Published: 3:00PM Wednesday March 11, 2009
Source: Reuters
Source: ReutersActors Bill Paxton, Jeanne Tripplehorn, Chloe Sevigny and Ginnifer Goodwin answer questions during the panel for HBO's series Big Love
HBO, the network behind television polygamy drama Big Love,
apologized for any offense to Mormons in a depiction of a sacred
ritual but made clear it would air the controversial episode as
planned.
The HBO network's program about a non-Mormon polygamous family has
stirred up a hornet's nest of complaints over an episode to be
broadcast on Sunday showing its version of an endowment ceremony
within a Mormon temple.
It is thought to be the first time the ritual, in which
participants move to a higher level of understanding of their
religion, will be shown on TV.
News of the episode prompted calls and e-mails for cancellation or
an HBO boycott by angry members of the Mormon Church, officially
known as the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
(LDS).
The Church itself has not officially called for a boycott.
"Big Love," which first aired in 2006, stars Bill Paxton as a
member of a fictional breakaway Mormon sect who has three wives and
eight children.
HBO said the writers had gone to great lengths "to be respectful
and accurate" in the ceremony's portrayal.
"Obviously, it was not our intention to do anything disrespectful
to the church, but to those who may be offended, we offer our
sincere apology," the network said in a statement. In a separate
statement, the creators of the series said they "took great pains
to depict the ceremony with the dignity and reverence it is
due."
'Just offensive'
The Church of Jesus Christ of the Latter-day Saints, based in Utah,
has some 13.5 million members around the world. It officially
banned polygamy in 1890, sixty years after it was founded, but the
practice continues in some breakaway sects.
The furor reflected the dilemma faced by Mormons as the growing
Church takes its place in mainstream society.
"This is a very sacred event in the lives of LDS church members. To
have it splashed all over television for entertainment purposes
(and ultimately for monetary gain) is just offensive," wrote a
poster called "nanberg" on HBO's official "Big Love" message board
on Tuesday.
The Church refrained from calling for a boycott of HBO, or sister
companies owned by corporate parent Time Warner Inc, such as
Internet service provider AOL. But the Church did recognize that
individual members might do so.
"Certainly Church members are offended when their most sacred
practices are misrepresented or presented without context or
understanding," LDS said.
"Individual Latter-day Saints have the right to take such actions
if they choose. The Church ... as an institution does not call for
boycotts. Such a step would simply generate the kind of controversy
that the media loves and in the end would increase audiences for
the series," it added.
The LDS statement said that, despite assurances three years ago
from HBO and the creators of "Big Love" that the show was not about
Mormons, Mormon themes and increasingly unsympathetic characters
were being woven into the show.
The Church was thrust into the spotlight last year for supporting a
ban on gay marriage in California and during the removal of more
than 400 children from a Texas polygamist ranch in response to an
abuse complaint.
The LDS statement urged followers to behave with dignity, saying
there was no evidence that extreme misrepresentations "have any
long-term negative effect on the Church."
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