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But sustaining tourism and the mythology Griffith built around his hometown sometimes means keeping the real world at bay, just as the show did. The show aired during a tumultuous era
-- 1960 to 1968 -- but its scripts studiously avoided references to current events, serving instead as a refuge from headlines about the Vietnam War, civil rights clashes and the assassination of President Kennedy. You won't learn about Griffith's politics at the museum named for him (though he supported President Obama's health care plan), and political and advocacy groups are prohibited from taking part in Mayberry Days, where guests are asked to avoid politics in their speeches. "On that weekend, we're celebrating the anniversary of `The Andy Griffith Show' and Andy Griffith's legacy and life," said Jones. "And we're celebrating the whole atmosphere of Mayberry, the simpler time." And that's what visitors want. "It's been a dream of ours to come up here for a long time," said Clint McHan, of Ackerman, Miss., who visited the museum with his wife, Jamie, and their son, Paxton. "I just wanted to be on the street, knowing that he walked on that street." On the show, he said, "you don't have to worry about anything." Asked if that time ever really existed, the 34-year-old said he wasn't old enough to know. But another visitor, Melanie Pledger of Winston-Salem, says it did -- at least at her house. "I certainly respected my mom and dad," said Pledger, who came to the museum with her mother, Carolyn Courtney of Benton, Ark., and her three sons. "We all sat down and ate dinner. I didn't realize everybody didn't do that." Pledger thinks people are looking for "down-home values, family, God, country, that kind of patriotism," when they visit Mount Airy. "I think America's really hungry for that," she said. Forrest brushes aside any suggestion that the times were any different than what "The Andy Griffith Show" portrayed. When asked about the racial divide of the `60s, he replies that he and Griffith grew up on the poor side of town, and two black families lived across the street from his family. Visitors "want to relive the times of the show," he said. "It was such a great time. It was such an innocent time. It was an innocent time compared to today." ___ If you go... Mount Airy, N.C.: Mayberry Days, Sept. 27-30: Andy Griffith Museum:
http://www.visitmayberry.com/
http://www.surryarts.org/mayberrydays/
mdshows.html
http://www.andygriffithmuseum.com/
218 Rockford St., Mount Airy, N.C.
336-786-1604 or 336-786-1604
Open daily. Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.; Saturdays, 11 a.m.-4 p.m.; Sundays, 1:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m. Admission, $3.
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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