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HBO Original Miniseries ‘Show Me A Hero’ Premieres Same Time as The US

From the creator of “The Wire” and the director of “Crash”, HBO’s new six-part HBO Original miniseries, SHOW ME A HERO, premieres with two parts back-to-back same time as the US - August 17, 8am on HBO, with a same day primetime encore at 8pm.

From the creator of “The Wire” and the director of “Crash”, HBO’s new six-part HBO Original miniseries, SHOW ME A HERO, premieres with two parts back-to-back same time as the US – August 17, 8am on HBO, with a same day primetime encore at 8pm. Two new parts air on subsequent Monday nights at the same time. The miniseries will also be available on HBO GO on the same day.

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In an America generations removed from the greatest civil rights struggles of the 1960s, the young mayor of a mid-sized American city is faced with a federal court order that says he must build a small number of low-income housing units in the white neighborhoods of his town. His attempt to do so tears the entire city apart, paralyzes the municipal government and, ultimately, destroys the mayor and his political future.

Based on the nonfiction book of the same name by Lisa Belkin, SHOW ME A HERO explores notions of home, race and community through the lives of elected officials, bureaucrats, activists and ordinary citizens in Yonkers, NY.

David Simon (HBO’s “Treme” and “The Wire”) and William F. Zorzi, Jr. wrote SHOW ME A HERO, based on Belkin’s book. Paul Haggis (“Crash”) directed all six parts of the miniseries; David Simon, Nina K. Noble, Paul Haggis, Gail Mutrux and William F. Zorzi, Jr. executive produced.

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The cast includes Oscar Isaac (“Star Wars: Episode VII – The Force Awakens”) as Mayor Nick Wasicsko; Catherine Keener (Oscar® nominee for “Capote”) as longtime East Yonkers resident Mary Dorman; Alfred Molina (HBO’s “The Normal Heart”) as Councilman Henry J. Spallone; Winona Ryder (Oscar® nominee for “Little Women”) as Councilwoman Vinni Restiano; LaTanya Richardson-Jackson (“Blue Bloods”) as housing project resident Norma O’Neal; Bob Balaban (“The Grand Budapest Hotel”) as U.S. District Judge Leonard Sand; Jim Belushi (“The Defenders”) as incumbent Yonkers Mayor Angelo Martinelli, who lost his bid for a seventh term to Nick Wasicsko; and Jon Bernthal (“The Wolf of Wall Street”) as NAACP attorney Michael Sussman.

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Lisa Belkin was a New York Times reporter in the late 1980s, when Yonkers, a city of 200,000 located just north of The Bronx and nearly 80% white, was suddenly confronted by a politically unpopular reality. A lawsuit undertaken by the U.S. Justice Department and the NAACP had proven definitively that Yonkers officials had used federal housing funds to purposely segregate the city for decades, and while elected officials vowed to appeal that ruling, even the city’s own lawyers saw little chance it could be overturned on the merits.

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The remedy for the civil rights violations is simple, but politically fraught: Yonkers must build 200 units of low-income housing somewhere on the white side of the Saw Mill River Parkway in East Yonkers, followed by another 800 units of affordable housing. A committed housing expert, Oscar Newman (Peter Riegert, “Local Hero”), is determined to use a new philosophy of public housing to avoid the high-rise projects and slum conditions of previous generations, and Yonkers housing commissioner Peter Smith (Terry Kinney, HBO’s “Oz”) and housing consultant Robert Mayhawk (Clarke Peters, HBO’s “The Wire”) stand ready to help him. But before they can do so, Yonkers officials must name the sites on which the new townhouses can be built.

Their attempts bring only rage from white residents who are determined to protect their own property values and stop the public housing at all costs. Wasicsko, a young councilman, initially sides with the residents and uses that position to defeat the incumbent mayor, but the electoral result doesn’t make the outcome of the court case any less inevitable for Yonkers.

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Wasicsko and his young wife, Nay (Carla Quevedo, “Abril en Neuva York”), a city employee, are battered by the maelstrom that results, and ultimately, their lives are changed forever. Slowly and inexorably, the townhomes begin to go up and the residents who will have to cross the Yonkers color line are chosen.

But will this experiment in racial integration and social mobility work after so much anger and fury? Will white opponents such as Mary Dorman come to terms with a new reality? And will the residents themselves be comfortable in neighborhoods that so fiercely opposed them?

“The story appeals to me not merely as political history,” says Simon, for whom SHOW ME A HERO marks his fifth project at HBO, “but because the question in Yonkers in 1987 was the same one that we face today. Are all of us – those with and those without, white, black or brown – are we all sharing some portion of the same national experience? Or is the American Dream something other than that?”

Simon partnered on SHOW ME A HERO with longtime collaborator William F. Zorzi, Jr., a colleague from Simon’s days at the Baltimore Sun, who served as one of the newspaper’s top political reporters covering state and local government. Zorzi re-reported the Belkin book, getting to know many of the survivors of that era in Yonkers over the course of more than a decade of preparation and research for the miniseries.

Says Paul Haggis, “Frankly, I have long desired to be a part of anything David Simon does. If he had asked me to direct a history of footwear, that’s what we would be discussing now. Luckily, it was a part of our history that really intrigued me, largely because it isn’t history at all, but an exploration of issues that remain at the core of the American narrative. Working from Lisa’s terrific book, Bill and David handed me a compelling story of flawed individuals trying to do what they believe is right for their community, people struggling to make better lives for their families, and those just trying to hang on to what they have. I am honored to have been able to collaborate with the writers, producers, actors, artists and crew members who worked so hard to create this miniseries, and network executives brave enough to encourage us to do so.”

Notes Michael Lombardo, president, HBO Programming, “When you hear ‘David Simon, Paul Haggis and Oscar Isaac,’ you say, ‘I can’t wait to see that.’ Along with an elite cast and crew, they’re telling a tragic story set in a fractured America very much in the news today. We are proud to share this story on HBO.”

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