Miss Evers' Boys with Alfre Woodard: DVD Cover
  • Cover Image

Miss Evers' Boys Director: Joseph Sargent Cast: Alfre Woodard, Laurence Fishburne, Craig Sheffer, Ossie Davis

DVD - Stereo / Mono Learn more

BUY THIS ITEM

  • $5.99 Online price
    $5.39 Member price
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=026359138928&productCode=DV&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

Enter a zip code

  • DVD Release Date: 01/08/2002
  • Original Release: 1997
  • Rating: Rated PG
  • Sales Rank: 14,631
 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Scenes
  • Cast & Crew
  • Full Product Details

Features

Interactive menus; Chapter selections; Languages; Subtitles; Cast and director bios

Full Product Details

Scene Index

Side #1 --
0. Chapters
1. Main Title/Prologue [8:32]
2. Syphilis - A Negro Disease? [4:49]
3. Spreading the Word [9:04]
4. And So They Came... [5:14]
5. Miss Evers' Boys [6:53]
6. Healing Hands [2:51]
7. Stepping Out [5:28]
8. Budget Cuts [4:00]
9. No Treatment [6:07]
10. Back for Her Boys [9:55]
11. Back Shots [10:06]
12. Being Taken up Over the Hill... [9:57]
13. The Tuskegee List [3:56]
14. Taking the Cure [10:18]
15. Paying the Consequences [6:05]
16. Doing What's Right; Then and Now [11:21]
17. Coda/End Credits [3:08]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Produced for the HBO cable network, this docudrama explores the social and ethical issues at the heart of the infamous Tuskegee Study of Untreated Blacks With Syphilis. From 1932 through 1972, the U.S. Public Health Service studied 600 poor African-American sharecroppers in Macon County, AL -- 399 chronic syphilitics and a 201-man healthy control group. Doctors treated the men with placebos, hid the true nature of their research, and withheld penicillin even after it became the standard and highly effective treatment for the disease in the mid-'40s. Although the experiment was hardly a secret, it was not until the early '70s that a public outcry developed; by then, all but 127 of the original study group had died. A class-action lawsuit obtained modest financial reparations for the participants and their descendants, but it was not until 1997 that President Bill Clinton offered an official government apology for the study. Framed as a series of flashbacks during the 1971 congressional hearings about the experiment, the film employs the viewpoint of Eunice Evers (Alfre Woodard), a local nurse who knew of the study's true nature, but devoted her life to caring for the men as they suffered horrifying physical and mental debilities and eventually died. The film charts her warm personal relationships with many of the participants -- the title refers to a singing and dancing troupe named in her honor -- and her failed romance with Caleb Humphries (Laurence Fishburne), an experimental subject who obtained penicillin from a military doctor and left the study to fight in World War II. Miss Evers' Boys was adapted from the play by David Feldshuh, which was itself based on the book Bad Blood: The Tuskegee Syphilis Experiment by James H. Jones. Although fictionalized, the title character is based on the real-life Eunice Rivers. The film won three Emmy Awards, including top acting honors for Woodard. Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

  • Viewer Rating:
Write a Review