Quick Search

Active Bloggers

Will Moss Will Moss
Hampton University class of 1995
Hija Chang Hija Chang
Bellarmine University class of 2021
A SHORT A SHORT
Other College... class of 2003
HBCU CONNECT HBCU CONNECT
Central State University class of 1995
Michael Fortson Michael Fortson
- College Not Listed - class of 2018
Randi Payton Randi Payton
University of the District of Columbia class of 1982
Joel Savage Joel Savage
class of 1993
Deanna  Johnson Deanna Johnson
Virginia State University class of 2028
Reginald Culpepper Reginald Culpepper
Clark Atlanta University class of 1998

Memories of ‘A Different World’ and ‘School Daze’ remain strong for HBCUs and administrators

Memories of ‘A Different World’ and ‘School Daze’ remain strong for HBCUs and administrators
Posted By: S. Moore on September 28, 2023


Morehouse College football coach Gerard Wilcher vividly remembers his college recruitment visits in Atlanta in the spring of 1987.

When Wilcher arrived at Clark Atlanta University he saw a camera crew filming and eagerly offered to be an extra. At Morehouse, students took the recruit to a local KFC that Wilcher would see nearly a year later in director Spike Lee’s movie School Daze.

Though he didn’t make the final cut of the film, seeing students at a historically Black college featured in a movie is something the Chicago native couldn’t envision before his trip to Georgia.

"It was insane [and] unreal. When you’re 17, 18, 19, you don’t understand the magnitude of stuff like that. There was this little movie we didn’t even know what it was going to be called, but it became, like, a cult classic,” Wilcher told Andscape. “So you just don’t understand the magnitude of some stuff.

“When I was in high school. I really didn’t know about HBCUs. I didn’t know about HBCUs until Morehouse showed up. I didn’t understand the relevance, and nobody explained the differences [between] the schools to me.”

School Daze and the television sitcom A Different World, which showcased life at fictional Hillman College, were two of the few mainstream representations of Black college life in the late 1980s and 1990s. Now, more than three decades after each premiered – School Daze is currently celebrating its 35th anniversary year and A Different World marked its 36th anniversary on Sept. 24 – the legacy of the film and TV show still resonates with the cast members, and HBCU administrators.

Actors Darryl Bell, Jasmine Guy and Kadeem Hardison, who participated in both projects, still travel to historically Black colleges and universities across the country to discuss the cultural significance of the film and TV show. The trio traveled to the Toyota HBCU NY Classic on Sept. 14 to talk about A Different World and School Daze, and they also will appear on a panel Thursday at Elizabeth City State University as part of the college’s slate of events for its homecoming, which is themed Vikings Unleashed: A Different World. Jackson State University’s 2022 homecoming theme, “It’s a Different World, was a tribute to the sitcom as well.

Despite filming School Daze before shooting A Different World, the television series was aired first. At the time, none of the actors knew the influence both projects would have on generations of Black students.

“Spike told us when we did School Daze that this was a historic moment. I remember Jesse Jackson dedicated the film before I started filming. I said, in my mind, how do you know something is historical until time has passed,” said Guy, who portrayed Whitley Gilbert on A Different World and Dina in School Daze.

Bell, who portrayed Ron Johnson on A Different World, remembers the moment he realized the potential significance of the show.

“The night after it premiered the production assistant got the ratings and ran across the stage,” he said. “We were the No. 2 show on television.



I knew then it was going to be special.”

The sitcom’s lasting impact is why cast members are happy to visit so many HBCUs, he said.

“That’s the greatest part of our legacy with A Different World, that not a day goes by that one of us doesn’t have someone come up and say to us, I’m an engineer [or] a doctor because I watched A Different World. I’m an HBCU president because I watched A Different World,” Bell said. “Someone will always say to us how they impacted our lives. It’s why this show remains so relevant, because it keeps creating generations of fans and encouraging young, particularly folks of color, to go to school and get an education.”

A Different World ran for six seasons on NBC. Hardison, who portrayed Dwayne Wayne on A Different World and Da Fella Edge in School Daze, learned about the importance of higher education and HBCUs through both roles.

“I didn’t know about HBCUs until I met Spike, and I still didn’t really understand what it was,” Hardison said. “Then once we started doing A Different World and [producer and director] Debbie [Allen] came on, then I started to feel, like, OK. The first season, it didn’t feel like an HBCU that I knew from doing School Daze with Spike. When Debbie came, all of a sudden it started to feel more like my first experience.”

Conversation topics in A Different World and School Daze ranged from colorism and classism to student activism and sexual assault, themes Bell said remain important in today’s society.

“There’s an episode that deals with almost any subject that’s relevant today, whether it’s health, mental health, gun violence, student protests, financial troubles, racism, apartheid,” Bell said. “There are no issues that we dealt with on A Different World that you can’t find an analogy for today, and that’s why so many of the people who watch A Different World in real time now watch with their kids. Their kids have found A Different World and found it just as important to them.”

Current HBCU administrators say they hope to impart lessons learned from the sitcom and film to the college communities they serve.

Winston-Salem State University athletic director Etienne Thomas remembers the impression School Daze and A Different World left on her as a teenager in New York.

“I don’t think you run into any Black person that was around in the ’80s and ’90s that doesn’t have a story from School Daze or A Different World,” Thomas said. “We looked at School Daze [and] we were all waiting for Spike Lee to have another one. We wanted to know what message he was going to tell this time.”

When starting her college search, Thomas expanded her choices to include HBCUs. An HBCU college tour during her junior year of high school gave her the chance to explore many options. She wanted to attend a school that evoked the same level of connection she witnessed among the characters on A Different World.

“I was on a search for Hillman. … I couldn’t find Hillman, but I knew I wanted that experience,” Thomas said. “When I got there [to North Carolina Central] … I called my parents and I was like, ‘Oh, I found it.’ I found North Carolina Central … only because of watching School Daze, The Cosby Show and A Different World.”

SOURCE Andscape
If you enjoyed this article, Join HBCU CONNECT today for similar content and opportunities via email!
Comments
Please Login To Post Comments...
Email:
Password:

 
More From This Author
Owner of Slutty Vegan to speak at Savannah State commencement
Walgreens - Celebrates Black Excellence in Pharmacy!
CF Industries Partners with HBCU CONNECT on Successful Diversity Recruitment Event Focused on Diverse Engineers!
Join Our Growing Team & Build a Brighter Future At Wells Fargo! - APPLY TODAY
Make a Difference in Healthcare! Explore Careers at GSK
Explore Exciting Careers at Pharmavite! We're Hiring in Production, Manufacturing, and Supply Chain. APPLY NOW!
Latest News
Honoring Memorial Day: The HBCU Legacy of Service, Sacrifice, and Opportunity

Honoring Memorial Day: The HBCU Legacy of Service, Sacrifice, and Opportunity

This Memorial Day, HBCU Connect honors the fallen and celebrates the proud HBCU legacy of military service — from the Tuskegee Airmen to today's veterans serving in the Veterans Health Administratio ...more
Will Moss • 200 Views • May 25th, 2026
N.C. A&T Student Named National Science Foundation Research Fellow

N.C. A&T Student Named National Science Foundation Research Fellow

Sydney Bryson, a senior at North Carolina A&T, has been named an NSF Graduate Research Fellow - the first CAES student to receive this prestigious award since 2007. Her research focuses on soil-plant ...more
Will Moss • 169 Views • May 21st, 2026
Rosen Foundation expanding scholarship program, partnering with Bethune-Cookman University

Rosen Foundation expanding scholarship program, partnering with Bethune-Cookman University

Carrying on the legacy of Harris Rosen and his commitment to education, today the Harris Rosen Foundation announced it is expanding its already-successful scholarship program and partnering with Bethu ...more
Reginald Culpepper • 299 Views • May 19th, 2026
Sinners vs. Michael: Which Film Actually Won the Ultimate Culture Debate?

Sinners vs. Michael: Which Film Actually Won the Ultimate Culture Debate?

While Antoine Fuqua’s Michael is dominating the box office with its electrifying, stadium-level concert recreations and a star-making, uncanny physical performance by Jaafar Jackson, critics and film ...more
TaQuan Ford • 233 Views • May 16th, 2026
Popular News
Louisiana Upholds Life Sentence to Black Man For Stealing Hedge Trimmers in 1997

Louisiana Upholds Life Sentence to Black Man For Stealing Hedge Trimmers in 1997

While this may not be HBCU related news, as an AFrican American male, I had to share this appalling decision by the Louisiana court system to keep a man in jail with a life sentence for such a petty c ...more
Will Moss • 403,746 Views • August 6th, 2020
Blonde Instagram Model Goes Viral for Graduating from HBCU and Pledging Delta Sigma Theta!

Blonde Instagram Model Goes Viral for Graduating from HBCU and Pledging Delta Sigma Theta!

A blonde woman is going viral this morning, for graduating from A Historically Black College while pledging a Black sorority, Delta Sigma Theta Sorority Incorporated. @Blonde_HBCU The woman, an IG ...more
Will Moss • 187,745 Views • November 30th, 2020
Apple to Invest over $40 Million Dollars into HBCUs - Time to major in Computer Science!!!

Apple to Invest over $40 Million Dollars into HBCUs - Time to major in Computer Science!!!

On Tuesday Johnny C. Taylor, President and CEO of the Thurgood Marshall College Fund stopped by “NewsOne Now” to make a major announcement that could literally change the lives of thousands of HBCU st ...more
Will Moss • 129,282 Views • March 11th, 2015
North Carolina HBCU Unity Day

North Carolina HBCU Unity Day

Shaw University - Elizabeth City State University - Johnson C. Smith University - Fayetteville State University - Livingstone College - North Carolina A&T State University - North Carolina Central Uni ...more
Reginald Culpepper • 109,467 Views • August 8th, 2016
Black Billionaire Robert F. Smith to  Donate $50 Million to Support STEM Students at HBCUs

Black Billionaire Robert F. Smith to Donate $50 Million to Support STEM Students at HBCUs

The Student Freedom Initiative announced today a $50 million personal gift from Robert F. Smith, philanthropist and Founder, Chairman and CEO of Vista Equity Partners. This gift matches the initial fu ...more
Will Moss • 84,703 Views • October 22nd, 2020
Please Give Us a Like on Facebook!
Featured Members