Roots
Young Kunta Kinte (LeVar Burton) grew up in Africa being warned about white slave hunters. One day he was out looking for wood to make his little brother a drum when he's captured and taken by ship to America. In America he is purchased by a white massa (Lorne Greene). He runs away three times before the slave hunters chop off part of his foot to keep him from running. He marries Belle, the plantation cook. The two of them have a little girl (Kizzy) who is eventually sold away from them. Kizzy (Leslie Ugghams) is sold to a small, poor plantation where the Massa (Chuck Connors) violates her. The result is her son, Chicken George (Ben Vereen). He grows up trained to work with the Massa's fighting chickens. He marries and has children and then is sent to Europe because Massa lost a high-stakes bet. His children grow up before he comes back home. After Emancipation, the family works hard to support themselves and establish themselves in the world. Eventually the story works down through the generations to Arthur Haley, the man who researched his roots and wrote the book.
In 1750, in Gambia, West Africa, Kunta Kinte, son of Omoro and Binta, distinguishes himself among his tribesmen in manhood training rituals. But he does not enjoy his new status long: slave traders sweeping the countryside seize him. Chained with other captives, Kunta begins an agonized odyssey to the New World.
Despite a violent rebellion, the slave ship Lord Ligonier completes its voyage in 1767, and Kunta Kinte endures the indignity of an Annapolis slave auction. Fiddler, the slave in charge of Kunta's training, becomes his only friend but Kunta's plans to escape and be with Fanta eventually put their friendship to the test. The events of Roots: The Gift (1988) are set between this and the next episode.
In 1776, John Reynolds sells the now adult Kunta Kinte to his brother William. Kunta tries to escape again, this time with dire consequences. He also meets his match in Belle Reynolds, the slave who cooks for William's family.
By 1780, Kunta accepts his fate, settles down with Bell and they have a daughter named Kizzy. Several years later, Kizzy befriends Anne, the young girl who was the result of a secret affair between Kizzy's master, Dr. William Reynolds, and the wife of his cuckold brother John, the previous Kunta's owner. The girls quickly, and secretly, become best friends, which ends up having unintended serious consequences later on.
In 1806, Kunta's teenage daughter Kizzy falls in love with a slave called Noah, who later tries to escape. Unfortunately, he is quickly caught and tortured until he names Kizzy as his accomplice, sealing her horrific fate.
In 1824, Kizzy is allowed to visit the plantation of her previous owner, Dr. William Reynolds, and learn the ultimate fate of her parents. Meanwhile, old slave Mingo teaches Kizzy's son George how to become a great cockfighting trainer. This eventually leads to huge unexpected changes in George's status.
In 1861, "Chicken George" returns home hoping to free his enslaved family.
The war is over, the Confederacy having surrendered, freeing the slaves. Mr. Harvey invites the slaves to stay if they wish, maybe sharecropping. The rest of the plantation owners, a senator and the sheriff have a meeting to discuss options, with the senator declaring that he's come to buy a lot of land. When tempers flare, the sheriff leaves. President Lincoln is shot by John Wilkes Booth. The former Harvey slaves' encampment is visited by masked men with torches on horses and Harvey is warned to "keep out of it".
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Georg Stanford Brown | Tom Harvey |
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Ren Woods | Fanta |
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Robert Reed | Dr. William Reynolds |
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Louis Gossett Jr. | Fiddler |
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John Amos | Older Kunta Kinte |
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Madge Sinclair | Bell Reynolds |
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Leslie Uggams | Kizzy Reynolds |
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Ben Vereen | Chicken George Moore |
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Lynda Day George | Mrs. Reynolds |
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Olivia Cole | Matilda Moore |
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LeVar Burton | Kunta Kinte |
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Edward Asner | Capt. Thomas Davies |
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Ralph Waite | Slater |
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Lloyd Bridges | Evan Brent |
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Lee De Broux | Trumbull |
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John Dennis Johnston | Man at Cockfight |
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Thayer David | Harlan |
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Raymond St. Jacques | The Drummer |
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Chuck Connors | Tom Moore |
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Lorne Greene | John Reynolds |
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Lillian Randolph | Sister Sara |
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Ji-Tu Cumbuka | Wrestler |
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Sandy Duncan | Missy Anne Reynolds |
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Vic Morrow | Ames |
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Austin Stoker | Virgil Harvey |
| Director | Marvin J. Chomsky |
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| David Greene |
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| John Erman |
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| Gilbert Moses |
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| Writer | Alex Haley, James Lee, William Blinn, Ernest Kinoy, M. Charles Cohen | |
| Producer | Stan Margulies, Donald A. Ramsey, Malcolm Alper, David L. Wolper, William Beaudine Jr. | |
| Musician | Gerald Fried, Quincy Jones | |
| Photography | Joseph M. Wilcots, Stevan Larner | |
| Edition | 30th Anniversary Edition |
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| Packaging | Custom Case |
| Nr Discs | 4 |
| Screen Ratios | Fullscreen (4:3) |
| Audio Tracks | Dolby Digital Mono [English] Dolby Digital Mono [Spanish] |
| Subtitles | English | English (Closed Captioned) | French | Spanish |
| Distributor | Warner Home Video |
| Layers | Single side, Dual layer |
| Edition Release Date | May 22, 2007 |
| Regions | Region 1 |
| Watched | |
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| Index | 3124 |
| Added Date | Dec 12, 2012 01:15:27 |
| Modified Date | Mar 26, 2019 21:58:25 |