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Kelvin Harrison Jr. and Aaron Pierre open up about portraying the visionary leaders in the lead-up to the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
OPINION Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and exposing the lie about a feud that never existed Much has been made about differences between the civil rights icons. The truth is that they weren ...
Martin Luther King Jr.’s harsh criticism of Malcolm X — published in a 1965 Playboy interview and long believed to signal a rift between the civil rights leaders — has been exposed as a ...
Richard DuCree/National Geographic (L-R) Martin Luther King Jr., played by Kelvin Harrison Jr., and Ralph Abernathy, played by Hubert Point-Du Jour, in 'GENIUS: MLK/X'.
The cast includes Kelvin Harrison Jr. as Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Aaron Pierre as Malcolm X, Weruche Opia as Coretta Scott King and Jayme Lawson as Betty Shabazz. Advertisement Advertisement ...
Yet, Dr Martin Luther King Jr and Malcolm X still managed to become two of the most iconic figures of the 20th century.
Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X after King's press conference at the U.S. Capitol on March 26, 1964, about the Senate debate on the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
Civil rights icons Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X only met once, but their coming-of-age stories run parallel in family, community, loss and sacrifice as shown in National Geographic’s ...
Martin Luther King Jr.’s most well-known and cited criticism of Malcolm X was fabricated and embellished, according to new research published Wednesday. King was quoted in a January 1965 inte… ...
After a new biographer’s take on the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. brought to light that King’s widely quoted denigration of Malcolm X in a 1965 interview was apparently a fabrication by the ...
Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X 'Keep 'em Guessing' in Sweeping First Trailer for Latest Season of Genius Two of the Civil Rights Movement's most important figures' fight for equality collide ...