Kuwait Times

triumph masking real diversity woes

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The triumph of black artists at the Oscars was seen as a signal that predominan­tly white Hollywood was making a serious effort to get a grip on its diversity problem. Yet scratch the surface and it is apparent that the battle has barely begun in an industry where Asians, Latinos and other minorities, not to mention women, remain sorely underrepre­sented on set-and in studio boardrooms. After the #OscarsSoWh­ite hashtag caught on in 2016 — the second straight year when no ethnic minority actors were nominated — Barry Jenkins's coming-of-age best picture "Moonlight" struck a chord last Sunday as a moving look at contempora­ry African — American life. There were six nods for black actors overall, as well as three documentar­y nominees telling African-American stories-including Ezra Edelman's winning "O.J.: Made in America"-and a screenplay win for Jenkins and his writing partner Tarell McCraney.

But critics have pointed out that race is not simply a black-and-white issue. Under growing pressure, the Academy has embarked on reforms in recent years to diversify the mix of its members, who may have become "more aware" of bias, according to Darnell Hunt, the professor in charge of UCLA's annual Hollywood Diversity Report. "But that's not necessaril­y a sign that the industry has changed, or that there's more diversity in the films being made. Studios are still (managed) by white men," he told AFP.

Exclusion

The latest edition of the study, published last month, notes that "despite the Academy Award nomination­s, the exclusion of people of color and women from Hollywood remains a concern." Minorities represent 40 percent of the US population but only 13.6 percent of actors and 10 percent of filmmakers. There was just one non-white, non-black acting nomination last Sunday-for British-Indian Dev Patel-while Syrian documentar­y shorts "The White Helmets" and "Watani: My Homeland" and Iranian director Asghar Farhadi's "The Salesman" were left to represent the entirety of Middle Eastern filmmaking.

It's not just an Oscars issue: Hispanics, Asians and Native Americans are the most woefully under-represente­d across the industry, while Middle Eastern actors find themselves typecast as terrorists. Discrimina­tion against women is arguably a larger issue, with only 29 percent of lead roles being female and, worse still, just 7.7 percent of production­s directed by women according to the UCLA report, which analyzed movies and TV released in 2015. At the root of the problem, say campaigner­s, is the overwhelmi­ng homogeneit­y in boardrooms and also in Hollywood's many casting agencies, which place the talent. If you have a bunch of white man deciding what gets made, contends Hunt, they will inevitably green-light projects in their wheelhouse-action, sci-fi and superhero movies populated and made by people who look like them. The doom and gloom is in part mitigated, however, by baby steps towards a more inclusive future.

Last resort

Ryan Coogler, the 30-year-old rising African American star who directed "Creed," is currently shooting "Black Panther," a Marvel tentpole centered on a black superhero. Meanwhile Ava DuVernay, acclaimed for the feature "Selma" and Oscar nominated for the documentar­y "13th," has become the first African-American to make a film with a budget of more than $100 million with the upcoming fantasy adventure "A Wrinkle in Time." Skeptics point out that white, male studio bosses are hardly clamoring to fall on their swords in the name of diversity.

But Sundance Institute director Keri Putnam says the solution lies not in executives vacating their seats, but in "inviting more people around the table." Josh Welsh, who heads Film Independen­t, the organizer of the annual Spirit Awards honoring indie filmmaking, believes that regulation may be the only long-term answer. Illinois and several other US states, for example, design their tax rebates system to award diversity, he points out. Online entertainm­ent magazine Deadline recently reported that the federal Equal Employment Opportunit­y Commission was in settlement talks with the major studios to resolve charges that they systemical­ly discrimina­ted against female directors. The EEOC doesn't comment on its investigat­ions, and charges are made public

only in the "last resort" instances where lawsuits are launched. Putnam notes meanwhile that executives are beginning to see inclusivit­y as a "business imperative" since films with diverse casts enjoy the highest global box office receipts and the highest return on investment. — AFP

 ??  ?? Writer/director Barry Jenkins (left) and writer Tarell Alvin McCraney pose in the press room with the Best Adapted Screenplay award for ‘Moonlight’. — AFP
Writer/director Barry Jenkins (left) and writer Tarell Alvin McCraney pose in the press room with the Best Adapted Screenplay award for ‘Moonlight’. — AFP

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