| Michael Ambrosino | ... | Himself | |
| Tom Atkins | ... | Himself | |
| Charles Bobbit | ... | Himself | |
| James Brown | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Bobby Byrd | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| James Byrd | ... | Himself (as James 'Early' Byrd) | |
| Mike Douglas | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Pee Wee Ellis | ... | Himself | |
| Dick Flavin | ... | Himself (as Richard Flavin) | |
| David Gates | ... | Himself | |
| Robert Hall | ... | Himself (as Dr. Robert Hall) | |
| Dennis Haysbert | ... | Narrator (voice) | |
| Hubert H. Humphrey | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Ellen Jackson | ... | Herself | |
| Lyndon B. Johnson | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Robert F. Kennedy | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Coretta Scott King | ... | Herself (archive footage) | |
| Martin Luther King | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Russell Morash | ... | Himself | |
| Richard Nixon | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Harry Reasoner | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Al Sharpton | ... | Himself | |
| John Starks | ... | Himself (as John 'Jab'o' Starks) | |
| Clyde Stubblefield | ... | Himself (archive footage) | |
| Tom Vickers | ... | Himself | |
| Rickey Vincent | ... | Himself | |
| Fred Wesley | ... | Himself | |
| Cornel West | ... | Himself (as Dr. Cornel West) | |
| Kevin White | ... | Himself | |
| Marva Whitney | ... | Herself | |
| Andrew Young | ... | Himself (as Dr. Andrew Young) |
Directed by | |||
| David Leaf | |||
Writing credits(in alphabetical order) | ||
| Morgan Neville | writer | |
Produced by | |||
| Brad Abramson | .... | executive producer | |
| Toby Byron | .... | executive producer | |
| Eric Kulberg | .... | producer | |
| David Leaf | .... | producer | |
| Morgan Neville | .... | producer | |
| Jeff Olde | .... | executive producer | |
| Shelly Tatro | .... | executive producer | |
| Arlene Wszalek | .... | producer | |
Cinematography by | |||
| Nicola Marsh | |||
Film Editing by | |||
| Peter S. Lynch II | |||
Sound Department | |||
| Dennis Hamlin | .... | sound mixer | |
| Marcus Pardo | .... | sound re-recording mixer | |
Visual Effects by | |||
| Ben Wszalek | .... | digital artist | |
Other crew | |||
| Parker Higgins | .... | researcher | |
| Samuel Mudge | .... | researcher | |
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| When I Fall in Love: The One & Only Nat King Cole | Bee Gees: This Is Where I Came In | Number One with a Bullet | Rock Prophecies | One Fast Move or I'm Gone: Kerouac's Big Sur |
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| News articles | IMDb Documentary section | IMDb USA section |
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The Night that James Brown Saved Boston had its world premiere at the SXSW Film Festival in Austin, TX. It is scheduled to appear on VH1 on April 5, the 40th anniversary of the event that it marks. There is probably been no more difficult year in modern American history than 1968. There may have been no worse moment than the murder of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. in Memphis on April 4, 1968. As cities around the country were burning, James Brown managed to prevent the chaos from tearing apart the racial divided city of Boston.
The film documents that remarkable concert and the politics around it. Boston Mayor Kevin White and his colleagues almost by accident realized that by televising the James Brown concert they could keep people indoors that night prevent widespread rioting. The film is almost testimony to the power of music in general and the power of James Brown's music in particular. The film is a tribute to the Godfather of Soul and the role he would come to play in working for civil rights.
This is a film that should be seen by students everywhere in an effort to understand one of the more dramatic moments in history of a great American city. James Brown may be gone, but his music and his contributions will live on forever.