Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Sitcom tackles tough topic

Colourism reveals many shades of prejudice in entertainm­ent industry

- TERRY TANG

The breakthrou­gh representa­tion of minorities in Hollywood blockbuste­rs has ignited a frequently overlooked discussion about whether prejudice isn’t just about the colour of a person’s skin, but the shade.

“Colourism,” the idea that light-skinned minorities are given more privilege than their darker-skinned peers, is a centuries-old concept that many insiders say remains pervasive in the entertainm­ent industry. The instant reckoning of social media has brought prominence to the issue and a recent episode the ABC sitcom Black-ish, known for not shying from heavier topics, confronted it.

In the episode Black Like Us, parents Dre and Bow (Anthony Anderson and Tracee Ellis Ross), are appalled when they see that daughter Diane (Marsai Martin) appears darker in her poorly lit classroom photo. Their outrage sparks a tense conversati­on within the family.

“We felt that this was the year to just put it on our shoulders and see what we can do and hope at the very least we can get people to talk about it openly,” said co-showrunner Kenny Smith.

Executive producer Peter Saji wrote the episode. A lightskinn­ed, mixed-race man, Saji drew from his own experience­s, as well as research.

“There is a light-skinned privilege that I never really wanted to admit I felt or experience­d. I sort of grew up ‘Oh, we’re all black. We all experience the same struggle,’” he said.

More often when movies and TV shows ignite conversati­ons about colourism, it’s unintentio­nal.

In 2016, a furor erupted over a trailer showing actress Zoe Saldana portraying singer and activist Nina Simone. Saldana’s skin was darkened and she wore a prosthetic nose.

When images from Ralph Breaks the Internet came out last year, it appeared Princess Tiana, Disney’s first black princess, had a lighter complexion and sharper features. Anika Noni Rose, who voices Tiana, met with animators and spoke about how important it was that dark-skinned girls see themselves represente­d.

The studio also consulted the U.S. civil rights group Color of Change.

“They had to spend some real money to actually fix this. They recognized the problem, they listened and they worked to change it,” said Color of Change executive director Rashad Robinson.

The issue isn’t unique to black people. In India’s Bollywood film industry, the starring roles tend to go to lighter-skinned actors, many of whom endorse products promoting fairer skin.

The movie Crazy Rich Asians left some Asian-americans disappoint­ed by a lack of brown or dark-skinned actors.

Meanwhile, Roma director Alfonso Cuarón received praise for casting Yalitza Aparicio in the lead role of an Indigenous maid. The character is more at the forefront than her lighter-skinned Mexican employer.

For African-americans, bias toward lighter-skinned people dates back to slavery. Skin complexion sometimes determined what type of jobs slaves were assigned or if, post-slavery, they were worthy of receiving an education. In later decades, universiti­es, fraterniti­es and other institutio­ns were known for using the “brown paper bag” test: Those with skin lighter than the bag were in.

“It’s part of white supremacy, or holding up whiteness over other background­s,” Robinson said. “It has deep implicatio­ns, historical implicatio­ns in the black community from beauty standards to profession­al opportunit­ies to how families have treated one another.”

The problem also exists within the music industry. Mathew Knowles, who managed daughters Beyoncé and Solange, as well as Destiny’s Child, said it’s no accident that most of the recent top-selling black artists are lighter-skinned like Mariah Carey and Rihanna. He said Beyoncé often got opportunit­ies that darker-skinned artists probably wouldn’t.

“There’s another 400 that are of a darker complexion ... that didn’t get a chance at Top 40 radio,” Knowles said. “They got pigeonhole­d that they were black and in the ‘black division,’ and they got pigeonhole­d in just R&B, black radio stations.”

Knowles, himself darker skinned, said his own mother instilled in him that darker-skinned women were less desirable. It’s a perception that he thinks is starting to shift.

“We have to have social courage to speak up about this stuff and stop being quiet about it,” Knowles said. “The only way we change is to be uncomforta­ble and truthful about our feelings and beliefs.”

That is a strategy that Black-ish co-showrunner Smith also agrees with.

“With anything it’s always best to have a truthful conversati­on,” Smith said.

 ?? ABC ?? Black-ish, starring Marsai Martin, left, Tracee Ellis Ross and Anthony Anderson, tackled the difficult topic of colourism after sitcom daughter Diane (Martin) wasn’t lit properly in her class photo.
ABC Black-ish, starring Marsai Martin, left, Tracee Ellis Ross and Anthony Anderson, tackled the difficult topic of colourism after sitcom daughter Diane (Martin) wasn’t lit properly in her class photo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada