VOA标准英语2012--For Black Actresses, Few Oscar-Worthy Roles
时间:2012-03-10 03:42:36
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For Black Actresses, Few Oscar-Worthy Roles
The box office hit “The Help” won an Oscar for best supporting actress. But Viola Davis, the film's lead actress, was passed over. In fact, only one African- American woman has ever won best actress in a leading role.
And that has highlighted the lack of award-winning roles for African-Americans, especially women.
Hattie McDaniels was the first African-American to ever win an Oscar. She was named best supporting actress for her
portrayal1 of Mammy, a slave, in the 1939
epic2 "Gone with the Wind."
Since then, African-American actresses have gone on to play a variety of roles. But
playwright3 Murray Horwitz argues many of them present African-Americans as victims.
“Once you’re a victim, you can’t be a man, a woman, a child who may be a
brat4, or a woman who may be cheating on her husband, or a man who might be a noble pillar of the community," he says. "It’s just ‘Oh, it’s them’ and that’s something I think that, as writers and filmmakers, we have to avoid.”
In 1991, Whoopi Goldberg won an Oscar for best supporting actress for her role as Oda Mae Brown, a
psychic5, in the supernatural drama "Ghost." But critics argued that her character tapped into the
stereotype6 of an African American
con7 artist.
In 2001, Halle Berry became the first African-American to win an Oscar for best actress in the drama "Monster's Ball."
She played the wife of an executed convict. Horwitz says Halle Berry’s role as Leticia Musgrove, who develops a relationship with her executed husband’s white guard,
deviated8 from the norm.
“Was Halle Berry's character in "Monster's Ball" sympathetic? Sure, but I don't know if you want to have dinner with her," say Horwitz. "So, I think one of the great victories has been the presence, and I don’t want to say increased presence because
statistically9 it goes up and down, but the presence of African-Americans in roles where race does not completely define the character, and we need a great actor to inhabit that role.”
According to Horwitz, layered roles for African-American actresses have been rare. Most fit the traditional
niche10.
Like the abusive mother in Lee Daniels' 2009 drama "Precious." Mo’Nique won an Oscar for that supporting role.
The film, based on a novel, offers a
bleak11 portrait of a teenage girl called Precious. Daniels says his film is true and its truth should not be forgotten.
“Do we dare show African-Americans in this light?" says Daniels. "Especially with Obama being president? How dare you tell this truth? How dare you tell this truth? How dare you read this truth? And I was taken aback by the audaciousness of it all. The audaciousness of the book.”
"Precious," although dark, is uplifting. In the end, Precious betters her life.
Daniels says that's a message not only for African-Americans but for Americans as a whole.
“We come in all different colors. We are colored people. Colored people. So, we have athletes, we have drug
dealers12, we have doctors, we have murderers, we are people.”
At this year's Oscars, Octavia Spencer walked away with the golden statue for best supporting actress for her role as Minnie in "The Help, about a maid in 1960s Mississippi.
The actress says the role was real. “I had to model her after someone, and I modeled her after my mom."
Halle Berry
remains13 the only African-American woman to have won best actress in a leading role.
And that begs the question: Should African-American actors wait for race-neutral roles? There aren't many of those. And where will the winning roles come from? Who will write them?
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