Movie |
Nazi | March
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Outstanding Directorial Achievement in SpecialsMovies for TVActuality | 1982 | Penney Finkelman
Original Drama Anthology | 1983 | Ernest
Best Performance by an Actor in a Miniseries or Motion Picture Made for Television | 1982 | Danny
Outstanding Directing in a Limited Series or a Special | 1982 | Herbert
Outstanding Writing in a Limited Series or a Special | 1982 | Ernest
Outstanding Drama Special | 1982
This would be the final appearance of Danny Kaye before motion picture cameras, and the last of only two dramatic performances. The other performance being the "Ragpicker," in the 1969 film The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969) starring Katharine Hepburn.
At the time of the proposed Neo-Nazi march Skokie had approximately 7,000 Holocaust survivors living in the village, per the Illinois Holocaust Museum. That was cited as the reason Frank Collin targeted Skokie as the place for his march. Legal rulings from the Illinois Supreme Court ultimately allowed them to march in Skokie, if they so chose. The Neo-Nazis eventually decided not to march in Skokie. Instead they, approximately 20 Neo-Nazis, marched in downtown Chicago on June 24, 1978. They were met by a un-receptive crowd of about 2,000 people. Frank Collin was later revealed to be the son of a Jewish father (birth name Max Simon Cohn) who was a survivor of the Dachau concentration camp. Collin was convicted of child molestation in 1979 and served three years in a Pontiac, Illinois prison. After prison he changed his name, again, to Frank Joseph. He has since written many books about ancient civilizations, particularly the "lost island" of Atlantis.
Nancy Cartwright's debut.
"Max Feldman: If the Nazis march in here in Skokie, you can believe me I will be there. I will be there with baseball bats, with a gun, with anything. I will be in Skokie if the Nazis will march."
"Herb Lewisohn: Doesn't it feel kind of funny? Bert Silverman: What? Herb Lewisohn: I mean, you argued the first amendment for us before. In 68, the democratic convention. It's kind of surprising finding you arguing for prior restraint. Bert Silverman: Well, it's surprising to find you, a Jew, arguing in the defense of a Nazi like Collin."