In the middle 1980's after appearing in over 40 films,
and a host of television shows and commercials, Frances was
presented with a part in a new series entitled, Frank's Place, a role that
columnist Charles Champlin described as
"a plum
assignment to crown a career that has lasted more than seven
decades." (L.A. Times, Oct. 18, 1988) The series would
evolve around a man who inherits his father's restaurant and
bar. The assortment of characters ranged from a beautiful
mortuary owner, a wise bartender, a self-effacing white lawyer,
to an outspoken young waitress and a cleaver-wielding cook. The
oldest living waitress is Miss Marie who dispenses wisdom and
advice garnered from her years of living.
When Frances received the script from her agent, she read it
and loved the part of Miss Marie. This was far different than the
script she'd received for her first Hollywood film role
forty years earlier. When she received the script for The
Magnificent Doll ...after searching the entire script several
times, she was so hurt because the role of Amy, the maid, was so
sparse and one-dimensional. Times certainly had changed. The character of Miss
Marie had something she could work with-something more than the
stereotyped characters that Hollywood films were filled with. In fact, all
the characters in Frank's
Place were well-rounded and likeable, even some of the villainous
ones.
|
|
At the initial audition...Frances
read for Hugh Wilson. When she finished, she said to him, "This must
have been written by a black person," because "it captures our
essence so well." He smiled. It was one of the greatest compliments
he'd ever received, he said, and "I want you for the role of Miss
Marie."
The first episode she liked very much, but the second, she didn't. In
fact, she decided that the script was going to be changed or she would no
longer be part of the cast. That was the first big challenge. The script
called for a scene in which Frank befriends a common alley cat named
"Jesse Jackson." Frances was angry. To belittle an important
African American leader was an affront. First she called Wilson. When she
explained her annoyance, he said, "I don't see anything wrong with
it." "Well I do. Jesse Jackson is our hero and if you don't mind
doing that to someone we respect, why don't you just call the cat Jimmy
Carter?" Next she called Tim Reid who was in Chicago at the
time. He said, "Hold everything until I get back." The cat was
renamed and Frances remained with the series. "Yet, in spite of that,
we became a family...(we) all learned to work together, showing that (we)
cared for each other as persons rather than just doing our job."
|
|
Frank's Place captured the folk experience of African
Americans in New Orleans better than anything on television ever
had. With plausible plots based on Black life, veteran actors, an
integrated cast and production staff, it was quite revolutionary.
Above all, it had quality. Some people in New York saw Frank's Place when it opened and called to say that in all
their lives they thought they'd never seen a play that
portrayed blacks with such dignity and quality as that series.
Roscoe Lee Brown told Frances his phone was constantly ringing
with people talking about the series and saying how lucky they
were to get it on.
Fan mail from across the country came pouring
in praising the show, with many letters addressed to Miss Marie,
including a marriage proposal, letters from whites as well as
blacks. In one letter, the writer says, "You are a vital and
effective force in the show..." another says," 'Frank's Place' is something you can always be proud
of."
When the show was cancelled, everyone was disappointed. Letters flooded the network executives in protest. One
letter, indicative of many, noted the fact that the show was
moved around so much, it couldn't find an audience.... Some
of its devoted followers gave up trying to reschedule their
viewing habits to fit CBS's capriciousness. One fan
characterized CBS executives as " not dealing in good faith
or that you hoped to deliberately confuse and discourage
people." Frances was very disappointed but, in her typical
fashion, she picked herself up, dusted off her Birkenstocks and
moved on.
|