Ruby Bridges: how a 90s Disney movie about racism caused a culture war (2024)

Before the made-for-TV film Ruby Bridges made its ABC network premiere on the Sunday night of Martin Luther King weekend in 1998, a taped address from the White House set the tone.

Florida school pulls anti-racism film Ruby Bridges after parent complaintRead more

Disney’s CEO, Michael Eisner, overviewed the 1954 supreme court decision that cleared a path for this six-year-old Black girl to begin integrating in New Orleans public schools in 1960, and nodded at the protests and violence Bridges and other school integration pioneers triggered nationwide. President Bill Clinton recalled his whitewashed Arkansas childhood, noting that he never went to school with a person of another race until attending college at Georgetown. “We’ve come a long way since 1954,” Clinton remarked, “but we still have a long way to go. Perhaps the greatest lesson we can learn from Ruby Bridges is that every one of us has the power to stand up against injustice and stand up to the ideals that make America great.” But in a sign of the times, that’s no longer the prevailing mood now.

Last month, a white woman named Emily Conklin filed a formal complaint with the Pinellas county school in Florida, exempting her second-grade daughter from watching the film at St Petersburg’s North Shore elementary, where she is a student. Tipped off by “a permission slip that was sent home”, Conklin discloses that after pre-screening the “first 50 minutes of the movie” she objected to the film using the words “negro” and “nigg*”, one depiction of a “child putting a noose around a dolls [sic] neck” and “adults screaming ‘I’m going to hang you.’” She fears the film might teach kids how to be racist.

Last week Pinellas school officials responded by banning the film at North Shore pending reassessment from a review committee. According to a district spokesperson, Conklin’s complaint prompted two other families to opt their kids out of seeing the film.

But even as it remains available within the district’s other school libraries, there is a fear that it could be the latest casualty in the sprawling political push to ban any content that could be deemed “too woke” by the state. Toni Morrison’s The Bluest Eye, biographies about baseball trailblazers Hank Aaron and Roberto Clemente, Black history lessons that were once state-mandated have suddenly come up for discussion under Florida’s Stop Woke Act, a 2022 law that essentially prohibits history lessons that has white guilt as a takeaway.

“Regrettably,” wrote former St Petersburg police chief and deputy mayor Goliath Davis in a recent editorial, “the political environment surrounding Maga Republicans, Mothers of Liberty and Governor Ron DeSantis continues to foster a movement of division, historical denial and instability.” That the film is suddenly a touch too strong for their tastes is an unexpected twist.

Ruby Bridges is a quintessential slice of “Disney history”, one that takes Norman Rockwell’s searing portrait of Ruby being escorted into New Orleans’ all-white William Franz grammar school under federal protection and puts it in soft focus. Ruby (Chaz Monet) is a baseball-loving brainiac with deep reserves of compassion, mom (Waiting to Exhale’s Lela Rochon) is her resolute emotional shield, and dad (Truth Be Told’s Michael Beach) is a disillusioned Korean war veteran who regains his faith in humanity when the bigots come around to his daughter.

On top of that schmaltz, the film is suffused with white heroes – from the open-minded child psychiatrist (Kevin Pollak) who revels in Ruby’s intellectual brilliance to the racist vice-principal (Diana Scarwid) whose heart eventually softens. At one point Ruby’s teacher (Carlito’s Way’s Penelope Anne Miller) says “there was a time in the south when white people owned Negroes like you would own a pet or a toy. But I’m from the north, and we never thought that way”. It’s a helluva whopper coming from a lady who’s meant to be from Boston.

In early meetings with the studio, screenwriter Toni Ann Johnson recalled how Disney executives hoped she would go even further and present the story from the point of view of Pollak’s character – the Pulitzer prize-winning Harvard psychiatrist Robert Coles. “It’s Disney,” she said in a 1998 Times-Picayune interview. “It’s in a 6 o’clock time period … I was told we could not use the word ‘nigg*r’ in the first hour … What do you think people were calling this little girl? … I was embarrassed.” Without that complete sterilization, Bridges never becomes a staple of Florida’s education for decades.

But in the end she came away satisfied with the Euzhan Palcy-directed film, a smash that drew 10 million viewers on the same night as the Golden Globes. It marked Disney’s best movie performance in prime time since Whitney Houston and Brandy Norwood starred in the live-action version of Cinderella the prior fall. “Ruby Bridges is not a great film,” said one Baltimore Sun critic, “but it is a powerful one.”

That power isn’t lost on Conklin, who has effectively scrubbed herself from the internet as online critics suss out her political allegiances and call out the hypocrisy of her waging a culture war while also working as the development director of her local YMCA. But the real irony is that Conklin may be miscast as the villain in this story. Her complaint doesn’t exactly call for the film to be banned; it merely suggests that it could be too mature for young students. Instead, she recommends saving it for an “eighth grade American History class” or, if that’s not possible, “send home a letter explaining the material”.

Overall, it seems as if she is calling for context, not cuts – something like that special message from the White House. “There’s more in the movie,” she wrote in her complaint while remarking on the inherent educational value in Ruby Bridges, “but I ran out of space to type it.”

Ruby Bridges: how a 90s Disney movie about racism caused a culture war (2024)

FAQs

What is the Ruby Bridge movie about? ›

How accurate is the Ruby Bridges movie? ›

The main historical events are accurately portrayed, but I didn't think the movie captured the spirit shown by Ruby Bridges and her family. Dr. Robert Coles (portrayed by Kevin Pollak) is an important figure in U.S. psychiatry. He did, indeed, help Ruby Bridges during her ordeal.

What did Ruby Bridges fight for? ›

Ruby Nell Bridges Hall is an American Hero. She was the first African American child to desegregate William Frantz Elementary School. At six years old, Ruby's bravery helped pave the way for Civil Rights action in the American South.

What happened to Ruby Bridges when she was 4? ›

When she was four years old, her family moved to New Orleans. Two years later a test was given to the city's African American schoolchildren to determine which students could enter all-white schools. Bridges passed the test and was selected for enrollment at the city's William Frantz Elementary School.

Does the Ruby Bridges movie have the n word in it? ›

Great historical movie but it has the N word

I don't recommend showing a movie with the N word to Children.

What is the kids movie about Ruby Bridges? ›

Watch Ruby Bridges | Disney+ When six-year-old Ruby is chosen to be the first African-American to integrate her local elementary school, she is subjected to the true ugliness of racism for the first time.

Who was protecting Ruby Bridges? ›

The Children's Museum Remembers Former U.S. Marshal Charles Burks, Who Protected 6-Year-Old Ruby Bridges. “I wish there were enough marshals to walk with every child as they face hatred and racism, and to support and encourage them the way these federal marshals did for me,” said Ruby Bridges, Civil Rights icon.

What did Ruby Bridges say? ›

She says: “If you really think about it, if we begin to teach history exactly the way that it happened, good, bad, ugly, no matter what, I believe that we're going to find that we are closer, more connected than we are apart.” When she was told that her plan for educational equity was grandiose, she responded: “Well, ...

What struggles did Ruby Bridges face? ›

Ruby faced blatant racism every day while entering the school. Many parents kept their children at home. People outside the school threw objects, police set up barricades. She was threatened and even “greeted" by a woman displaying a black doll in a wooden coffin.

Did Ruby Bridges have 4 sons? ›

Answer and Explanation:

Following her marriage to Malcolm Hall, Ruby Bridges had four sons. Her sons are named Sean Hall, Christopher Hall, and Craig Hall, as well as a fourth, publicly unnamed son. Bridges son Craig Hall was killed in a street shooting in New Orleans in 2005.

What did Ruby Bridges' dad do? ›

Her father lost his job at the gas station, the grocery store where they shopped banned them from returning, and the farm owners sent Ruby's grandparents from the farm they had sharecropped for over 25 years.

What was Ruby Bridges' real name? ›

Ruby Bridges
Bridges in 2011
BornRuby Nell Bridges September 8, 1954 Tylertown, Mississippi, U.S.
Occupation(s)Philanthropist, activist
Websitewww.rubybridges.com

Is the movie Ruby Bridges based on a true story? ›

Ruby Bridges is a 1998 television film, written by Toni Ann Johnson, directed by Euzhan Palcy and based on the true story of Ruby Bridges, one of the first black students to attend integrated schools in New Orleans, Louisiana, in 1960.

What is the moral of Ruby Bridges? ›

Learning that you can never judge anyone from the outside was the first lesson of that tumultuous year. A second was that we must all “become brothers and sisters:” “We must absolutely take care of one another. It does take a village, but we have to be a village first.

Is the story of Ruby Bridges fiction or nonfiction? ›

This non-fiction account retells the story of Ruby Bridges, a young Black girl who integrated an all-White school in New Orleans. Ruby Bridges was a first-grade student who was sent to integrate an all-White elementary school.

What is stuff about Ruby Bridges family? ›

Bridges was the oldest of five siblings. Her parents and grandparents lived and sharecropped on a small farm in Mississippi. The family struggled to make ends meet, and when Bridges was four years old, her parents and siblings moved to New Orleans, Louisiana in search of better job opportunities and a better life.

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