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Made possible by the John H. Mitchell Television Programming Endowment

POSTPONED: Frederick Douglass: Slave and Statesman / The Sty of the Blind Pig

Closeup of Ivan Dixon as Frederick Douglass.
January 19, 2025 - 7:00 pm
In-person: 
Nomathande Dixon, daughter of Ivan Dixon.


Updated Jan. 10: While there is no immediate fire danger to the UCLA campus or the Archive’s collection in Santa Clarita, screenings scheduled for January 17–19 will be rescheduled out of respect for the guest speakers, staff and community members impacted by the devastation. New dates for these programs will be announced when possible. Our hearts are with the broader Los Angeles community. Please stay safe.


In innumerable productions over his pioneering career, Ivan Dixon’s multifaceted talents would far exceed the fame he achieved in his starring role on the 1960s sitcom Hogan’s Heroes. During his five seasons with Hogan, Dixon purposely utilized his time on set to learn filmmaking, observing episodes as they were directed and edited. Despite the security the series provided, Dixon, one of the first African American regulars on network television, left the popular program to pursue other ambitions. He went on to a highly successful career as a feature film and television director, helming numerous episodes for a diverse range of programs, including several innovative productions for public television: “Frederick Douglass: Slave and Statesman” and Hollywood Television Theatre: “The Sty of the Blind Pig.”

—Mark Quigley, John H. Mitchell Television Curator


Frederick Douglass: Slave and Statesman

U.S., 2/16/1983

Directed by Ivan Dixon, this powerful one-person show stars William Marshall (Blacula) as abolitionist and trusted Lincoln advisor Frederick Douglass. Based on Douglass’ essential writings, Sylvia Jarrico’s teleplay dramatizes the highly influential thinker’s life from the period surrounding his birth as an enslaved person through Reconstruction. Dixon trains his incisive video lens directly on Marshall as he addresses the audience, channeling Douglass’ profound insights on slavery, emancipation, suffrage and equal rights for all.

DCP, color, 57 min. A KCET Production in Association with William Marshall. Producer: Patrica Kunkel. Director: Ivan Dixon. Writer: Sylvia Jarrico. With: William Marshall.

Video from the Peabody Awards Collection, University of Georgia Libraries. Use courtesy of PBS SoCal. Special thanks to Ruta Abolins, Marigie Compton, Gerry Bryant.

Hollywood Television Theatre: “The Sty of the Blind Pig”

U.S., 5/31/1974

KCET’s dynamic production of Philip Hayes Dean’s critically acclaimed play examines the volatile relationship between a domineering mother (Madie Norman) and her yearning daughter (Mary Alice), torn by generational change amidst the backdrop of the burgeoning civil rights movement. Directed with escalating urgency and tension by Ivan Dixon, the incisive character drama features a harrowing, tour-de-force lead performance by Emmy, Obie, and Tony Award-winner Mary Alice (Fences).  

DCP, color, 90 min. A KCET Production. Executive Producer: Norman Lloyd. Producer: George Turpin. Director: Ivan Dixon. Writer: Philip Hayes Dean. With: Mary Alice, Scatman Crothers, Madi Norman, Richard Ward.

Preserved by the UCLA Film & Television Archive from the original 2 in. videotape. Video transfer at the CBS Media Exchange. Use courtesy of KCETLink. Special thanks to Gerry Bryant.