SAT., JANUARY 3, 1881 THE CAROLINA TIMES -J Today Ds jro-Atf kstf Soy Ossie E my Bee By Ossla Davis Our new public television ) series, "With Ossie & Ruby," is the natural culmination of k twenty years of our lives. My twife, Ruby Dee, and I came long at a time when being Mack was hot yet fashionable, and there was very little in the professional theater for us to do except carry silver trays and ' announce that the grits wouldn't hold the heat. In our first year of marriage, Ruby ' : and I together earned less than 1,000. We were starving fo death, and it was obvious to us there must be some other way to earn a living. During the early '50s, in ad dition to being unemployed because we were black, we also learned that we were unemployed because we were , red. Some of our California hunts. Our association with which we would be paid'SIor '; them made us targets, also. $20. Back then, that was a lot Yet, out of this dire cir- of money at least to us. cumstance came an opportuni-1 ' Through this experience. i ty that led directly to "With X J Ruby and I found there was a ; Ossie & Ruby." Some of the performers who were out of ; work found a way to pick up an extra buck by giving friends had been kicked out of 4 readings of literary material. ; Hollywood, because of the So we went around to chur- "McCarthyite" drive, and ; ches, schools, synagogues and some of our New York friends ; union halls, and we'd give" like Paul Robeson, Canada ; dramatic interpretations of ! Lee and John Henry Faulk Dostoevsky and Yeats and were also targets of the. witch other literary masters, for . Saturday January 10, 1981 . . WFMY ' WPTF . WTVD WUNC WTTG WRAL I WTBS WGHP CH.2- CH.28 CH.11 CH.4 CH.5 CH.5 CH.1l CH. 8 Cable 2 Cable 3 Cabled Cable 9 Cable 10 f Cabhl2 Cable 13 -m 00 Krofft -,. My Three Newsbag Kids Are Vegetable -Animals, 15 Superstars sons " People Soup Animals .s30 FUntstones Rocky 4, Flipper Wonderama Too . -Romper TheJetsons 45 " Bullwlnkle " I 1 " " Room S CO Mighty Godzilla Mighty " Super- Ultraman Super- 15 Mouse Globe- Mouse " Mends " friends 30. TomS :. ' trotters Tomt, Battled '. Western: , 45 Jerry ,. Hour Jerry ffawte Tht " "The " " 00 BugsBjunny- - . - ' " Fredi J BugsBunny- :' TheJetsons It'sA Restless It's A U 15 RoadRunner Barney RoadRunner " Cpmedy Breed" Comedy & 30 Meat The Bullwlnkle Block- &Kk. 45 Schmoo I I " busters " busters y 00 " " " Entertaining Six Million " Classics: " III 15 .." ' " . At Home Dollar ". "King ' w 35 Popeye Daffy Duck Popeye - Herb . Man 90 Minutes Of The 90 Minutes 45 1 - v " . " Gardening " Of Action Khyber" Of Action 00 " Batman & " Houseman- Theatre I: l Comedy a a 15 " . SuperSeve- 11 n " ' ship" "First Men I I 30 DrakPak " Drak Pak Inauguration In The " " " 45 I " ' " I " ' 1 Of Jams 1 Moon" " " '" j r00 Fat Albert Bill Dance Fat Albert - " " Weekend Theatre: Weekend 7 J 15 " . Outdoors " . " . Specials- "River Specials I C so JBA Jack Van American " " TBA Of No American 45 1 " I Impe " " " " Return" Bandstand a 00 Duke Movie: " " Theatre II: Duke 1 15 vs. "How The ; - " "Darby's vs. I 30 Maryland West Was V " Ranchers" Maryland " F Troop 45 ' I Won" ; " I " I " " " ' I " f f 00 " ' ' I " " " " . Theatre: Soul Train J 15 " ' " " ". " ' "Captain ' U 30 "Horatio 45 " 1 "1 " 1 " I " , " Hombtower " 3" 00 UNC " " Antiques " UNC " ' Wrestling 15' ys " " VS. " " 30 Virginia Tennessee " Once Upon Theatre III Virginia " " L 45 ' I ys. I " I A CIassic "Old " " 400 " Kentucky " Masterpiece Dracula" ". " Hula Bowl 15 " " " Theatre " " " ' " 30 " " CBS Sports " " ' Rat Patrol " 45 " " r Spectacula . - 500 Wild Wild ' " " . Soccer Soul Tram Hula Bowl Wrestling 15 West " ' " Made In. " " 30 ". ShaNaNa " Germany " " " " j - tf tt ii i if t fi $t s00 News 2 " News Sneak KungFu"" " " " h 15 Prewws " " . yJ 30 CBS News " Reflections ThisO.d " " . .. 45 I " I " I " I House " I " l " I I 00 HeeHaw Pink HeeHaw Nova WetcomeBae- 7 k " Football Lawrence 15 " Panther " " Kotter Saturday vs. 30 " Muppets " " M.A.S.H. The Baxters On TBS II rrn tt it tt it It ! t00 WKRPIn NBC Movie: " Classic Georgetown Breaking Atlanta Breaking 15 Cincinnati "Kent " Country vs. Away Chiefs Away U 30 Tim Conway State" Tim Conway " Boston Col " vs. 45 1 " I I " I " 1 " 1 " 1 Tampa Bay f n 00 FreebieA " Freeblei Mystery! " Love Boat " Love Boat . .Q.15 The Bean " TheBean mJ It II tt II tl tt tt It i 45 " I " I " I '1 " . " I sr0Q Secrets Of HiH St. Secrets Of Matinee At News Fantasy TBS News Fantasy 11 15 Midland Blues Midland The Bijou " Island " Island 3 V 30 Heights " Heights " Black I 45 I " " I " " Reflections ." . " I j 00 News America's News " Odd Couple News Dick News J 7 15 " Top Ten " " " " Maurice ABC News' i I 30 Movie: Saturday Movie: MetiomeCia- : Wrestling " ' Wiock ' 45 I "Tht Night Live "A I , j "The " " Theatre j rtW Comedians" " Thousand Great " - Rock Concert i 1 ? 15 " " " Waldo " " " i Cm so " " " Pepper" Chiller " i 45 " " " " Theatre " separate body of material we . could perform that came out of pur past experiences and j out of our ethnic identifica ! tion. It was then called Negro : literature and included the work of Langston Hughes, ' Phyllis Wheatley, Paul " , Lawrence Dunbar and others. , Most black folks, particularly those who came up from the South, knew this material very i well. I knew it because I had come from Georgia, and each year during Negro History; Week, we would study black ' writers in great detail. So ; Ruby and I began to perform dramatic interpretations ' of J this material in black chur ,' ches, at black weddings and at ; i black, funerals, and somehow, 5 j we survived. ! A quantitative change in our : lives occurred which was based , on three events. First of all, Ruby and I became involved : with "A Raisin in the Sun," j one of the first plays written ? ; by a black and directed by a ; black that was a smash on i Broadway. Because of that play, our status, prestige and price went up. This led to the -second major event writing my own play, . "Purhe ; Vic torious." It, too, became a talked-about event, and it fix ed our place as ; people of (Significance in the black literary experience. ' ; The third thing that happen ed, and I suppose the most im portant thing, was a direct i result of the Supreme Court's ; decision in 1954 which deter ' mined that the civil rights bat j ties of the '60s would largely be fought in the area of educa tion. As a result of that deci- sion, colleges and universities , found themselves absolutely ' flatfooted when they were in- clined or required by law to do something . about black ' studies. They needed people to take the material off the page and dramatize it so black and white students alike would know what was nwant by . black literature. As a result, i we became very popular on 1 college campuses throughout, the country. During this time, there ! began to be suggestions and ' proposals for Ruby and me to . i do" our thing on records, radio and television.' We met ex ecutives in offices, talked to studio heads, worked with agents, and they all said, ; "Wouldn't it be marvelous if you could do that stuff ou do on campuses on a television show? In 1973, CBS gave us a special called "Today Is Ours," and Kraft Foods spon sored a weekly radio show on which Ruby and I read poetry and did interviews. The pro gram was quite successful. j After the radio show ended, we continued our college I tours, made motion iictures and appeared on r evision shows. On one occas? a few years ago, I was in v .fed to !public television station ' i KERA in Dallas to serve as thost for a six-program segr ment of the "Here's to Your J Health" series. At KERA, I ! met a rather quiet young man, Bob Ray Sanders, black like myself,' who asked me what had become of our radio show and if it would be possible to bring it back. I said we'd rather do a television show ! which would give wider ex-. jposure to the kind of material ;we shared on our college :. tours, That was the end of the ; conversation. I paid little at- . : lention to it because I had : made that same speech a thou sand times in a thousand places, and nothing had ever comeof it. ; :. j Sometime later, our: agent' i informed us that some people ! in Texas wanted Ruby and me ' 'to do a television show.. When I finally stopped to pay atten-! tion to these Texas people, it ! turned out to be KERA's Bob " Ray Sanders and the station's ; director, David Dowe. They j gave us a proposal, and what '. .they said made sense to us. To' our great surprise, we found . ! that their's was a real poposi- " ' tion, a real chance. In short, -ithey made us an offer we couldn't refuse, and "With ; Ossie & Ruby" was, at last, on ! its way to becoming a reality. J Since then, things have been I a bit frantic at times as we've; ! selected, material, written and rewritten scripts and then began production. But I think f viewers, will be satisfied and . perhaps a little surprised at ;the results. "With Ossie "& . Ruby" is a different kind of i television series.:. Each pro- gram presents a different i aspect, a different view of the ; American experience. And we're combining many arts ! forms - poetry, drama, ; music, dance, comedy to entertain 6ur audience. It has been a special pleasure- for Ruby and me, who have always dreamed of having our own ; television show, to see "With Ossie & iRuby" become a reality. Now Jthat it has, we can at last share with millions of Americans the i words, ideas and songs that I are most dear to us. All the work and struggle and hope it ! took to make it happen seem well spent. I think "With I Ossie & Ruby" is proof that .the American. Dream does work at least, for those who (work for it. jLmTJCm for A3 phoiwecfraass -