The Asian Age

Roseanne back on TV as Trump supporter

- Frankie Taggart

Hollywood is hardly a big fan of Donald Trump, but on the upcoming reboot of Roseanne, the title character will be a supporter of the Republican President. he award- winning ABC sitcom is returning for a 10th season in March, after a gap of 21 years, and actress Roseanne Barr says depicting her working- class character as proTrump was a necessity. “I’ve always tried have it be a true reflection of the society we live in. I feel like half the people voted for Trump and half didn’t, so it’s just realistic,” Barr said Monday.

The 65- year- old told journalist­s at the Television Critics Associatio­n winter press tour in Pasadena, southern California, that hating people for the way they voted in 2016 was “not American.” “And, in fact, it was workingcla­ss people who elected Trump, so I felt like that was very real and something that needed to be discussed,” she added. Barr has been a vocal Trump supporter on Twitter, telling her 430,000 followers she voted for him to “shake up” the status quo and because he is “draining the swamp” and going after child sex trafficker­s.

The atmosphere in Pasadena’s Langham Huntington hotel was testy at times, with one journalist asking how a character who had shown herself to be anti- racist could realistica­lly be written now as supporting a bigot.

“That’s your opinion,” Barr responded curtly, before conceding that the president talked “a lot of crazy shit” and insisting she was not a “Trump apologist.”

“There are a lot of things he has said and done that I don’t agree with, like there’s probably a lot of things that Hillary Clinton has done and said that you don’t agree with,” she said.

The actress said a large part of her unwillingn­ess to vote for Clinton was “Haiti”, a reference to debunked claims that the Clintons raised millions of dollars for a hospital for the islanders that was never built.

Asked what she thought of speculatio­n that Oprah Winfrey will run for president after her rousing speech at the Golden Globes on Sunday, Barr said she loved the media powerhouse “like everyone else”.

“But I think it was time as a country for us to shake things up and, you know, try something different,” added Barr, who ran for President with both the Green Party and the Peace and Freedom Party in 2012, but ended up voting for Barack Obama. Oscar- winning actress Susan Sarandon’s name was then floated and Barr replied: “Actually, I think I would be a better president than Oprah and Susan Sarandon.”

Roseanne, which ran on ABC from 1988 to 1997, featured Barr as the outspoken mother of four children in a blue- collar family. Aficionado­s may be surprised to see John Goodman back in the cast, after his character Dan Connor, Roseanne’s husband, died of a heart attack in the original run.

Goodman, who went on to arguably the most high- profile career of all the cast, including starring roles in The Big Lebowski, The Artist and 10 Cloverfiel­d Lanem, said getting back into character was a cinch.

“For me it was easy as pie, like falling out of bed, putting on an old shoe,” the 65- year- old told journalist­s.

 ??  ?? ( From left to right) Actresses Emma Kenney, Roseanne Barr and Sarah Chalke at the Disney ABC Television TCA Winter Press Tour in Pasadena, California
( From left to right) Actresses Emma Kenney, Roseanne Barr and Sarah Chalke at the Disney ABC Television TCA Winter Press Tour in Pasadena, California

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