Amos 'n Andy
I received a collection of DVDs of the old Amos ‘n Andy TV
show as a Christmas present this year. I remember watching the show in reruns
when I was an adolescent, but I had not seen any of the programs since then. I have
watched a few episodes and am now puzzled by the controversy over and suppression
of the show over the years.
In what I have seen, there is nothing about the program demeaning
to black people. The lead characters are of course comedic to the point of
being goofy. It is a comedy show. However other black people who appear in the
shows are depicted as normal, average, competent Americans - lawyers, actresses, department store
executives, bank officers, FBI agents, secretaries, store clerks, and so on –
with a complete lack of stereotyping or condescension. The main characters are a
typical set of stock comedic types. There are the conniving schemer (Kingfish),
the henpecked husband (Kingfish again), the straight man (Amos), the schemer’s
frequent dupe (Andy), the cowardly, blustering loudmouth (Algonquin J. Calhoun,
attorney at law), the shrewish wife (Sapphire), the harridan mother in law
(Sapphire’s mother), the troublesome idiot brother-in-law (Leroy), the
preening, ridiculous lady’s man (Andy again), and the witless sidekick or
servant (Lightning). One finds versions of
all of them in comedies going back a long way indeed and having nothing to do
with black people.
The episodes I’ve seen vary in quality. Some are funny. Some
fall flat. One was touching. None depicts black people in as bad a light as do many
more politically correct movies and TV shows (particularly the awful stuff from
the 1970’s), and none provides any good reason for throwing the Amos ‘n Andy
show into a memory hole. One could half
wonder if the real reason for suppressing the show is less the humor than the
background of presenting black people
other than the main characters as ordinary Americans, something which
goes against too many cherished political notions. I doubt it, but the entire
situation is odd. As Kingfish might say, something funny going on here.
Labels: Amos 'n Andy, comedy, political correctness, politics, TV
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