In this 1960s image released by HBO, Richard Loving and his wife Mildred are shown. The Lovings are the subject of an HBO documentary "The Loving Story," premiering Tuesday, Feb. 14, 2012 at 9pm EST.
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Richard Loving looks out from the Jim Crow past with wary eyes, appearing on the screen with a blond crew cut, plaid work shirt, bad teeth and Southern accent.
"He looked like a redneck," said Philip Hirschkop, a lawyer who soon recognized his mistake — Loving was actually a pioneer for racial equality.
The white bricklayer from Virginia defied stereotypes and centuries of racist laws when he married Mildred Jeter, who was black and Native American. Convicted of violating a law against interracial marriage, the Lovings fought for their rights in a landmark 1967 Supreme Court case that struck down such bans nationwide.
Their lives are explored in a new documentary, "The Loving Story," which premieres Tuesday on HBO.
Today, there are more than 4 million "mixed marriages" in the United States, and roughly one in seven new marriages are between people of different ethnicities. But in 1958, when the Lovings' marriage was ruled illegal and they were banished from their native Virginia, 21 states outlawed interracial unions.
"The Loving Story" details the couple's nine-year battle to live in Virginia as man and wife. Using evocative photographs, newly unearthed footage and interviews with the Lovings' daughter and lawyers, the film reveals the power of love to overcome bigotry.
"I came to respect Mildred and Richard so much," said the film's director and producer, Peggy Buirski. "I think these people had such high standards and strong principles and in many ways they defied stereotypes."
"You don't have to be an activist to change history," Buirski said. "You just have to believe strongly in something."
Richard and Mildred grew up near each other in rural Virginia. They courted for a few years before getting married in Washington, D.C., on June 2, 1958, then returned home to live near their families.
On July 14, the sheriff broke into the Lovings' bedroom in the middle of the night and took them to jail. Judge Leon Bazile sentenced the Lovings to five years in prison, but suspended the sentence as long as they left the state. And Bazile made a statement that demonstrates the immense distance society has traveled since 1958, a statement that is narrated at the start of the film:
"Almighty God created the races: white, black, yellow, Malay and red, and he placed them on separate continents, and but for the interference with His arrangement there would be no cause for such marriages," Bazile said in court. "The fact that He separated the races shows that he did not intend for the races to mate."
But "The Loving Story" makes clear that Mildred and Richard Loving were meant for each other.
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