Judge William Alsup Oral History

Pantalla completa

Volver

Judge William Alsup Oral History

Videotaped oral history interview with Judge William Alsup. A U.S. district judge in San Francisco since 1999, Alsup was a freshman at Mississippi State University at the time of the assassination. While in college, he became active in campus civil rights activities. Alsup is the author of several books, including "Won Over: Reflections of a Federal Judge on His Journey from Jim Crow Mississippi" (2019) and a novel, "The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald" (2022). Interview conducted at The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza on Marzo 21, 2023 by Stephen Fagin. The interview is one hour and eight minutes long.

Detalles del objeto
Título del objeto:

Judge William Alsup Oral History

Date:

03/21/2023

Medio:

Nacido digital (archivo .m2ts)

Dimensiones:

Duración: 68 minutos

Línea de crédito:

Colección de Historia Oral/Museo de la Sexta Planta en Dealey Plaza

Número de objeto:

2023.001.0021

Nota curatorial:

In addition to this video oral history, Judge Alsup previously recorded a telephone interview with the Museum in two parts in Octubre-Noviembre 2022. He also participated in a public program, "The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald," presented by the Museum in partnership with the University of North Texas College of Law. Moderated by Felicia Epps, Dean of the UNT College of Law, that program may be viewed on the Museum's YouTube channel: The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald: A Conversation with Judge William Alsup (youtube.com). -- Stephen Fagin, Curator

The concept of a fictional trial for accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald has been explored almost since the moment Jack Ruby stepped into history in the basement of Dallas police headquarters on Noviembre 24, 1963. The first feature film about the Kennedy assassination, produced in Dallas and released in 1964, was entitled The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald. Directed by Larry Buchanan, the low-budget film was not a financial success and generated some controversy. A play, The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, written by Amram Ducovny, premiered on Broadway in Noviembre 1967 and closed after nine performances. An ABC television miniseries, The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, followed in 1977 starring John Pleshette as Oswald and Lorne Greene as his defense attorney. London Weekend Television took a unique approach in 1986 with the documentary, On Trial: Lee Harvey Oswald, with included actual eyewitnesses, a Texas judge and jury, and prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi versus defense attorney Gerry Spence. The 20+ hour trial was edited into a five-hour miniseries that aired on the Showtime cable network in the United States. A number of books have also explored the concept, including The People V. Lee Harvey Oswald (Walt Brown, 1994) and Lee Harvey Oswald On Trial (Keith and Rebekka Pruitt, 2015). A variety of mock trials for Lee Harvey Oswald have also taken place in classrooms, courtrooms and other venues around the world, including a 2011 mock trial here at The Sixth Floor Museum - recorded as part of the Oral History Project - during a Library of Congress "Teaching With Primary Sources" Institute. Local schoolteachers functioned as prosecutors, defense attorneys, witnesses and members of the jury with a former history teacher from the Richardson, Texas ISD serving as the presiding judge. This particular mock trial resulted in a hung jury. - Stephen Fagin, Curator

File name:

-

File size:

-

Title:

-

Author:

-

Subject:

-

Keywords:

-

Creation Date:

-

Modification Date:

-

Creator:

-

PDF Producer:

-

PDF Version:

-

Page Count:

-

Page Size:

-

Fast Web View:

-

Choose an option Alt text (alternative text) helps when people can’t see the image or when it doesn’t load.
Aim for 1-2 sentences that describe the subject, setting, or actions.
This is used for ornamental images, like borders or watermarks.
Preparing document for printing…
0%

Judge William Alsup Oral History

Videotaped oral history interview with Judge William Alsup. A U.S. district judge in San Francisco since 1999, Alsup was a freshman at Mississippi State University at the time of the assassination. While in college, he became active in campus civil rights activities. Alsup is the author of several books, including "Won Over: Reflections of a Federal Judge on His Journey from Jim Crow Mississippi" (2019) and a novel, "The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald" (2022). Interview conducted at The Sixth Floor Museum at Dealey Plaza on Marzo 21, 2023 by Stephen Fagin. The interview is one hour and eight minutes long.

Detalles del objeto
Título del objeto:

Judge William Alsup Oral History

Date:

03/21/2023

Condiciones:

Derechos civiles

Relatos orales

Cultura pop

Abogado

Segregación

Racismo

"On Trial: Lee Harvey Oswald"

Novelas

Lone gunman theory

Ensayos

Clinton, Bill

Oswald, Lee Harvey

Dallas

California

Derechos civiles y activismo social (OHC)

Historia y Cultura de Dallas y los años 60 (OHC)

Autores, cineastas e investigadores (OHC)

Cultura popular (OHC)

Lee Harvey Oswald (OHC)

Medio:

Nacido digital (archivo .m2ts)

Dimensiones:

Duración: 68 minutos

Línea de crédito:

Colección de Historia Oral/Museo de la Sexta Planta en Dealey Plaza

Número de objeto:

2023.001.0021

Nota curatorial:

In addition to this video oral history, Judge Alsup previously recorded a telephone interview with the Museum in two parts in Octubre-Noviembre 2022. He also participated in a public program, "The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald," presented by the Museum in partnership with the University of North Texas College of Law. Moderated by Felicia Epps, Dean of the UNT College of Law, that program may be viewed on the Museum's YouTube channel: The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald: A Conversation with Judge William Alsup (youtube.com). -- Stephen Fagin, Curator

The concept of a fictional trial for accused assassin Lee Harvey Oswald has been explored almost since the moment Jack Ruby stepped into history in the basement of Dallas police headquarters on Noviembre 24, 1963. The first feature film about the Kennedy assassination, produced in Dallas and released in 1964, was entitled The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald. Directed by Larry Buchanan, the low-budget film was not a financial success and generated some controversy. A play, The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, written by Amram Ducovny, premiered on Broadway in Noviembre 1967 and closed after nine performances. An ABC television miniseries, The Trial of Lee Harvey Oswald, followed in 1977 starring John Pleshette as Oswald and Lorne Greene as his defense attorney. London Weekend Television took a unique approach in 1986 with the documentary, On Trial: Lee Harvey Oswald, with included actual eyewitnesses, a Texas judge and jury, and prosecutor Vincent Bugliosi versus defense attorney Gerry Spence. The 20+ hour trial was edited into a five-hour miniseries that aired on the Showtime cable network in the United States. A number of books have also explored the concept, including The People V. Lee Harvey Oswald (Walt Brown, 1994) and Lee Harvey Oswald On Trial (Keith and Rebekka Pruitt, 2015). A variety of mock trials for Lee Harvey Oswald have also taken place in classrooms, courtrooms and other venues around the world, including a 2011 mock trial here at The Sixth Floor Museum - recorded as part of the Oral History Project - during a Library of Congress "Teaching With Primary Sources" Institute. Local schoolteachers functioned as prosecutors, defense attorneys, witnesses and members of the jury with a former history teacher from the Richardson, Texas ISD serving as the presiding judge. This particular mock trial resulted in a hung jury. - Stephen Fagin, Curator