Stunts
Chris Rossi
Grip
May Routh
Costume Designer
Robert Rudas
On-Set Dresser
Don Ruffin
Stunts
Steve Ruffin
Dolly Grip
Michael Runyard
Stunts
Todd Russell
Boom Operator
Roger Sassen
Gaffer
Keith Sayer
Makeup Artist
James Sbardellati
Assistant Director
James Sbardellati
Line Producer
Lee Sbardellati
Set Production Assistant
Van Scarboro
Video Playback
Ephraim Schaffer
Unit Production Manager
Andrea Scharf
Researcher
Susie Schelling
Medic
Heather Schreck
Post-Production Assistant
Janeen Schreyer
Makeup
Paul Schwanke
Other
Brady Schwartz
Foley Editor
Ben R Scott
Stunts
Dennis R. Scott
Stunt Coordinator
John-clay Scott
Stunts
Walter Scott
Stunts
Ira Senz
Wig Supplier
Adam Silverman
Post-Production Supervisor
Lincoln Simonds
Stunts
Darrell Smith
Rigging Gaffer
Videos
Movie Clip
Film Details
Also Known As
Wallace
Genre
Drama
Adaptation
Biography
Historical
Release Date
1997
Production Company
Tyson Kohut
Location
Sacramento, California, USA; Los Angeles, California, USA
Technical Specs
Duration
2h
Articles
George Wallace
So the man who helped elevate the art of TV drama in the 1950s returned to the small screen when HBO offered him the drama Against The Wall (1994). It became the first in a remarkable run of four acclaimed made-for-cable movies, for which he took home four consecutive Emmys Awards for directing. "It was a kind of rebirth. I got all my confidence back and I found that I was really sharp and focused." George Wallace (1997), the fourth of these films, was made for the commercial cable station TNT. It dramatizes the polarizing political career of George Wallace, the Alabama politician who leveraged the prejudices of Southern white voters to serve two terms as Governor of Alabama and run in the Democratic primaries for the 1972 Presidential election, a campaign cut short by an assassination attempt that left him paralyzed. He was a firebrand populist who promised "Segregation today, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever" in his inaugural gubernatorial address in 1963. He notoriously blocked the entry of black students to the University of Alabama after the Supreme Court ruled segregation unconstitutional and his vocal opposition to the Civil Rights Act became into a rallying cry for angry, racist, white Americans in the Deep South. The two-part mini-series was written for the screen by Paul Monash, a veteran who began writing for TV in the 1950s (including an episode of Playhouse 90 that directed by Frankenheimer 40 years before) and Marshall Brady, based on Brady's 1968 biography of Wallace.
For the role of Wallace, Frankenheimer courted veteran film, television, and stage actor Gary Sinise, co-founder of Chicago's esteemed Steppenwolf Theatre Company and an Oscar nominee for Forrest Gump. Sinise had already played one American political figure for TV--Harry Truman in the 1995 telefilm Truman--but he was wary of stepping into the skin of the man who fanned the flames of racism and intolerance in the 1960s. Frankenheimer, however, pressed him to look deeper into the script, which follows Wallace from idealist to political opportunist to the face of Southern racial intolerance and then coming back around to his public renunciation of his segregationist views. Frankenheimer likened it to a Faust tale, a man who sold his soul for political power. "Here's a person who spent a lot of his life on a quest, fighting for the wrong things, and then he realizes it and tries to redeem himself in some way," Sinise explained in a 1997 interview. "That's where the hope of it is."
Angelina Jolie, whose career was just beginning, won the role of Wallace's vibrant young second wife Cornelia, the daughter of Wallace's political mentor Big Jim Folsom. "They showed me the "Life" magazine cover of her over the body when he was shot and the look on her face. That told me everything I needed to know to like her," she remembered in an interview years later. "She could have been shot at that moment but she was on him and she was holding him." Jolie earned the best reviews of her budding career to date for her passionate performance.
Mare Winningham, a respected film and TV veteran herself with an Emmy Award and two nominations to her name, plays Wallace's first wife Lurleen, and Clarence Williams III is Archie, the African-American prisoner who serves as a trustee working at the Governor's mansion, a fictional character created for the film.
Frankenheimer had hoped to shoot the film on location in Alabama but then-Governor Fob James refused the production access to key locations in the state. The film was shot in California with Sacramento's capitol building standing in for Alabama's state house.
Recalling his roots in live television, Frankenheimer creates a visually dynamic drama on a limited budget with elegant camerawork, bold compositions (even quoting from his own The Manchurian Candidate) and a judicious use of handheld shots. To enhance the authenticity and immediacy of the drama, archival film and TV news footage of protests and riots and other key historical events is edited into black-and-white recreations and dramatic footage. As New York Times critic Caryn James observed, "What sounds like a gimmick actually creates a sense that those scenes are, indelibly, part of history."
George Wallace earned an impressive eight Emmy nominations. Along with his directing statuette, Frankenheimer directed Gary Sinise and supporting actress Mare Winningham to Emmy Awards and Jolie to a Golden Globe for her performance. "I've had complete creative freedom, complete artistic control," Frankenheimer said of his cable films. "There's been no interference. Those things are very important to a director." The acclaim brought Frankenheimer back to the big screen--he followed the telefilm with the hit action thriller Ronin (1998)--but it wasn't the end of his TV work. He tackled American politics once more with the made-for-HBO drama Path to War (2002), for which Sinise reprised the role of George Wallace in a brief, uncredited appearance. It was Frankenheimer's final film. He died in 2002 at the age of 72.
By Sean Axmaker
Sources:
The Directors: Take One, Robert J. Emery. TV Books, 1999.
Angelina, Andrew Morton. St. Martin's Press, 2010.
Vision and Conflict: Collaborating on the Wallace Saga, DVD featurette. Warner Home Video, 2008.
"Going Beyond Just Facts to Show a Hollow Soul," Caryn James. The New York Times, August 23, 1997.
George Wallace
Before John Frankenheimer became the director of such 1960s movie classics as The Manchurian Candidate (1962), The Birdman of Alcatraz (1962), Seven Days in May (1964), and Seconds (1964), he was one of the most celebrated small screen directors of the 1950s, creating edgy, vital live television drama for Playhouse 90 and other programs. Then his big screen career stalled after a string of box office stiffs in the 80s and early 90s: "I just hadn't been offered the really great scripts, so I found myself accepting some stuff that had a lot of fingerprints on them. It was just not the kind of material that I was being offered in the 60s and 70s," he reflected in a later interview. "I was getting older and I was very acutely aware that there was not much of a demand for me."
So the man who helped elevate the art of TV drama in the 1950s returned to the small screen when HBO offered him the drama Against The Wall (1994). It became the first in a remarkable run of four acclaimed made-for-cable movies, for which he took home four consecutive Emmys Awards for directing. "It was a kind of rebirth. I got all my confidence back and I found that I was really sharp and focused."
George Wallace (1997), the fourth of these films, was made for the commercial cable station TNT. It dramatizes the polarizing political career of George Wallace, the Alabama politician who leveraged the prejudices of Southern white voters to serve two terms as Governor of Alabama and run in the Democratic primaries for the 1972 Presidential election, a campaign cut short by an assassination attempt that left him paralyzed. He was a firebrand populist who promised "Segregation today, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever" in his inaugural gubernatorial address in 1963. He notoriously blocked the entry of black students to the University of Alabama after the Supreme Court ruled segregation unconstitutional and his vocal opposition to the Civil Rights Act became into a rallying cry for angry, racist, white Americans in the Deep South. The two-part mini-series was written for the screen by Paul Monash, a veteran who began writing for TV in the 1950s (including an episode of Playhouse 90 that directed by Frankenheimer 40 years before) and Marshall Brady, based on Brady's 1968 biography of Wallace.
For the role of Wallace, Frankenheimer courted veteran film, television, and stage actor Gary Sinise, co-founder of Chicago's esteemed Steppenwolf Theatre Company and an Oscar nominee for Forrest Gump. Sinise had already played one American political figure for TV--Harry Truman in the 1995 telefilm Truman--but he was wary of stepping into the skin of the man who fanned the flames of racism and intolerance in the 1960s. Frankenheimer, however, pressed him to look deeper into the script, which follows Wallace from idealist to political opportunist to the face of Southern racial intolerance and then coming back around to his public renunciation of his segregationist views. Frankenheimer likened it to a Faust tale, a man who sold his soul for political power. "Here's a person who spent a lot of his life on a quest, fighting for the wrong things, and then he realizes it and tries to redeem himself in some way," Sinise explained in a 1997 interview. "That's where the hope of it is."
Angelina Jolie, whose career was just beginning, won the role of Wallace's vibrant young second wife Cornelia, the daughter of Wallace's political mentor Big Jim Folsom. "They showed me the "Life" magazine cover of her over the body when he was shot and the look on her face. That told me everything I needed to know to like her," she remembered in an interview years later. "She could have been shot at that moment but she was on him and she was holding him." Jolie earned the best reviews of her budding career to date for her passionate performance.
Mare Winningham, a respected film and TV veteran herself with an Emmy Award and two nominations to her name, plays Wallace's first wife Lurleen, and Clarence Williams III is Archie, the African-American prisoner who serves as a trustee working at the Governor's mansion, a fictional character created for the film.
Frankenheimer had hoped to shoot the film on location in Alabama but then-Governor Fob James refused the production access to key locations in the state. The film was shot in California with Sacramento's capitol building standing in for Alabama's state house.
Recalling his roots in live television, Frankenheimer creates a visually dynamic drama on a limited budget with elegant camerawork, bold compositions (even quoting from his own The Manchurian Candidate) and a judicious use of handheld shots. To enhance the authenticity and immediacy of the drama, archival film and TV news footage of protests and riots and other key historical events is edited into black-and-white recreations and dramatic footage. As New York Times critic Caryn James observed, "What sounds like a gimmick actually creates a sense that those scenes are, indelibly, part of history."
George Wallace earned an impressive eight Emmy nominations. Along with his directing statuette, Frankenheimer directed Gary Sinise and supporting actress Mare Winningham to Emmy Awards and Jolie to a Golden Globe for her performance. "I've had complete creative freedom, complete artistic control," Frankenheimer said of his cable films. "There's been no interference. Those things are very important to a director." The acclaim brought Frankenheimer back to the big screen--he followed the telefilm with the hit action thriller Ronin (1998)--but it wasn't the end of his TV work. He tackled American politics once more with the made-for-HBO drama Path to War (2002), for which Sinise reprised the role of George Wallace in a brief, uncredited appearance. It was Frankenheimer's final film. He died in 2002 at the age of 72.
By Sean Axmaker
Sources:
The Directors: Take One, Robert J. Emery. TV Books, 1999.
Angelina, Andrew Morton. St. Martin's Press, 2010.
Vision and Conflict: Collaborating on the Wallace Saga, DVD featurette. Warner Home Video, 2008.
"Going Beyond Just Facts to Show a Hollow Soul," Caryn James. The New York Times, August 23, 1997.
Quotes
Trivia
Miscellaneous Notes
Aired in United States August 24, 1997
Aired in United States August 26, 1997
Released in United States on Video January 27, 1998
Began shooting January 13, 1997.
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