Medicine Hat News

Actress-writer Waithe: Films fall short of ethnic equality

- LYNN ELBER

LOS ANGELES Hollywood is falling short of ethnic equality despite black-led films including “Black Panther,” actress and award-winning writer Lena Waithe said.

There are “a million ‘La La Land’s every year. How often do we get a ‘Moonlight’? How often do we get ‘Black Panther’?” she said. “What to me will be true equality is when ‘Black Panther’ comes out and it’s just like ‘Captain America.’”

Waithe, an actress and Emmy-winning screenwrit­er with the streaming comedy “Master of None” who was in the film “Ready Player One,” joined in conversati­on with comedian Hannah Gadsby at an Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences lunch.

The event marked the launch of an academy initiative aimed at creating opportunit­ies for female filmmakers to network and celebrate inclusiven­ess. It included presentati­on of a newly establishe­d Academy Gold Fellowship to young filmmaker Geeta Malik, writer-director of the award-winning online short “Aunty Gs” and films including “Beast” and “Troublemak­er.”

Music legend and activist Annie Lennox also spoke at the event, making a case for “global feminism” to support women and girls in crisis worldwide.

Gadsby, the Australian comic who made a splash with her standup special “Nanette,” said her autism has made her acutely aware of screen characters who are relegated to the “periphery” of the action.

 ?? PHOTO BY CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP ?? This combinatio­n photo shows Annie Lennox left, Lena Waithe centre, and Hannah Gadsby, right. The three are headlining a movie academy lunch celebratin­g a new initiative to advance the careers of female filmmakers.
PHOTO BY CHRIS PIZZELLO/INVISION/AP This combinatio­n photo shows Annie Lennox left, Lena Waithe centre, and Hannah Gadsby, right. The three are headlining a movie academy lunch celebratin­g a new initiative to advance the careers of female filmmakers.

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