The Day Lincoln Was Shot

The Day Lincoln Was Shot is a 1998 American television film based on the book by Jim Bishop. It is a re-creation of the assassination of Abraham Lincoln, co-written and directed by John Gray, and stars Lance Henriksen as Abraham Lincoln and Rob Morrow as John Wilkes Booth.[1]

The Day Lincoln Was Shot
DVD Cover
GenreBiography
Drama
History
Written byJohn Gray
Tim Metcalfe
Directed byJohn Gray
StarringLance Henriksen
Rob Morrow
Music byMark Snow
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
Production
Executive producersRobert Greenwald
Philip K. Kleinbart (supervising producer, as Philip Kleinbart)
Elizabeth Selzer (associate producer)
ProducerThomas John Kane
Production locationsVirginia Rep Center - 114 W. Broad Street, Richmond, Virginia
New York City
Petersburg, Virginia
Washington, D.C.
CinematographyRonald Victor Garcia
EditorScott Vickrey
Running time96 minutes
Production companyTNT
DistributorTNT
Release
Original networkTNT
Picture formatColor
Audio formatStereo
Original releaseApril 12, 1998 (1998-04-12)

The book had previously been adapted in 1956 as a live television play starring Raymond Massey as Lincoln, Lillian Gish as Mary, and Jack Lemmon as John Wilkes Booth. It was telecast on the CBS anthology series Ford Star Jubilee.

Plot

The movie shows the events leading up to and after the assassination of Abraham Lincoln as well as a look into the personal lives of both men. Lincoln is relieved that Richmond has fallen and the Civil War is over. He has contentious discussions with his Cabinet about the treatment of the defeated South. Many members want the Confederates punished, but Lincoln argues for mercy. The President is despised by many Southerners and receives numerous death threats. Lincoln has a rather fatalistic attitude about them but as a disturbing dream about hearing cries in the White House and seeing a coffin in the East Room surrounded by mourners crying out that an assassin has murdered the President. Booth is the most popular actor in the country (it is pointed out that only Lincoln has his picture taken more often).

Coming from an acting family, he feels overshadowed by his father and brother and longs to make his mark on history. A fanatical Confederate sympathizer, Booth sees Lincoln as a tyrant and slavery as a proper way of life and assembles a motley group of Confederates, including former Soldier Lewis Powell and simple-minded David Herold. They form a plot to kidnap the President, but the war ends. Booth is outraged when he hears Lincoln making a speech promising African-Americans citizenship and the vote. His changes his plot from kidnapping to murder.

Booth decides to assassinate Lincoln at Ford's Theatre, orders Powell to kill Secretary of State William Seward, and orders another henchman, George Adzerodt, to kill Vice President Andrew Johnson. Later that night at the play at Ford's Theater, Booth kills Lincoln and escapes after stabbing Major Henry Rathbone, a substitute guest, and landed awkwardly on the stage. Almost the same time that happens, Powell attacks Seward who survives and the Vice President is unharmed because Adzerodt couldn't have the courage to shoot him. Lincoln is attended by the doctors before being carried to the Petersen House, where he died the following morning at 7:22 A.M. surrounded by his friends and family for the remaining 8 hours. After an intense manhunt for 2 weeks, Boston Corbett shoots Booth inside a burning barn surrounded by federal troops. He dies on the front porch saying that he died for his country.

The credits reveal that Booth's henchmen and Mary Surratt were put on trial and hanged. Ironically, Lincoln's successor Johnson was much harsher on the defeated South than Lincoln would have been.

Cast

Home releases

The film was first released on VHS in 2000 from Warner Home Video. The film is now available on DVD via the burn-on-demand Warner Archive service.[2]

References

  1. Archived August 23, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  2. oriolesbball61. "Day Lincoln Was Shot, The | WBshop.com | Warner Bros". Shop.warnerarchive.com. Retrieved 2015-03-12.
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