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PBS Frontline - Death of a Princess (not Diana) (1980/2005)

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Description from PBS website http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/

In the spring of 1980, America was at a dramatic crossroads in the Middle East: President Carter's attempt to rescue U.S. hostages in Iran had just ended in failure, oil prices were rising steadily, and the U.S. economy was in shambles. At that moment, the PBS series WORLD -- the precursor to FRONTLINE® -- broadcast perhaps the most controversial film in the history of public television.

Amid a clamor of political uproar and international front-page headlines, "Death of a Princess" told the true story of a young Saudi princess and her lover who had been publicly executed for adultery. The broadcast ignited protests from both the Saudi Arabian and U.S. governments and big oil companies.

FRONTLINE marks the 25th anniversary of this defining moment for public television with an expanded re-issue of "Death of a Princess." The film is a docu-drama, based on transcripts from interviews conducted by reporter/filmmaker Antony Thomas on his journey through the Arab world in search of the truth and the meaning of the public execution of Saudi Princess Misha'al. The original film is accompanied by a new examination of the controversy surrounding the original broadcast and an analysis of the politics behind the protests against the film and of what the film reveals about the struggles of Arab women.

When "Death of a Princess" was first broadcast in Great Britain in April 1980, the Saudi government's reaction to the film touched off a diplomatic firestorm that reportedly included threats to impose sanctions on British business interests in Saudi Arabia and to break formal ties with the United Kingdom. Amid the furor, the British Ambassador to Saudi Arabia was sent home.

The Saudis also protested the U.S. broadcast in May 1980. Mobil Oil, which had extensive interests in Saudi Arabia and was also a significant PBS funder, ran ads criticizing the film in The New York Times and other newspapers. Members of Congress concerned about oil supplies and U.S.- Saudi relations spoke out against the broadcast, while others supported PBS's right to broadcast the film. Acting Secretary of State Warren Christopher sent a letter to PBS president Larry Grossman relaying the concerns.

"We plan to schedule the program," Grossman said in response to the pressures. "We have great faith in the program. It's a program of integrity, it was made responsibly, and we intend to broadcast it."

"It was a bald question, 'Would the journalistic enterprise be defended against the powerful political and economic opposition?'" recalls Peter McGhee, then the program manager for public affairs at WGBH, which produced "Death of Princess." "And in the end we prevailed. It put a chock behind the back wheel of public television."

Runtime Approx 2 Hours, AVI.