Friday, April 07, 2006

Denzel, Halle, & Jamie: Do Black Actors Win Awards for Playing Stereotypes?



Found this on Diversity Inc.'s website: Link to Article Here

Black actors and actresses have made their presence known on the silver screen and among their peers, particularly in the past decade. But does it help or hurt these talented actors to win for such roles?

Syndicated columnist and National Public Radio commentator Deborah Mathis wonders why black actors and actresses in stereotypical roles get awards while the more "nuanced performances go unrecognized."

Mathis says some of the high points for the entertainment industry have been the Academy of Motion Pictures' nods to black actors such as Sidney Poitier and Jamie Foxx. The roles which earned Oscars for Halle Berry, Denzel Washington and even Hattie McDaniel, in her opinion, are questionable. The most recent example of this is Three 6 Mafia's Oscar for their song to "It's Hard out Here for A Pimp" from the movie "Hustle & Flow."

"Awarding 'It's Hard Out Here for Pimp' is regression," says Mathis. "It makes me wonder if stereotype portrayals might be the surest way for a black artist to win. The music has a hook to it but it's pretty monotonous, and the lyrics … mercy. All I can say is it's hard out here for a listener. This song … doesn't even raise 'pimp' to its modern level, which is a term of art, if you will, for anyone who is making it."

Mathis says the song is "replete with invectives" and wonders if the song won because the academy wanted to "keep up its image of being inclusive."

"In their minds you don't get any blacker than talking about the low-down gritty hustle," she says. "I've got a favor to ask the Academy: Don't do us any more favors. Don't strain yourself to award black artists. We'd rather wait until it's really something that blows your mind, something that really does honor to the craft. And by the way, you'll find plenty of that if you look beyond the mammy's, crooked cops and the emotional cripples."
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Here's my thing:

If the Black actors don't play stereotypical roles that Hollywood has written for them, does it force Hollywood to rewrite Black roles or does it put Black actors out of work?

Do they just sacrifice their career or do they accept Hollywood's terms until they become a superstar and can change things?


Speak up!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

I agree with Karencolette. If they don't play what's being offered to them.. they don't work! They have bills and families just like the rest of us. Acting is a passionate career to choose and most actors are just happy to get a job.. .let alone be picky about what jobs they get offered.

I've heard many of a humble "movie star" continue to say time and time again... " I'm just a working actor...I choose the best roles and I'm lucky if I have a choice for my career. "

Lori said...

True, true. I agree with you llw. It's the same thing in corporate America. We acquire a skill set, hit the "real world" with our resumes (comp cards for actors, and try to get the best job we can get at the time we need it. I mean, I didn't turn down any job unless I had another one lined up. So why should people expect actors to turn down paid gigs just to "keep it real" within the community? Unless the community is sending them money when they need it, they're not being sincere.

Like they say - you to to put up or shut up (i'd usually say it nicer than that, but that's how the saying goes...). :-)