Los Angeles Times

Sharpton takes aim

Civil rights activist plans ‘ to start a movement’ against the movie industry’s lack of diversity.

- By Deborah Netburn deborah.netburn@latimes.com

He blames Hollywood’s decision makers for the industry’s lack of diversity.

The Rev. Al Sharpton spoke in front of a packed house at the First AME Church of Los Angeles on Sunday, saying he planned “to start a movement” to draw attention to the lack of diversity among this year’s Oscar nominees.

“In 2016, a year when we saw movies like Idris Elba’s ‘ Beasts of No Nation,’ movies like ‘ Straight Outta Compton,’ and movies like ‘ Concussion,’ not one of these actors and actresses of color was nominated for their roles,” Sharpton said at the church’s 10 a. m. service. “There are no blacks who can greenlight a f ilm. We can put a black family in the White House, but we can’t put a black in the boardroom of power in Hollywood.”

His comments drew applause and chants of approval from the black congregati­on, who had invited him to speak as part of the church’s 144th- anniversar­y celebratio­n.

Sharpton said his issue was not with the artists who star in and make f ilms, but rather with Hollywood’s decision makers.

“This is about the indus- try,” he said. “We cannot have the face of American culture exclude us.”

The reverend then turned to black comedian Chris Rock, the host of the 88th Academy Awards.

“People ask me, ‘ What about Chris Rock, aren’t you friends?’ ” Sharpton said. “I say yes, ‘ He tells jokes. I tell the truth. We get along fine.’ ”

This drew more applause and chants from the congregati­on.

After the service, Sharpton held a news conference to discuss a rally he planned to hold Sunday afternoon at Highland Avenue and Sun- set Boulevard, just a few blocks from the Dolby Theatre, where the Academy Awards were to be held. Many of the celebritie­s attending the ceremony would pass by the busy intersecti­on.

The news conference took place on the grounds of a mansion next to the former home of Hattie McDaniel, the first African American to win an Oscar. She received the award in 1940 for her role as Mammy in “Gone With the Wind.”

In addition to the protest in Los Angeles, Sharpton said his group, the National Action Network, had organ- ized rallies in other cities, including New York, Cleveland, Atlanta and Detroit.

“These gatherings are to put the industry on notice,” he said. “The ceremony may go on tonight, but we are starting today to make sure this will not happen again under these circumstan­ces.”

He held up an Oscar statuette that had been painted white to make his point.

“When they present the awards tonight, they ought to present them as they are,” he said. “White Oscars.”

In 2012, The Times reported that Oscar voters were 94% white and 77% male. Four years later, the academy has made scant progress: Oscar voters are 91% white and 76% male, according to a new Times study.

Blacks are about 3% of the academy, up from 2%; Asians and Latinos each make up just over 2%, with both groups up slightly.

The academy has invited more women and minority group members over the last four years, but with its 6,261 voting members appointed for life, the organizati­on’s ranks are on track to remain overwhelmi­ngly white and male for decades.

Under fire for nominating an all- white slate of actors for two years in a row, the academy last month vowed to double the number of women and minority members by 2020. It also adopted controvers­ial new rules that will allow it to take away voting rights from inactive members.

“Our goal is to make sure that we are active in bringing in different voices regardless of gender or race or sexual orientatio­n,” academy President Cheryl Boone Isaacs said in an interview Thursday. “Inclusiven­ess in this organizati­on, that is our goal.”

Sharpton said that after two consecutiv­e years of no black Oscar nominees, he hopes to see change in 2017.

“This will escalate into a mass movement next year if this is not corrected,” he said.

 ?? Eugene Garcia European Pressphoto Agency ?? THE REV. Al Sharpton raises a painted Oscar statuette. The awards should be presented “as they are,” he said. “White Oscars.”
Eugene Garcia European Pressphoto Agency THE REV. Al Sharpton raises a painted Oscar statuette. The awards should be presented “as they are,” he said. “White Oscars.”
 ?? Jenna Schoenefel­d For The Times ?? CONGREGANT­S sing during the service at the First AME Church of Los Angeles, where the Rev. Al Sharpton delivered a sermon on diversity in Hollywood.
Jenna Schoenefel­d For The Times CONGREGANT­S sing during the service at the First AME Church of Los Angeles, where the Rev. Al Sharpton delivered a sermon on diversity in Hollywood.

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