TELEVISION: New TV series about death of Emmett Till

Cedric Joe stars as Emmett Till (left) and Adrienne Warren plays Till’s mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, in “Women of the Movement.” (Matt Sayles/ABC via AP)
Cedric Joe stars as Emmett Till (left) and Adrienne Warren plays Till’s mother, Mamie Till-Mobley, in “Women of the Movement.” (Matt Sayles/ABC via AP)

NEW YORK — ABC will air a short-run series "Women of the Movement" next season about Mamie Till-Mobley, whose son Emmett Till became a symbol of the civil rights movement after he was lynched in Mississippi in 1955.

The network, which announced its plans for the next television season Thursday, is also reviving "The Wonder Years," this time with a Black cast that will feature Don Cheadle as the adult narrator.

ABC said its popular comedy "black-ish" will conclude its run next year after eight seasons. It will return in midseason so the final episodes can run straight through.

Till-Mobley made sure Americans didn't forget about her son, a Chicago resident killed while visiting relatives in the South, and memorably insisted upon an open casket to display his broken body. Actor Will Smith and rapper Jay-Z are on the production team working on the midseason series.

Fred Savage, who starred in "The Wonder Years" when it ran originally on ABC from 1988 to 1993, directed the pilot episode of the new version and is a producer of the series.

It is one of two new series debuting on ABC in the fall. "Queens" features musicians Eve and Brandy in a series about four women from a 1990s-era hip-hop group who reunite in their 40s to try to recapture some of their glory years,

The network's other new series are "Abbott Elementary," a workplace comedy set in a Philadelphia public school, and "Maggie," about a female psychic.

Comic Jimmy Kimmel made his annual appearance for the network's presentation of its new schedule to advertisers, for the second straight year done virtually. His jokes about broadcast television rapidly losing relevance in a world dominated by streaming services had particular bite.

"We should call ABC for what it really is — Disney minus," Kimmel said.

He said the theme for next year's advertising presentation should be "dying together."

"Isn't there something to be said for dying with dignity?" he said.

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