Chattanooga Times Free Press

Netflix and Egypt spar over an African actress as Cleopatra

- BY VIVIAN YEE

CAIRO — On this much, at least, everyone can agree: Cleopatra was a formidable queen of ancient Egypt, the last of the Macedonian Greek dynasty founded by Alexander the Great, who went on to even greater posthumous fame as a seductress, immortaliz­ed by Shakespear­e and Hollywood.

Beyond that, many of the details are fuzzy — which is how one of the world’s dominant streaming services ended up in an imbroglio with modern-day Egypt recently, called out by online commenters and even the Egyptian government for casting a Black actress to play Cleopatra in the Netflix docudrama series “African Queens,” which airs Wednesday.

Soon after the show’s trailer appeared last month, Netflix was forced to disable comments as they turned into a hostile and occasional­ly racist pile-on. Egypt’s Supreme Council of Antiquitie­s, the government agency in charge of heritage, declared the show a “falsificat­ion of Egyptian history.” A popular television host accused Netflix of trying to “take over our Egyptian culture.” An Egyptian lawyer filed a complaint demanding that the streaming service be shut down in the country.

For the show’s makers, the four episodes about Cleopatra were a chance to celebrate one of history’s most famous women as an African ruler, one they portray as Black. But for many Egyptians and historians, that portrayal is at best a misreading, and at worst a negation, of Egyptian history.

Despite her Macedonian Greek lineage, the producers of the show say question marks in her family tree leave room for the possibilit­y that her mother was of another background: The identities of Cleopatra’s mother and grandmothe­r are unknown, leading some experts to argue that she was at least partly Indigenous Egyptian.

“We don’t often get to see or hear stories about Black queens, and that was really important for me, as well as for my daughter, and just for my community to be able to know those stories because there are tons of them,” Jada Pinkett Smith, who produced “African Queens,” said in a Netflix-sponsored article about the show.

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