Church groups reject series
| Paxton over-extended patriarch in 'Big Love' |
By Debbie Hummel
Associated Press
The upcoming premiere of HBO's "Big Love" is causing a big buzz in the Beehive State.
Everyone from practicing polygamists to the Mormon church — which shunned the practice more than a century ago — is anxiously anticipating the fallout from the show about a Utah polygamist and his three sometimes desperate housewives.
Some worry that the series will perpetuate stereotypes from which the state and the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints have long sought to distance themselves. Others fear it will diminish the crimes, such as child abuse, reported in some of the state's secretive polygamous sects. And polygamists say they're sure the series won't accurately portray the "boring" reality of their lives.
The program debuts at 8 p.m. Sunday, after the season premiere of "The Sopranos," which spawned bus tours of the show's locations in New Jersey and backlash from some Italian-American groups.
Public perceptions are a concern of the LDS church, which claims 12 million members worldwide.
In 1843, church founder Joseph Smith said he had a revelation from God allowing what was called plural marriage. In 1890, a subsequent church president, Wilford Woodruff, made public a revelation declaring that church members should cease poly-gamy. The federal government had required the Utah territory end its endorsement of polygamy as a condition of statehood, which came in 1896.
Polygamy isn't an issue for modern-day Mormons, said church spokesman Michael Otterson, adding that members understand why polygamy is no longer practiced.
What concerns the church is anything that might make light of the abuse of women and children alleged to occur in some polygamist communities.
"To make polygamy, given those circumstances, the subject of television entertainment is not only a bad idea, but it's going to add to the pain of those victims," Otterson said.
He's also worried that the church could lose some of the ground it has gained in educating the public about the differences between the mainstream church and splinter fundamentalist groups that practice polygamy.
The statement says: "According to a joint report issued by the Utah and Arizona attorney general's offices, July 2005, approximately 20,000 to 40,000 or more people currently practice polygamy in the United States. The Mormon church officially banned the practice of polygamy in 1890."
HBO has said it feels the epilogue will help clear up any confusion and the show's creators say their program will reinforce the difference.
"We want to make it abundantly clear that our characters are not Mormon, that they wouldn't find any home in the Mormon church. And that works for the dramatic pull of the show," said co-creator Mark V. Olsen.
"I don't want it to represent our culture in a bad way," said Anne Wilde, community relations director for pro-polygamy group Principal Voices. "I would like people to realize it's very similar to a monogamous family," Wilde said.