The Biracial Aesthetic: Colorism and Hollywood.

Doobie Doo

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The Biracial Aesthetic: Colorism and Hollywood.

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(left to right) Alexandra Shipp and Yara Shahidi
It’s no secret that 2018’s Black Panther was celebrated as a groundbreaking film. It was the first MCU film with a majority all black cast and set in Africa, but it was also groundbreaking for another reason: the women. In case you didn’t notice, all the women in Wakanda are dark-skinned and for black women that’s not something we see very often within media. With Letitia Wright as Shuri and Lupita Nyong’o as Nakia, the film set itself apart from most comic book movies, and mainstream movies in general. Especially when compared to Fox’s X-Men where Storm, a mutant with Kenyan and African American heritage, is portrayed as a mixed race, light-skinned woman (Halle Berry and Alexandra Shipp).


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(left to right) Letita Wright and Lupita Nyong’o
Shipp in particular was called out on her performance, as her portrayal of Storm came out in 2016, versus Berry’s early 2000s role. When news emerged of Disney’s plans to buy Fox and potentially join the X-Men to the current Marvel universe, fans rejoiced. Maybe Storm would finally be cast properly, however, Shipp wasn’t a fan of that idea. In a series of absurd tweets and a blocking spree, it was clear where she stood with the issue.





Furthermore, in an interview with Glamour, Shipp doubled down on her views.

“I tweeted back at people who criticized me for not having dark enough skin for my role in X-Men because we’re not going to have this conversation about a cartoon character,” Shipp said. “You’re not going to tell me that my skin color doesn’t match a Crayola from 1970. Growing up, when I was reading the comics, I pictured her looking like me. For any black girl, for there to be a black superhero, we picture them looking like us.”
It’s all good and fine that Alex saw Storm and viewed herself. Many people have favourite characters that don’t reflect them exactly, or at all, but still relate to them in some way. What’s not fine is her blatant colourism and refusal to acknowledge it. However, Shipp is not the only light-skinned actress to take a role from a dark-skinned actor, or character, and the practise of coloursim doesn’t just reside within Hollywood.

In order to break down why this is, we’re going to have to explore the topic of colourism or ‘shadeism’. Colourism is a term that many darker skinned people of colour would be familiar with but if you aren’t, colourism is a type of discrimination based on skin colour. Unlike racism, colourism usually takes place within the communities of colour themselves and is an internalized form of bigotry. Colourism isn’t just the idea of being disliked for your skin tone, it is a real life issue that has real life consequences. Research has shown that colourism can affect prison sentence duration for black people, socioeconomic status, and school suspension for black students.

In 2013, a study by the University of Cape Town found that more than 1/3 of women in South Africa (35%) bleach their skin because they want to have “white skin.” According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), 77 percent of women in Nigeria use skin-lightening products, the world’s highest percentage. That compares with 59% in Togo and 27% in Senegal.

According to the Ivorian Ministry, they have now banned the skin whitening products containing mercury and its derivatives, cortisone, vitamin A and more than two percent hydroquinone, a lightening agent that is mostly used to develop photographs. This is because products aren’t simply making the users lighter as they think but, instead burning off the first layer of their skin. Expectant mothers who bleach experience trouble breastfeeding because of dried milk ducts and others can suffer from migraines, high blood pressure and skin cancer. These are all health effects that could impact victims of colourism.

The first examples of colourism within media that I witnessed as a young child were on ‘The Fresh Prince of Bel Air’ and ‘My Wife and Kids’ when both Aunt Vivian (Janet Hubert-Whitten) and Claire (Jazz Raycole) were recast. Not only that, but the two dark-skinned actresses were distinctly replaced by lighter skinned actors (Daphne Maxwell Reid and Jennifer Freeman) as if they were completely different people. I understand the need to replace actors, as it happens all the time during filming for TV or movies, but the distinct recasting of skin tones isn’t something of an accident. In fact, it’s very common that we see a lighter skinned mother or daughter in particular with a family of brown skinned sons and/or a darker skinned husband.

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One more recent example of this phenomenon in Hollywood is the casting for The Sun is Also a Star. Now, I’m going to be honest here and say I haven’t read this book yet, but it’s been on my readlist for sometime because I rarely find books with Jamaican female leads, especially when they’re dark-skinned. So imagine my surprise when I realized that Yara Shahidi, an Iranian and African American actress, has been cast to play a dark-skinned Jamaican immigrant. That alone had me feeling some type of way, but when the promotion pictures came out and we saw that Yara’s family in the movie were all dark-skinned and some were actually Jamaican, many couldn’t help but wonder why? Why is Hollywood so scared to cast a dark-skinned young actress within a role they belong in, a role created for them and a role they deserve.



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The 2016 biopic, Nina also fell victim to Hollywood’s colorism. Based on the life of activist and singer Nina Simone, we saw this film recieve immense backlash from that primarily stemmed from the casting choice. Instead of casting someone like Uzo Aduba who very much resembles Simone and would’ve been incredible in this role, we got Zoe Saldana. Saldana not only donned a fake nose for this film as her own does not reflect Simone’s, but she had on ‘blackface’ in order to darken her complexion because, once again, her skin tone did not reflect Simone’s. It would’ve been so easy to simply cast a dark-skinned actor who resembled the singer but instead an actress in blackface, a fake nose and a horrendous accent is somehow the safer option? In what world did it make sense that Zoe Saldana would be the actor to bring Simone to new audiences?


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Don’t just take it from me but from Clarkisha Kent, a film critic and entertainment writer. When asked about colourism within Hollywood she had this to say,

“ Hollywood is not late [to colourism].They just don’t care. They associate money and youth with light skin, otherwise they wouldn’t keep doing it. Black Hollywood does this too. And until there are consequences for doing this, they won’t stop. X-Men is a great example of this. Someone was kind enough to put all the X-men colorist castings in one diagram and it was disgusting. Storm. Sunspot. Celia Reyes. You name it. All cast by lightskinned or White-passing people. Reyes and Sunspot are especially bad because of Afro-Latinx erasure and because Sunspot was SO DARK, that they tackled racism in one of his issues.”




“It [ Black Panther] was definitely a watershed moment and gives people something to point to saying that, “Well if ‘BP’ can get it right, so can you.” That said, until we can establish a pattern, it will remain an exception to Hollywood’s colorist rule.”


 

Jimmy from Linkedin

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Synopsis:"Police brutality, just like the mutilation of black bodies in cinema, is absolutely necessary for the mental, psychological, the unconscious coherence of the rest of the world." Professor Frank B. Wilderson, III visits The C.O.W.S.. Dr. Wilderson is an Associate Professor at the Univeristy of California Irvine. He's the author of Incognegro and Red, White, & Black: Cinema and the Structure of U.S. Antagonisms. The latter deconstructs how "cinema protects the sanctity of an Anti-Blackness." He explores Denzel Washington's Antwone Fisher (2002) & Monster's Ball (2001). Dr. Wilderson makes a brilliant observation on whom is depicted as being the source of trouble for a black male, Antwone Fisher: As we move from the opening dream sequence of abundance through the violence that catalyzes loss, we find not one White hand at the end of all the literal and figurative whips that cut deep into Antwone Fisher's back and psyche. Instead, we have the figure of the three Black women.

also in this he talks about the specific casting of people like Halle Berry for white eyes and audiences to heal their guilt of trauma perpetuated on black people by using a mulatto to "show" it. Very interesting!
 

Easy-E

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  1. If the most talented actress for the role gets it, I have no problem with it. But, Hollywood has a bad track record. The Aunt Viv thing tows that line. Daphne Reid can't hold Janet Hubbard's jockstrap. The Aunt Viv character TOTALLY changed. But, that was personal issues taking over. But, you have to ask; they couldn't find an actress that looked more like "Aunt Viv."
  2. I care more about non-native born Black folk being cast. I get "we are all one village"--:comeon:(I'm done fighting this fight on thecoli), but, actual native black Americans are getting looked over at an amazing rate. Most of the young black women in Hollywood are mixed race or come from international roots. Again, I have no problem with these people nor get hung up on their skin color. But, I'm clamoring for more actors born in Maryland, Florida, California, etc.
  3. The biracial thing speaks more to how having white connects in the industry help. I'm all for "accepting" biracial folk, but, I'm tired of them acting like their white parent is a malignant tumor on a black body. J. Cole, yes, your mom was poor and sick with alcoholism. She dealt with a word WAY MORE willing to help white women with that then a black woman.
But, I didn't know Nas' cousin was biracial with all the #blackgirlmagic...

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Yall let biracial be black.

So this is a product of dikkriding them


They should of been considered they own thing rather than black.

So of course they gonna try to get a ambiguous looking black over a dark looking black person.

This is nothing new tho they been doing this.

If biracial wasnt cast as black people they would have no choice but to pick a darker person.

Girl saying she black. Ur not u half white and like many biracials her s\o probably white too.

It is what it is tho..
 

Anerdyblackguy

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I get what she’s talking about. I think for us black men it’s a little tough to really understand the effects of colorism on darker skinned black women since we don’t control the image or perceptions of defines as beauty.

Now about Hollywood, it’s not going to change anytime soon. The bigger the investment(s) the safer the casting. It’s really messed up.
 

Anerdyblackguy

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Yall let biracial be black.

So this is a product of dikkriding them


They should of been considered they own thing rather than black.

So of course they gonna try to get a ambiguous looking black over a dark looking black person.

This is nothing new tho they been doing this.

If biracial wasnt cast as black people they would have no choice but to pick a darker person.

Girl saying she black. Ur not u half white and like many biracials her s\o probably white too.

It is what it is tho..

I disagree. I believe Hollywood would just settle on biracials and call it a day.
 

Dwayne_Taylor

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I don’t have time for articles that continue to frame this as something that only happens to black women. Her discussion of television missed an opportunity to talk about the way biracial children, are favored over black children, including boys.
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They dont even look alike, they really did not want a dark or brown skin little boy on TV unless they’re playing a little hoodlum .

:stopitslime:
 
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