Credits include landmark "Roots" miniseries
By Lynn Elber, Television Writer
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP) --David L. Wolper, whose landmark 1977 miniseries “Roots” engrossed the nation with its saga of an American family descended from an African slave, has died. He was 82.
Wolper died peacefully in his Beverly Hills home Tuesday evening while watching television with his wife Gloria, said spokesman Dale Olson. Wolper died of congestive heart disease and complications of Parkinson’s disease, Olson said.
He was a consummate salesman and advocate for filmmakers, said Mel Stuart, a veteran feature director and documentarian who worked with Wolper for two decades.
“There was an excitement. Anything was possible because Dave could enable it. He was a dreamer who could make dreams come true,” said Stuart, who directed “The Making of the President” documentaries and “Willy Wonka,” among other Wolper-produced films.
Wolper helped establish a new “school” of West Coast films at a time when New York-based TV networks’ news divisions and filmmakers dominated the field.
“In a way, he brought the documentary to Hollywood, and he became the major force in Hollywood for making documentaries,” Stuart said.
Olson, who represented Wolper for 40 years, called him “the most remarkable man I ever knew. During the documentary days, working for Wolper was like going to school and cramming for a test every week” for publicity kits on subjects ranging from exotic insects to U.S. presidents.
“He’ll surely be missed,” said producer-director James L. Brooks (“Broadcast News,” ”The Simpsons”), who landed his first job in Los Angeles with Wolper’s company.
“He stood out as a colorful man,” Brooks recalled, “even at a time when people were colorful.”
During his lengthy career, Wolper produced the children’s classic “Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory” and demonstrated his showman instincts with New York’s 1986 extravaganza celebrating the Statue of Liberty centennial and the 1984 Olympic Games ceremonies in Los Angeles.
But his TV work remained his best-known accomplishment, particularly “Roots,” based on the best seller by Alex Haley. The ABC series was seen in whole or part by 130 million people — more than half the country — when it ran for eight nights in 1977.
“I make it happen,” Wolper said in a 1999 Associated Press interview. “Who bought Alex Haley’s book ‘Roots’ for TV? Me. I hired the director, hired the writer. I put them all together. I’m like the chef. If I mix all the ingredients right, it’s going to taste terrific. If I don’t, it’s not going to come out good.”
The miniseries chronicling Kunta Kinte, enslaved as a teenager in 18th-century West Africa to be sold in America, and his descendants represented a different kind of family story, one told from the black perspective. It was based on Haley’s novel, a Pulitzer Prize-winner that mixed accounts of his own ancestors with fiction.
Among the large cast were John Amos, Ben Vereen, Leslie Uggams, Cicely Tyson, Olivia Cole, Madge Sinclair and Richard Roundtree. Newcomer LeVar Burton, who played Kinte as a youth, became an instant star. The series won a slew of honors including nine Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award.
In 2002, Wolper produced a 25th-anniversary special on the impact of “Roots,” which aired on NBC after ABC turned down the idea.
“I think it was an important milestone in the history of television,” then NBC Entertainment President Jeff Zucker said at the time. “It introduced the miniseries. It showed what you could do if you had the courage of your convictions to put something on like that.”
Wolper also produced several other miniseries, including the 1979 sequel “Roots: The Next Generations,” ”The Thorn Birds” and “North and South.”
A New York City native who was born Jan. 11, 1928, Wolper studied at Drake University in Des Moines, Iowa, and the University of Southern California, where he was business manager of the humor magazine, Wampus, edited by future Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Art Buchwald.
After leaving school in 1949, he joined with friends to create Flamingo Films, a TV distribution company, Olson said. Wolper traveled cross-country to sell old films to the few dozen TV stations then on the air.
His move into production was a splashy one. He obtained Soviet space footage for a documentary that was carried by 100-plus stations after networks refused to air an independent production. “The Race for Space” earned a 1960 Academy Award nomination.
Before becoming a titan in the miniseries genre, Wolper had a series of highly successful TV documentaries, including “The Making of the President 1960.” Time magazine crowned him “Mr. Documentary,” Olson said.
At the 1964 Emmy Awards, “The Making of the President 1960” received four trophies including program of the year, which was then the top award. “What a moment for me,” Wolper said.
He also produced the National Geographic special “The World of Jacques-Yves Cousteau,” which opened up the ocean depths for television viewers. He recalled Cousteau as “exactly as he appeared to be on the screen, a brave man who believed, passionately, in what he was doing and loved the oceans of the Earth.”
“I will never forget what you did to start my career,” Cousteau wrote to Wolper after a series of 1960s specials on the undersea explorer.
Always game for something new, Wolper branched out into docudramas such as “The Trial of Lt. Calley,” sitcom hits “Welcome Back, Kotter” and “Chico and the Man,” and films including the Oscar-winning “L.A. Confidential.”
His opening and closing ceremonies for the 1984 Olympics featured a spaceship floating mysteriously above the Coliseum (it was hitched to a blacked-out Army helicopter).
Wolper called his 2003 memoir simply, “Producer.”
In it, he reminisced about the 1971 “Willy Wonka.” He said it was his only work specifically for children, though he “always hoped kids would learn from and enjoy my documentaries.”
For the title role, he said Gene Wilder was perfect casting for a character with “a magical quality about him, the joy of a child in a man’s body. … The role fit him tighter than one of Cousteau’s wet suits.”
Wolper’s producer roots go back to the 1950s, when he turned footage of the Soviet space program — which he bought out from under the TV networks’ noses — into “The Race for Space.” The film was a hit in syndication and an Oscar nominee.
Before that, he first entered the entertainment industry by selling old movies to TV stations.
He said he welcomed the relative anonymity that came from staying behind the scenes.
“I make the money and I don’t have to take the abuse some of the stars do, opening up their personal life. I can go into a restaurant, sit down and have a nice meal without being harassed.
“Arnold Schwarzenegger can’t do that,” he said.
Beside his artist wife, Gloria, Wolper is survived by three children by a previous marriage and 10 grandchildren. Private services will be held, with a public memorial pending.
AP Television Writer Frazier Moore contributed to this report.
Alec Baldwin Urges Judge To Stand By Dismissal Of Involuntary Manslaughter Case In “Rust” Shooting
Alec Baldwin urged a New Mexico judge on Friday to stand by her decision to skuttle his trial and dismiss an involuntary manslaughter charge against the actor in the fatal shooting of a cinematographer on the set of a Western movie.
State District Court Judge Mary Marlowe Sommer dismissed the case against Baldwin halfway through a trial in July based on the withholding of evidence by police and prosecutors from the defense in the 2021 shooting of cinematographer Halyna Hutchins on the set of the film "Rust."
The charge against Baldwin was dismissed with prejudice, meaning it can't be revived once any appeals of the decision are exhausted.
Special prosecutor Kari Morrissey recently asked the judge to reconsider, arguing that there were insufficient facts and that Baldwin's due process rights had not been violated.
Baldwin, the lead actor and co-producer on "Rust," was pointing a gun at cinematographer Halyna Hutchins during a rehearsal when it went off, killing her and wounding director Joel Souza. Baldwin has said he pulled back the hammer — but not the trigger — and the revolver fired.
The case-ending evidence was ammunition that was brought into the sheriff's office in March by a man who said it could be related to Hutchins' killing. Prosecutors said they deemed the ammunition unrelated and unimportant, while Baldwin's lawyers alleged that they "buried" it and filed a successful motion to dismiss the case.
In her decision to dismiss the Baldwin case, Marlowe Sommer described "egregious discovery violations constituting misconduct" by law enforcement and prosecutors, as well as false testimony about physical evidence by a witness during the trial.
Defense counsel says that prosecutors tried to establish a link... Read More