Eleanor and Franklin | |
---|---|
Genre | Biography Drama Romance |
Based on | Eleanor and Franklin by Joseph P. Lash |
Written by | James Costigan |
Directed by | Daniel Petrie |
Starring | Edward Herrmann Jane Alexander |
Theme music composer | John Barry |
Country of origin | United States |
Production | |
Executive producer | David Susskind |
Producers | Audrey Maas Harry R. Sherman |
Editor | Michael Kahn |
Running time | 240 minutes |
Production company | Talent Associates |
Original release | |
Network | ABC |
Release | January 11 January 12, 1976 | –
Related | |
Infobox instructions (only shown in preview) |
Eleanor and Franklin is a 1976 American television miniseries starring Edward Herrmann as Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR) and Jane Alexander as Eleanor Roosevelt which was broadcast on ABC on January 11 and 12, 1976.[1] It is the first part in a two-part "biopic" miniseries (with a later sequel telecast the following year) based on Joseph P. Lash's biography and history from 1971, Eleanor and Franklin, based on their correspondence and recently opened archives.[2] Joseph Lash was Eleanor's personal secretary and confidant.[3] He wrote several books on the Roosevelts including some on both Eleanor and Franklin individually and was also a controversial activist in his own right in leftist, liberalism, social and labor issues of the era.
Directed by Daniel Petrie, the film follows Franklin and Eleanor's lives told in flashback from her perspective after her husband's death, from the time they were children as cousins who met briefly, their courtship and marriage, bearing and raising a large family, her social efforts as he rises to Assistant Secretary of the Navy in World War I, the hidden affair with Lucy Mercer, (1891–1948), (portrayed for the first time by actress Linda Kelsey), her help and encouragement with his 1921 paralytic illness, and her campaigning with Louis Howe, (1871–1936), their mentor, crony and campaign manager during his runs for political offices in the New York state legislature, the unsuccessful effort for Vice President in 1920, later winning as Governor of New York and his rivalry with fellow politician Al Smith, (1873–1944), until his election to the Presidency in 1932 in the darkest times faced by the nation since the Civil War with the deepening "Great Depression".
A second film miniseries, Eleanor and Franklin: The White House Years (1977), was made the following year which detailed Roosevelt's terms as president during the Great Depression and World War II, told as a series of flashback episodes as Eleanor sits with her husband's body in the back bedroom during a legendary private moment in the cottage, the "Little White House" in Warm Springs, Georgia, on April 12, 1945.
The film won numerous awards, including 11 Primetime Emmy Awards (Outstanding Television Movie and Outstanding Supporting Actress in a Television Movie for Rosemary Murphy), the Golden Globe Award for Best TV Movie, and the Peabody Award. The director Daniel Petrie, (1920–2004), won for Director of the Year – Special,[4] as he would again the next year with "The White House Years". The film is noted for being almost entirely historically accurate.