American Experience

1Season 17

S17.E1 ∙ RFK

Mon, Oct 4, 2004

Part One: The Garish Sun: Robert F. Kennedy devotes himself to his brother John, then deals with the pain of the assassination.

2Season 17

S17.E2 ∙ The Fight

Mon, Oct 18, 2004

Documentary on the boxing match between American Joe Louis and German Max Schmeling, which captured the world's attention on June 22, 1938.

3Season 17

S17.E3 ∙ Fidel Castro

Mon, Jan 31, 2005

A biography of Cuban leader Fidel Castro.

4Season 17

S17.E4 ∙ Building the Alaska Highway

Mon, Feb 7, 2005

The creation of the 1,500-mile Alaska-Canada Highway.

5Season 17

S17.E5 ∙ Kinsey

Mon, Feb 14, 2005

Documentary examining the impact and continuing influence of 'Alfred Kinsey''s groundbreaking research on human sexuality.

6Season 17

S17.E6 ∙ Mary Pickford

Mon, Apr 4, 2005

Through interviews with film historians and biographers, and through archival footage, the rise and fall of the professional life of actress and businessperson Mary Pickford (1892-1979) - born Gladys Smith - and the associated ebbs and flows in her personal life, are presented. At the height of her fame, she was dubbed "America's Sweetheart" despite being born in Canada. Mary's widowed mother, Charlotte Smith, got herself, Mary and Mary's two siblings into the somewhat disreputable profession of acting - first on the stage, then into the emerging form of moving pictures - as a means of economic survival, but it soon became clear of Mary's star quality compared to her other family members. Mary and Charlotte's foray into the business side of show business was in a means to take control of Mary's own career, against the actions of impresarios and studio executives who may not have had Mary's best interests at heart. Arguably the biggest maneuver in Mary's business life was the formation of United Artists in 1919 with director D.W. Griffith, fellow actor Charles Chaplin and who would become her second of three husbands, fellow actor Douglas Fairbanks, that marriage the most famous of the three despite not being the longest. United Artists was not only a means to distribute the movies made under their production company under their control, but to provide an outlet for all creative artists in the motion picture business some financial security. Mary's slide began in the late 1920s having overextended herself in her own human resource on the business side, and her adoring fans not allowing her to grow up on screen, the advent of talking pictures only one of the many aspects which showed a Mary with who the public could not relate. Mary's Academy Award win as Best Actress in 1930 for Coquette (1929), not a typical Pickford role and the first speaking role to win the award, is largely seen as an award to her contributions to the film industry as opposed to an award for this particular role.

7Season 17

S17.E7 ∙ The Great Transatlantic Cable

Mon, Apr 11, 2005

The story of Cyrus Field and the creation of the transatlantic telegraph line.

8Season 17

S17.E8 ∙ The Massie Affair

Mon, Apr 18, 2005

In 1931, Honolulu's tropical tranquility was shattered when a young Navy wife made an allegation of rape against five islanders.

9Season 17

S17.E9 ∙ The Fall of Saigon

Mon, Apr 25, 2005

Add a plot

10Season 17

S17.E10 ∙ Victory in the Pacific

Mon, May 2, 2005

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11Season 17

S17.E11 ∙ The Carter Family: Will the Circle Be Unbroken

Mon, May 9, 2005

The life and times of The Carter Family, one of the earliest and most-influential group in American country and roots music.

12Season 17

S17.E12 ∙ Guerrilla: The Taking of Patty Hearst

Mon, May 23, 2005

A documentary on the curious American domestic terrorist group, infamous for the 1974 kidnapping of Patty Hearst.