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Catch up with Mr. Gossett at one of his many upcoming events!

June 2nd, 2010

WebMD the Magazine interviews Mr. Gossett about his life, career and the Eracism Foundation.

May 26th, 2010

Ebony sits down with Mr. Gossett for a personal interview in the Legend: Celebrating Our Icons series.

May 25th, 2010

Mr. Gossett interviewed on Good Morning America.

More News

Mr. Gossett in the Boston Globe

September 30th, 2008

The Boston Globe caught up with Mr. Gossett and Ms. Phillips prior to the Get Konnected! multicultural social networking event in Boston founded by Ms. Phillips.  The article covers some personal details as well as several upcoming events on Mr. Gossett’s calendar.  Catch the full scoop here.

Mr. Gossett at the Abandoned Baby Centre in Dagoretti, Nairobi

September 11th, 2008

Mr. Gossett showing his constant heart for children.

Mr. Gossett showing his constant heart for children.

From USA Today:

Film star Louis Gossett Jr poses with a child at the Abandoned baby Centre in Dagoretti, Nairobi, August 13, 2008. Gossett and five other celebrities are in the country to shoot a primetime network television special documentary titled “Eye on Kenya” in association with Feed the Children that will look at the wonders of Kenya through the eyes of celebrities as they visit the country.

Lou Featured in Jet Magazine during Eye on Kenya Documentary

September 10th, 2008


Mr. Gossett on HBO’s Black List

September 9th, 2008

Mr. Gossett was chosen to both partake in and promote HBO’s special The Black List.

From HBO’s website:

Part of a multimedia initiative, The Black List: Volume One is the brainchild of renowned portrait photographer/filmmaker Timothy Greenfield-Sanders and acclaimed NPR radio host, journalist and former New York Times film critic Elvis Mitchell, with Greenfield-Sanders directing and Mitchell conducting the interviews. Mitchell, by design, is never seen on camera or heard, a strategy that allows the subjects’ own voices to remain the focus. The actual title of the film itself, The Black List, was first conceived by Mitchell as an answer to the persistent taint that western culture has applied to the word “black.”

The Black List: Volume One made its world premiere at 2008’s Sundance Film Festival; Variety called it “an impeccably mounted survey of voices from across the spectrum of African-American accomplishment…a rich and revealing work of portraiture.”

You can find out more about the documentary series by visiting the HBO Website.

Also, to give a voice to someone in your life, visit WhosOnYourBlackList.com.

Watch the promotional video for more information:

Mr. Gossett to host “Raising the Roof!” a MLK Tribute Concert

September 8th, 2008

Sewee Entertainment

Academy Award Winning Actor Louis Gossett, Jr. to host

“Raising the Roof!” - MLK Tribute Concert for Jan/Feb 2009

Sewee Entertainment announced today that Academy Award Winning Actor Louis Gossett, Jr. will host of “Raising the Roof!” - a one-hour televised Tribute Concert honoring the life and work of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

Mr. Gossett, Jr., is perhaps best known for his performance in the ground breaking 1977 television series  “Roots” for which he won an Emmy and his Oscar winning performance as the hard charging drill sergeant in the movie, “An Officer and a Gentleman.”  An enduring presence for more than five decades, Mr Gossett ranks as one of the most respected and beloved actors of stage, screen, and television.   In addition to his Oscar he is the recipient of multiple Golden Globes and People’s Choice Awards

His performances have connected him with fans on a global scale.  In 2006 he founded the Eracism Foundation, which works towards developing and producing entertainment that brings awareness and education to issues such as racism, ignorance and societal apathy.

“Raising the Roof” is produced through a partnership involving The Boston Children’s Chorus and WCVB-TV, the highly respected Hearst-Argyle TV station in Boston.  Past hosts of “Raising the Roof” have included “Good Morning America” Anchor Robin Roberts as well as ABC News Anchor/Correspondents Deborah Roberts and Ron Claiborne.

The event is fittingly filmed before a live audience at The New England Conservatory of Music in Boston.  It was on the steps of that building that a young woman named Coretta Scott met an aspiring Boston University doctoral candidate named Martin Luther King, Jr.

The uplifting and energized one-hour concert will be taped before a live audience and will feature the talented singers of the Boston Children’s Chorus along with the Young Peoples Chorus of New York City. The event also offers a series of multi-cultural reflections exploring the on-going impact of Dr. King.

WCVB-TV will handle production. Executive Producer Elizabeth Cheng and Producer Stella Gould created the National Primetime Emmy-nominated Boston Pops concert, “Pops Goes the Fourth,” which aired on the Arts and Entertainment Network for ten years.  Cheng has also executive produced numerous specials for A&E and the History Channel.

Sewee Entertainment will handle Ad Sales & Syndication.

“Raising the Roof” is being offered to broadcast TV stations on barter terms 6/6.  The special is available live on the MLK holiday, January 19th at 7-8 PM, or thereafter until Feb 28,  2009.

For interviews with Mr. Gossett contact:  Colette Phillips @ Colette Phillips Communications, Inc  617.357-5777 ext 203

For information related to the Ad sales and Syndication Contact:  Sewee Entertainment - Tim Voit - 843-224-3444

Mr. Gosset Quoted in King speech to Obama speech: A dream realized?

September 8th, 2008

Mr. Gossett was quoted in a recent article by the Associated Press, which has been picked up by a number of news venues.  The full text of the article can be read here or here.

Excerpt:

Hollywood is “sensitive” to issues of race and the industry is moving in the right direction, says Louis Gossett Jr., an Oscar-winning actor who is black. However, “the people who still call the shots … are of one race.”

Film projects on racial themes with black leading actors get less financing and distribution, he says. “In fact, my best Caucasian friend often says, ‘I’ll handle this so we can all be equal.’ Now, we should probably handle these things together.”

Lou Featured on Anderson Cooper’s 360 Blog

September 5th, 2008

Forty years after the death of Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., CNN took an unprecendented look at the state of black America in “CNN Presents: Black in America. The success, struggle, pain and pride.

Anderson Cooper’s 360 Blog has devoted several days to smart insight and commentary related to the special.

Mr. Gossett was featured on the Blog today, sharing his insight and his constant heart for helping children.

The planet is dying or dramatically changing. Hurricanes, earthquakes and tsunamis are taking their toll on humanity. We need to drop everything and pay attention to the planet. This should be our number one agenda - not issues like racism or our ethnic differences. It’s like we are all in a plane at 30 thousand feet plummeting to the ground, and the people inside are fighting over who will be in first class.

Perhaps we need to go back to where we started. The most important commodity on the planet is not oil, or military might or other riches; on the contrary our single most important commodity is our children.

What we plant in them is how the future will go. So it becomes important that we only plant the positive and not the negative. Racism is the negative. One thing that I tell all children is to repeat this affirmation three times: “No such thing is impossible.”

The family institution and our neighborhood units no longer seem to exist. We need to find a way to return to that … in a place not unlike a synagogue or a temple or a church. We need a place where our children learn to respect themselves, the opposite sex, their elders, their spirituality, and their physical fitness.

A large percentage of them would come out ladies and gentlemen. Much more prepared to learn in school and be responsible for their communities.

If everybody wants things to get better, this might be a good idea.

Mr. Gossett Featured on AHN

September 4th, 2008

As seen on AHN News.

Jan Westmark - Celebrity News Service

Washington, D.C. (CNS) - Actor Lou Gossett Jr. will be the featured guest speaker at Ohev Sholom, The National Synagogue in Washington D.C. on Saturday morning. An Oscar, Golden Globe and Emmy award winning actor, Gossett has been an enduring public presence for more than five decades and ranks as one of the most respected actors of stage, screen, and television.

It is believed that Gossett’s appearance at The National Synagogue marks the first time an African American will deliver a Shabbat morning sermon to members of the historic synagogue in its 122 year history. Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld, of the National Synagogue, believes there is even more to the story, however.

Rabbi Herzfeld told Celebrity News Service, “Lou Gossett is a deeply spiritual man and at this stage of his life he wants to make a positive difference in the world. He has been given many benefits from God and he wants to share those benefits.”

Gossett agreed with Rabbi and said, “To him whom much is given, much is expected. I have been blessed that through my work I have a recognizable persona and I can use the power of that persona for a greater good by shining the spotlight on issues of importance. I see myself as a vessel that God uses to do the work I am on the planet to do.”

In 2006, Gossett launched The Eracism Foundation, with the aim of developing and producing entertainment that brings awareness and education to issues such as racism, ignorance and societal apathy. “Part of the thing that keeps us apart is our differences,” Gossett said. “Instead of seeing strength and power in celebrating those differences, we fight over them.”

In his address at The National Synagogue, Gossett will share his work with Holocaust survivors and the African-American battalion that liberated them, as well as talk about how his Eracism Foundation has been shaped by his exposure to Judaism.

Through his Eracism Foundation, Gossett hopes to work with children of all races by helping to instill in them the values he grew up with as a boy in Coney Island, New York, values such as tolerance, discipline, self-respect, civility, deference to your elders and treating women respectfully. He believes that we must start with the children. “Children are our most precious resources and we must work as hard as we can to protect and preserve their future,” says Gossett.

Known for his role in the landmark 1977 miniseries “Roots,” Gossett will speak at the National Synagogue at 11:30 a.m. on Saturday, August 23.

Mr. Gossett Featured in AFRO News

September 4th, 2008
As seen in AFRO.
By James Wright

AFRO Staff Writer

When the rabbi of one of the oldest synagogues in the District decided to have an African American deliver the traditional Saturday morning sermon, some thought it would be a noted minister or a political figure with close ties to the Jewish community.
However, Rabbi Shmuel Herzfeld of the 122-year-old Ohev Sholom-The National Synagogue in Northwest Washington, surprised many by inviting Academy Award-winning actor Lou Gossett Jr. to preach to the congregation on Aug. 23. After Gossett’s sermon, there will be a discussion on the state of Black-Jewish relations.
Herzfeld said he decided to extend the opportunity to Gossett because of the opportunity to hear from a man who builds relationships with people from different backgrounds.
“I am deeply impressed with him,” Herzfeld said. “I found him to be a spiritual man.
“This is normally a sermon given by a rabbi but I feel that the life that Mr. Gossett has led is so special that we should hear his words.”
Gossett, 72, has acted in a number of movies and television shows either as a star or supporting actor. In 1983, he won “Best Supporting Actor” in the movie, “An Officer and a Gentleman” and an Emmy as the “Fiddler” in the 1977 ABC television miniseries, “Roots.”
In 2006, he founded the ERACISM Foundation, which is dedicated to creating entertainment that brings education and awareness to issues such as racism, ignorance and society apathy.
“Friction between [Jews] and African Americans is amplified by some who do not want us to get along. We have Black members of this synagogue and they feel comfortable here.”
Gossett said he quickly agreed when he was asked to deliver the sermon.
“I am a product of the successful union of these two (Afro-Judaic) cultures,” he said. “If it were not for that I would have never have entertained the thought to excel the way I have.
“I was equally influenced by the way that the Jewish families encouraged their children to succeed. Growing up in Coney Island (New York), there were strong bonds between the African-American community and the Jewish community and those bonds remain today.
“I look forward to speaking at the shule to officially thank the Jewish community and encourage the continuation of a beautiful relationship.”
Herzfeld’s synagogue has had Blacks make presentations before and it has a handful of Black members, known as African-American Jews. While Gossett is not the first person of African descent to deliver the Saturday morning sermon — an Ethiopian Jewish rabbi did so a few years ago — an African American making the presentation is just as historic.
Herzfeld’s invitation is an example of how Jewish leaders are trying to reach out to Blacks as a sign of unity, he said. Throughout American history, the two groups have worked together to advance causes of social justice, whether it was ending slavery, fighting segregation or promoting civil and human rights in the South during the civil rights movement.
Over the years, there has been some tension since the 1978 Allan Bakke U.S. Supreme Court decision that outlawed the use of quotas in employment and education. Black and Jewish leaders disagreed on the Bakke decision because Blacks said quotas made sure that they had access to education, employment and business opportunities while Jewish leaders argued that Jewish participation in business and higher education was limited based on their ethnicity, and the tool to ensure this was quotas.
Statements made by Nation of Islam Minister Louis Farrakhan and the Rev. Jesse Jackson in his 1984 campaign for the Democratic Party nomination for president upset Jews, leading many Black political leaders to repudiate their comments or limit support of their activities. Farrakhan and Jackson have repeatedly said they are not anti-Semites but want an honest dialogue as Blacks become more economically and politically empowered.
Dr. Lewis Gordon, a Black Jew and the director of Temple University’s Center for Afro-Jewish Studies, said relations between the two groups are not that good. He argues that many Jews of European descent left their idealistic liberalism behind after the 60’s to embrace neo-conservatism, that Blacks are “the enemy to civil order in the United States.”
“When White Jews speak of a shared status of oppression, many Black Americans see that as disingenuous, and explain, echoing Martin Luther King Jr., why they prefer not to wait,” he said. “What Jewish Americans fail to understand is that although they and Blacks are minorities, there is a world of difference between being considered a member of a White minority than one of color.”
Herzfeld disagrees with Gordon.
“I believe that Blacks and Jews are getting along quite well,” he said. “I think the friction between us and African Americans is amplified by some who do not want us to get along. We have Black members of this synagogue and they feel comfortable here.
“Judaism is color-blind. Let me be clear about this: people who are racist against Blacks are also anti-Semites.”
Gossett agrees with Herzfeld, saying that Blacks and Jews have come a long way and should continue the journey together.
“Because of our similar histories it is only natural for us to continue our collaboration at all levels, as a shining example of what America should definitely be striving for,” he said. “Then we can show the rest of the world by example what democracy in action can look like.”