South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Queen Latifah is getting in on the action

Black women left out of the return of leading female heroes until now

- By Greg Braxton

Private detective Foxy Brown was the “dangerous lady” armed with guns, karate skills and sex appeal in 1974’s “Foxy Brown.”

Played by Pam Grier, Brown was being held at gunpoint by two henchmen as she delivered a package to the murderous Miss Katherine (Kathryn Loder). When the outlaws discovered what was inside, Brown whipped a pistol from her boulder-size Afro and opened fire, killing the two goons and wounding Katherine.

Grier was a superstar in the 1970s during the so-called Blaxploita­tion era, positioned as a counterpar­t to Black male heroes such as Shaft in such films as “Foxy Brown,” “Sheba, Baby” and “Coffy.” Another notable female star of the period was Tamara Dobson, as the gun-toting Cleopatra Jones. TV tried to capitalize on the trend too in 1974 with “Get Christie Love!” in which star Teresa Graves delivered the spicy catchphras­e, “You’re under arrest, sugar.”

In more recent years, top female actors including Charlize Theron (“Atomic Blonde”), Angelina Jolie (“Salt”), Jennifer Lawrence (“Red Sparrow”), Milla Jovovich (“Resident

Evil”), Jennifer Garner (“Alias”) Kiera Knightley (“Domino”), Alicia Vikander (“Tomb Raider”) and Jessica Chastain (“Ava”) jumped into the game, beating up bad guys and performing risky stunts in high-profile film and TV projects. But unless they were wearing a superhero’s cape or working in the framework of science fiction, Black female actors have largely been missing in action.

That troubling shortfall is being turned upside down on Sundays as CBS presents “The Equalizer,” a reboot of the 1980s TV drama starring Edward Woodward as former intelligen­ce agent Robert McCall, who becomes a freelance crusader on behalf of victims facing overwhelmi­ng odds.

The show stars Queen Latifah, taking on the character most recently portrayed by Denzel Washington in the films “The Equalizer” and “The Equalizer 2,” which were heavy on atmosphere and brutal violence.

And like her male predecesso­rs, Robyn McCall is a lethal weapon.

“I like the idea of someone who uses their skills to exact justice,” Latifah said. “I’m not cynical. I still think there’s hope for the world.”

She added that she was a fan of the original series and of the films, and felt it would be “cool” to revamp the show with a Black female actor. As for the dearth of Black women in lead action roles, Latifah said it is indicative of how Hollywood has treated Black female actors — and women in general.

“The playing field has never been level,” said Latifah, who has one of the most varied resumes in the industry. In addition to being Oscar nominated (“Chicago”), the entertaine­r has been a rapper, singer, talk show host and producer. She is an executive producer of “The Equalizer,” credited as Dana Owens, which is her real name.

“It’s been such an uphill battle for a long time,” she added. “Black women are not regarded the way we should be. We’re not held as the high standard of beauty, capability, wisdom, intelligen­ce and strength that we actually are. So whenever we have an opportunit­y to show ourselves as we should be seen — that we’re not all the same — we should have that opportunit­y.

The heyday of the Black female action star ended when Blaxploita­tion did. While “Get Christie Love!” lasted only one season, viewers flocked to shows with white female heroes such as “Charlie’s Angels,” “Policewoma­n” and “The Bionic Woman.”

During the Blaxploita­tion era, Black women were “seen as more built for bodily strength, and it was less of a risk to put them in those action roles,” said Jeffrey Brown, associate professor of popular culture at Bowling Green State University.

But when that era passed, he said, Hollywood found it more fashionabl­e to cast “glamorous, petite, upper-middle-class white women as action stars. They supplanted the Black women who had paved the way.”

Andrew Marlowe, a co-creator and executive producer of “The Equalizer,” is excited that viewers will finally be able to root for a Black female action hero again.

“It’s long past time to be able to see these characters on TV in these roles,” said Marlowe. “It’s an exciting cultural moment. We hope that in doing so, the show can find its success, and we can normalize it. It’s very odd that we haven’t been able to see this before. Black women should be portrayed as the interestin­g, warm, powerful, complicate­d people that they are.”

Close observers of culture are already celebratin­g the series.

Mark Anthony Neal, chair of the African and African American studies department at Duke University, said, “It’s the right vehicle for now. It makes sense given everything surroundin­g (the consciousn­ess-raising movement) ‘Say Her Name’ and the number of incidents (of ) Black women who have been targets of police brutality. This is Black women fighting back, not just for Black women but for others who don’t have the potential to fight back.”

Most opportunit­ies for Black female actors to show their action chops in recent years have come instead in stories grounded in the fantastic or set in alternate universes.

Halle Berry portrayed the magical Storm in the “X-Men” franchise. Tessa Thompson played Valkyrie in Marvel’s “Thor” films. Danai Gurira battled human and undead enemies as Michonne in “The Walking Dead.” Sonequa Martin-Green commanded in “Star Trek: Discovery.”

Meanwhile, fare reminiscen­t of the Blaxploita­tion classics has struggled to break through. A planned revival of “Get Christie Love!” never came to fruition. The 2018 Taraji P. Henson vehicle “Proud Mary,” was released in the January doldrums to little fanfare by distributo­r Screen Gems. And Spectrum Originals’ “Bad Boys” spinoff “L.A.’s Finest,” which paired Gabrielle Union with Jessica Alba and premiered in 2019, was canceled after two seasons.

Latifah sees “The Equalizer” as an example of what can happen when the entertainm­ent industry becomes more visionary and inclusive.

“I’m here to change things,” she said. “That’s my job. That’s what I want to do.”

 ?? BARBARA NITKE/CBS ?? Queen Latifah stars as former CIA operative Robyn McCall in the CBS series“The Equalizer,”airing Sundays.
BARBARA NITKE/CBS Queen Latifah stars as former CIA operative Robyn McCall in the CBS series“The Equalizer,”airing Sundays.

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