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 Hollywood Goes to School   
    By Mark Walsh   
    
 
     Hollywood has an insatiable appetite for heroes and
    villains, and it's found plenty of both in the classroom. More realistic portrayals of
    school life in the 20th century are harder to come by. The difficult, sometimes tedious
    work of teaching and learning doesn't translate quite as easily to the big and small
    screens, even when producers try.  
    But Hollywood is in show business, not education policy, and many of the
    classroom-related movies and television shows described here are as entertaining as they
    come.  
    
      
        | Teachers | 
       
      
        | Hollywood teachers are heroes--usually. They are idealistic. They battle
        the principal and other cynics and doubters. They question whether they can go on, but in
        the end, they make a classroom breakthrough and sign up for another year.  In Blackboard
        Jungle (1955), the prototypical American film of the genre, Korean War veteran Richard
        Dadier (Glenn Ford) faces a class of boys who make his life hellish. He is mugged, his
        wife is harassed, and his colleague's priceless record collection is smashed. He is ready
        to quit, but he goes back to his education school professor for re-inspiration. In the
        climax, a student pulls a knife on him, but some of the other boys help squelch the
        violence. Despite one-dimensional characters, it is the classroom movie against which all
        others are measured.  
        A dedicated teacher is also the focus of Good Morning, Miss Dove (1955), with
        Jennifer Jones as an elderly educator who recalls a lifetime of shaping the lives of her
        students.  
        In Stand and Deliver (1987), based on a true story, Jaime Escalante (Edward
        James Olmos) is one movie teacher who takes on the system and wins. Confronted by
        skeptical test authorities, his Latino students ace an Advanced Placement calculus test
        not once, but twice.  
        More typical is the teacher who defies conventions and pays a price, such as John
        Keating (Robin Williams) in Dead Poets Society (1989). His romantic notions about
        engaging the minds of his boarding school boys butt up against tradition. He loses his
        job, but at least he gets his students to stand up on their desks and recite, "O
        Captain! My Captain!"
		 
  
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        | Principals | 
       
      
        | In the movies, the school principal (or vice principal or headmaster) is
        often bumbling (Mr. Rooney in Ferris Bueller's Day Off , 1986), villainous (the Catholic
        school principals in two obscure but poignant films, The Chocolate War, 1988, and Heaven
        Help Us, 1985), or pedantic (Mr. Wameke in Blackboard Jungle and Mr. Rivell in Teachers,
        1984).  But school leaders have also played heroic roles. In the sentimental Boys
        Town (1938), Father Flanagan (Spencer Tracy) gets through to even the toughest
        delinquents in his school.  
        In The Principal(1987), Mr. Latimer (James Belushi) is a failed suburban
        classroom teacher turned inner-city principal who takes on gangs and uncaring teachers.  
        And Lean on Me(1987) tells the true story of the autocratic Joe Clark (Morgan
        Freeman), who wields his trademark bullhorn and baseball bat and locks fire doors to keep
        drug dealers and other miscreants from the halls of his school. With the troublemakers
        gone, the rest of the students pass a basic-skills test that keeps the school accredited.
        The bad kids apparently all transfer to the troubled schools in other movies.  
  
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        | Urban Schools | 
       
      
        | Urban schools are almost invariably depicted as war zones. In Class of
        1984 (1982), a B movie that might be more deserving of a D, a mild-mannered music
        teacher becomes a vigilante against gang members. Fast-forward to the Class of 1999 (1990),
        in which security guards wear Darth Vader-like masks and the "department of
        educational defense" uses teacher-robots to take on the gangs.  A similar theme
        pervades 187 (1997), in which teacher Trevor Garfield (Samuel L. Jackson) is driven to
        kill gang members and ends up dead himself. The screenplay was written by a former teacher
        who thought too many Hollywood school movies ended on unrealistically upbeat notes.  
        But there are optimistic urban school movies, from Up the Down Staircase (1967),
        in which 1960s urban hoodlums learn to appreciate Dickens, and Cooley High (1975), which
        has a promising message for an all-black high school in Chicago.  
        In Dangerous Minds (1995), the classroom vulgarities would have shocked even the
        hoods from Blackboard Jungle. But ex-Marine LouAnne Johnson (Michelle Pfeiffer)
        uses martial arts demonstrations and candy bars to turn her students on to poetry.  
  
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        | Student Life | 
       
      
        | In the 1920s and 1930s, America's image of schoolchildren was shaped in
        part by Hal Roach's Our Gang movie shorts. The gang, also called the Little
        Rascals, engage in their memorable mischief in titles such as Bored of Education
        (1936). In the Andy Hardy series (1937-46), teenage life is "swell"; MGM won a
        special Oscar for representing the "American way of life."  How things had
        changed by the 1980s and '90s. In Risky Business (1983), Joel Goodson (Tom Cruise)
        helps run a prostitution ring for a "future business leaders" club project. A
        stoned Jeff Spicoli (Sean Penn) has pizza delivered to class in Fast Times at Ridgemont
        High (1982).  
        Director John Hughes helped define the 1980s with such movies as Sixteen Candles
        (1984), The Breakfast Club (1985), and Pretty in Pink (1986), which all
        feature smart, sassy teenagers in affluent suburban settings.  
        One of the most realistic depictions of student life is in 1994's Hoop Dreams, a
        project that started out as a short documentary about playground basketball and turned
        into a three-hour-plus window on urban public schools, suburban Catholic schools, and
        dashed expectations.  
  
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        | Television | 
       
      
        | In the half-century history of TV broadcasting, classrooms have been the
        setting for many shows, but only a few memorable ones. (Many didn't last more than one
        season.)  Among the first were Mr. Peepers (NBC, 1952-55), with Wally Cox as a
        shy science teacher, and Our Miss Brooks (CBS, 1952-56), with Eve Arden as a
        wisecracking English teacher who was always trying to snag science teacher Mr. Boynton as
        a husband. Arden was so popular she received offers to teach in real schools.  
        In Mr. Novak (NBC, 1963-65), James Franciscus played a likable, fresh-faced English
        teacher at a Los Angeles high school, with Dean Jagger as the dignified principal.  
                In Room 222 (ABC, 1969-74), teacher Pete Dixon (Lloyd Haynes) at Walt Whitman
        High School dispensed lessons about history, tolerance, and sensitivity. Welcome Back,
        Kotter (ABC, 1975-79) is recalled disapprovingly for its racially and ethnically
        stereotyped student "sweathogs," but the show also had a sweet disposition and a
        great theme song.  
The Simpsons (Fox, 1989- ) isn't just about school, of course, but the episodes
        at Springfield Elementary are the most biting satire of public education anywhere. The
        sign outside the school on parent-teacher night says: "Let's share the blame."  
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RETRO: The Magazine of Classic 20th Century Popular Culture. A further look at pop culture in the past.  
History of Fashion, from the Online NewsHour. A humorous, illustrated look at how fashions have changed through time. 
Fifties Web:  Salute to Dick Clark's American Bandstand.  The TV show that kids danced to from the '50s to the '80s. 
  
PHOTOS: Robin Williams in Dead Poets Society.
 
Joe Clark, right, is portrayed by Morgan Freeman in Lean on Me.
 
Spencer Tracy in Boys Town.
 
Michelle Pfeiffer in Dangerous Minds.
 
The Little Rascals.
 
Hoop Dreams.
 
Eve Arden in Our Miss Brooks.
 --The Kobal Collection 
Bart of The Simpsons.  
--20th Century Fox Film Corp.
  
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