ROANOKE TIMES 
                      Copyright (c) 1996, Roanoke Times

DATE: Saturday, June 29, 1996                TAG: 9607020023
SECTION: SPECTATOR                PAGE: S-1  EDITION: METRO 
DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD
SOURCE: SUSAN KING LOS ANGELES TIMES 


`GRAND AVENUE': INDIAN CULTURE VS. MODERN LIFE HBO MOVIE IS THE 1ST DRAMA ABOUT CONTEMPORARY INDIANS

American Indian writer Greg Sarris laments that most features and TV films dealing with Indians these days focus on historical ``dead'' males. ``We have had three Ishi movies, three Geronimos and two Crazy Horses,'' says Sarris. ``The big question is, what happened to those of us who lived?''

The answer can be found in HBO's ``Grand Avenue,'' premiering Sunday night at 8. Adapted by Sarris from his novel, the movie focuses on the challenges facing three American Indian families living in Santa Rosa in northern California.

There's Mollie (Sheila Tousey), an alcoholic single mom trying to raise her three children away from the reservation. Her cousin Anna (Jenny Gago) is trying to salvage her marriage while her daughter is suffering from cancer. And high school teacher Steven (A Martinez) wants a better life for his pregnant second wife (Irene Bedard) and his son (Alexis Cruz) - but he finds his life in turmoil when Mollie, his high school sweetheart, returns to the old neighborhood.

``There are a lot of firsts here,'' says co-executive producer Sarris, who was raised in Santa Rosa and is of Coastal Miwok Indian, Pomo Indian, Filipino, Jewish and Irish heritage. ``This is the first drama about contemporary Indian people. An Indian wrote the book. An Indian wrote the teleplay and an Indian produced it. It is the first drama that features a lot of [Indian] women. And it's the first drama that has anything to do with California Indians. Everybody probably thinks Ishi was the last California Indian.''

Directed by Daniel Sackheim, ``Grand Avenue'' also is the first TV project for Robert Redford and his partner, Rachel Pfeffer, who are both executive producers. Paul Aaron, who produced ``Laurel Avenue,'' HBO's acclaimed 1994 drama about a middle-class black family, also is an executive producer of ``Grand Avenue.''

``What I wanted to do was find a piece of material which dealt with contemporary Indian life and, particularly, contemporary urban Indian life,'' Aaron says. ``I wanted to do a series of pieces which are kind of walks down various streets in America `we' would not normally find ourselves in. `We' being the vast majority.''

Most Americans, Aaron says, still envision Indians as wearing buckskin, moccasins and war paint. ``We still live in that kind of sensibility,'' Aaron acknowledges.

Sarris, a University of California, Los Angeles, English professor, explains that ``since we were defeated 200 years ago, we have either been [portrayed as] a noble savage or a barn burner. So now we are the noble savage again. That's good, I guess, but it's the same old thing.''

In ``Grand Avenue,'' Sarris says, he is ``showing people who happen to be Indians. They are people like you and me. Anybody can get into these people. They have the same desires and motivations as anybody.''

Sheila Tousey, who is a Menominee Indian from northern Wisconsin, has been longing for a project like ``Grand Avenue'' to come along. ``What I have always waited for was to see a family of Indian people sitting down at a dinner table having dinner and having fights and seeing something contemporary,'' Tousey says. ``When I got the script it was like, `My God, it's finally here.'''

Indians, Tousey says, are sort of an invisible people. ``There are a lot of Indians in this country, and people have no idea what to expect from us,'' she says. ``I think that's the reason why it's difficult to find an audience for native pieces. People know what to expect when it is a western - when they see us in buckskin. But anything past starting in the 1900s, it's not that they lose interest, it's they don't know what to expect.''

``Grand Avenue'' really hit home for Dianne Debassige. The young actress plays the rock-solid second daughter, Alice, who becomes very involved in Indian culture when she moves to Santa Rosa.

An Ojibway Indian from Canada's Lake Huron, Debassige's own mother is an alcoholic single parent like Mollie.

``It was actually therapeutic [to make the movie],'' she says. ``I let my mother read the script before I went down [to do the film] to give her an idea of what kind of story it was. She cried. She was really emotionally affected by the story, probably because so much of it rang true.''


LENGTH: Medium:   83 lines
ILLUSTRATION: PHOTO:  1. A Martinez stars as a high school teacher in ``Grand 

Avenue,'' airing Sunday at 8 p.m. on HBO. color. 2. Irene Bedard and

Alexis Cruz star with Martinez in HBO's ``Grand Avenue.''

by CNB