Vietnam: A Television History

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Vietnam: A Television History
Written byMartin Smith
Elizabeth Deane
Richard Ellison
Marilyn Mellowes
Bruce Palling
Judith Vecchione
Austin Hoyt
Andrew Pearson
Directed byJudith Vecchione
Austin Hoyt
Martin Smith
Bruce Palling
Narrated byWill Lyman
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of episodes13 (1983 version)
11 (1997 version
and 2004 DVD release)
Production
Running time780 min (1983 version)
660 min (1997 version
and 2004 DVD release)
Production companiesWGBH-TV
Central Independent Television
Antenne-2
Original release
NetworkPBS
ReleaseOctober 4 (1983-10-04) –
December 20, 1983 (1983-12-20)

Vietnam: A Television History (1983) is a 13-part

mini-series about the Vietnam War (1955–1975) from the perspective of the United States. It was produced for public television by WGBH-TV in Boston, Central Independent Television of the UK and Antenne-2 of France. It was originally broadcast on PBS
between October 4 and December 20, 1983.

Later, it was rebroadcast as part of the PBS series American Experience from May 26 to July 28, 1997. However, only 11 of the 13 original episodes were rebroadcast. Episodes 2 and 13 were dropped.

Vietnam: A Television History was the most successful documentary produced by PBS up to the time of initial broadcast. Nearly 9% of American households watched the initial episode, and an average of 9.7 million viewers watched each of the 13 episodes. A rebroadcast in the summer of 1984 garnered roughly a 4% share in the five largest U.S. television markets.[1]

Production

The origins of the series reach back to 1977 when PBS President

tie-in book, Vietnam: A History (1983), became a best-seller.[3]

Episodes

No.TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateRebroadcast
1"Roots of a War (1945–1953)"
Judith VecchioneHerselfOctober 4, 1983 (1983-10-04)May 26, 1997
The initial episode deals with the history of
Geneva Accords of July 1954
called for a reunification election in two years.
2"The First Vietnam War"
Judith VecchioneHerselfOctober 5, 1983 (1983-10-05)
Examines the First Indochina War (1946–54) that led to a French defeat by Ho Chi Minh's Viet Minh.
3"America's Mandarin (1954–1963)"
Elizabeth DeaneHerselfOctober 11, 1983 (1983-10-11)May 26, 1997
After the division of Vietnam into North and South the North is seen as a Communist threat by the United States. South Vietnam's Prime Minister,
death of Diem just a few weeks prior to the assassination of JFK
.
4"LBJ Goes to War (1964–1965)"
Austin HoytHimselfOctober 18, 1983 (1983-10-18)June 2, 1997
When
Gulf of Tonkin resolution that essentially authorized the President to make war. Johnson ordered the bombing of the North, in an operation called Rolling Thunder. A series of attacks in Saigon - the explosion at the Brinks hotel
; four days later, a major attack on the South Vietnamese army; and then an attack on Pleiku - led to the first request for additional US troops to protect the three jet-capable US airfields. On March 8, 1965, 3500 Marines landed at Da Nang and by the end of the year, there would be 200,000 American troops in Vietnam.
5"America Takes Charge (1965–1967)"
Andrew PearsonHimselfOctober 25, 1983 (1983-10-25)June 9, 1997
The first years of involvement by US combat troops is seen through the eyes of both American soldiers and everyday Vietnamese people. In the early days, there was strong support from the American public as America took charge of the war. By the end of 1965, there were 200,000 troops on the ground in Vietnam. The
Thuy Bo massacre
are conducted. The bombing in the North, Operation Rolling Thunder, continued but did not achieve the hoped for objective. After 3 years, the US had won many battles but not yet the war.
6"America's Enemy (1954–1967)"
Martin SmithHimselfNovember 1, 1983 (1983-11-01)June 16, 1997
Under the 1954 Geneva peace accords, reunification elections were to be held in Vietnam within two years. Prime Minister Diem rejected the election promise and took excessive steps to repress any opponents. The strategic hamlets were not welcome by the peasant population and by 1964, supplies were flowing south along the Ho Chi Minh trail. Viet Cong guerrillas supported by the Army of North Vietnam attacked American installations in Saigon. The bombing of the North started in 1965 in reaction to the Gulf of Tonkin incident. The Marines that began arriving in 1965 were not seen as liberators by the people. The North launched a major attack in 1965 on the airbase at Da Nang. It was eventually recognized that the bombing campaign, Operation Rolling Thunder, had failed.
7"Tet 1968"
Austin HoytHimselfNovember 8, 1983 (1983-11-08)June 23, 1997
The year 1968 was to be a new year for US efforts in Vietnam. Reports from the Embassy said that they were winning the ground war but American TV reports were showing a different picture altogether. The
New Hampshire primary
. On March 31, 1968 President Johnson made a televised speech about peace in Vietnam and announced a halt to the bombing. He also announced he would not seek re-election.
8"Vietnamizing the War (1968–1973)"
Martin SmithHimselfNovember 15, 1983 (1983-11-15)June 30, 1997
By Christmas 1969, American troops were being withdrawn under President Nixon's policy of having more of the ground fighting transferred to the South Vietnamese army. That year as many as 4000 South Vietnamese soldiers were being killed every week. The South Vietnamese government was recognized by most countries in the West and had survived for 15 years on more than $100 billion in US aid. At its peak, US troops numbered 500,000. The Vietnamese economy was overheated and the black market and prostitution thrived. The Paris peace talks had not stopped the bombing in South Vietnam as forces attempted to eliminate the Viet Cong but many native South Vietnamese were fighting for the VC. In two years the number of American troops were reduced by over 300,000. In 1969, more than 9,000 Americans were killed in Vietnam; the following year that number was cut in half. South Vietnamese President Thieu was not popular and protests began against his government. The anti-war sentiment was growing however among US troops and morale was low. There were 200 fragging incidents in 1970 and racial polarization among US troops was a major issue. In May 1972 the North invaded and the South Vietnamese were having a difficult time without US troops. President Nixon reacted by mining Haiphong harbor. In October 1972, the US reached an agreement with North, one that was not supported by Thieu.
9"Cambodia and Laos"
Bruce PallingHimselfNovember 22, 1983 (1983-11-22)July 7, 1997
The
Prince Norodom Sihanouk attempted to maintain his State's neutrality. The country prospered with an abundance of rice and fish and nearly 90% of peasants owned their own land. In 1963 Sihanouk, afraid that the situation in Vietnam might spill over into his country, organized anti-American propaganda and by 1966, Cambodia had maintained its neutrality and had broken off relations with the United States. American aircraft often pursued the enemy across the border into Cambodia and in 1970 President Nixon launched major bombing attacks on Cambodian territory. In January 1970, Sihanouk left on a trip and in March 1970 army officers ousted him with Lon Nol leading a new government. Sihanouk, now in exile in China, declared his support for the Khmer Rouge. Nixon ordered troops to attack North Vietnamese enclave along the Vietnamese/Cambodian border. The US pulled out after 60 days as promised with 350 dead Americans. Cambodia was plunged into full-scale war as the Khmer Rouge moved into the interior. On April 12, 1975 Americans were evacuated and less than a week later, Phnom Penh
fell.
10"Peace is at Hand (1968–1973)"
Martin SmithHimselfNovember 29, 1983 (1983-11-29)July 14, 1997
By early 1968, the US had dropped nearly 3 million tons of bombs on Vietnam. After the Tet offensive, President Johnson ordered a stop to the bombing and peace talks began in Paris. Some thought the negotiations would be swift but there was little of the give and take that you would normally expect. Nixon had won the 1968 election by a narrow margin and 500,000 American troops were still in Vietnam at that point. After Tet, fighting had again shifted to the countryside and in the first half of 1969, 200 Americans were killed and 800 wounded every week. Nixon introduced the policy of Vietnamizing the war, that is transferring the ground and air war to the Vietnamese themselves. By April 1970 US Forces in Vietnam had been reduced by more than 100,000, well ahead of schedule. Campus protests however reached a peak in 1970 with 4 students being killed by National Guardsmen at
Le Duc Tho
on January 23, 1973.
11"Homefront USA"
Elizabeth DeaneHerselfDecember 6, 1983 (1983-12-06)July 21, 1997
Martin Luther King spoke out against the war and riots broke out across the US after his assassination. The Chicago protests at the Democratic convention and the police response led to bloodshed on all sides. During the election, Nixon attacked Humphrey based on his support of Johnson's war policies. Every Thursday, the number of Americans killed in Vietnam was released to the media. Nixon won the election by a slim margin and the Vice President Spiro Agnew began attacking the media as biased. Soon however, the public learned of the massacre at My Lai
and even Vietnam Veterans began protesting the war.
12"The End of the Tunnel (1973–1975)"
Elizabeth DeaneHerselfDecember 13, 1983 (1983-12-13)July 28, 1997
On January 23, 1973 Nixon announced a cease fire, the return of all POWs, the complete withdrawal of forces from the country, all within 60 days. Many South Vietnamese were furious, seeing this as a death sentence. Most Americans now believed that the cost of the war, particularly in lives, was too great. The public cheered the return of POWs, a month-long celebration that played out on TV. Nixon had pledged support should the North launch a full-scale invasion, but he was now distracted by the
Gerald R. Ford who committed to continue his predecessor's policies, but by August the military balance had shifted against Thieu. The South lacked US air support, had problems with the ammunition supply and spare parts for aircraft. South Vietnamese corruption was a major, though little discussed, problem. In 1972, 31,000 South Vietnamese soldiers had died and leaders in the North concluded there was nothing the US could do to stem the tide. The invasion of the South in 1975 was at least in part a test of US resolve. Congress refused to approve additional funds. A North Vietnamese feint lured the South Vietnamese to defend Pleiku in the highlands but, unsuccessful, they were forced to go further south and set a new line of defense. Da Nang fell on March 30, 1975 and the hysteria there filtered south. Curfews were imposed in Saigon and Americans prepared to leave, but the evacuation
created chaos. On April 21, 1975, Thieu resigned and on the 28th Northern troops entered the city, which fell on the 30th. The North, which had given itself two years to gain control of the South, had done so in only 55 days.
13"Legacies"
Richard EllisonHimselfDecember 20, 1983 (1983-12-20)
Examines the legacy of the Vietnam War from the end of fighting up to 1983.

Edited 1997 version

When PBS elected to rebroadcast Vietnam: A Television History (originally broadcast in 1983) as part of its American Experience series in 1997, it used a re-edited version some 120 minutes shorter (a total of 660 minutes, as opposed to 780 minutes). This version excluded entirely Episodes 2 ("The First Vietnam War") and 13 ("Legacies") of the original broadcast.

The editing was reportedly undertaken to remove outdated information and to create a more cohesive story for viewers. However, some viewers who remembered the original 13-episode version denigrated the changes as "censorship": they believed that they could detect a "corrective" treatment of the material that involved cutting out politically objectionable scenes; an interview of a French captain discussing the end of the siege at

Dien Bien Phu
and referring to the Viet Minh as "Red Termites"; an interview of a man recalling a popular expression of that time and place in which the native plantation workers were termed "fertilizer" because so many died and were buried beneath the trees among which they toiled; and material depicting the British decision to rearm defeated Japanese soldiers at the end of World War II to use them against the Vietnamese. No evidence was presented that PBS executives edited the series for political purposes.

Additionally, the use of the shortened 1997 broadcast version for the 2004 DVD release of the series–rather than the entire, original 1983 version–has not been explained.

Reception

Critical response

The New York Times described the series as "determinedly even-handed" and "delicately balanced"; it concluded that the production was "a landmark in television journalism". It observed that "the documentary implies that the peace movement, unsupported by most Americans, had little effect on the conduct of the war. Indeed, by attacking

Richard M. Nixon. This seems to have been its most significant contribution to American history... In a curious way, the documentary also suggests that American hawks and doves were right and wrong in equal measure." The critic, however, took the filmmakers to task for some "weaknesses in the reportorial technique."[4] The film also received very positive reviews from The Washington Post, Variety, Time,[5] and Newsweek.[6]
The latter two hailed the series as fair, brilliant, and objective.

The series aired in the UK to good reviews, but did not receive the high ratings achieved in the U.S.[7]

The series won six

DuPont-Columbia Award, and an Erik Barnouw Award.[8]

Criticism

The film Television's Vietnam: The Real Story (1985), aired on the PBS network as a rebuttal to the documentary. It was narrated by Charlton Heston and produced by Accuracy in Media.[9][10]

See also

References

  1. ^ "The Museum of Broadcast Communications - Encyclopedia of Television - Vietnam: A Television History". www.museum.tv. Archived from the original on December 30, 2014.
  2. ^ Karnow, Stanley (April 27, 1989). "In Our Image". C-SPAN (Motion picture). Interviewed by Brian Lamb. Archived from the original on July 7, 2023. Retrieved August 5, 2023.
  3. .
  4. ^ Corry, John (1983), "TV: 13-Part History of Vietnam War on PBS", The New York Times (4 Oct 1983)
  5. ^ Henry III, W. A. "Vietnam: A Television History", Time, October 3, 1983.
  6. ^ Broyles, W. "Vietnam: A Television History." Newsweek, October 10, 1983.
  7. ^ "The Museum of Broadcast Communications - Encyclopedia of Television - Vietnam: A Television History". www.museum.tv. Archived from the original on December 30, 2014.
  8. ^ "Vietnam: A Television History, Interviews Collection. at American Archive of Public Broadcasting".
  9. .
  10. ^ Corry, John (June 27, 1985). "'Television's Vietnam: The Real Story,' on PBS". The New York Times. Retrieved October 4, 2016.

Further reading

  • Banerian, James, editor. "Losers Are Pirates: A Close Look At The PBS Series "Vietnam: A Television History."" Phoenix, Arizona: Sphinx, 1985.
  • Karnow, Stanley. (1983; 2nd edition, 1997), Vietnam: A History. Middlesex, England: Penguin.
  • Lichty, Lawrence. "Vietnam: A Television History: Media Research And Some Comments." In, Rosenthal, Alan, editor. New Challenges For Documentary. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1988.
  • Springer, Claudia. Vietnam: A Television History And The Equivocal Nature of Objectivity, Wide Angle (Athens, Ohio), 1985.

External links