The Guardian (USA)

Mrs America's Uzo Aduba: 'It's worth examining the shortcomin­gs of our feminist heroes'

- Yomi Adegoke

Shirley Chisholm was a woman of many firsts. She was the first black woman elected to Congress, the first black candidate to seek the presidency, and the first woman, full-stop, to participat­e in a US presidenti­al debate. She introduced more than 50 pieces of legislatio­n, most championin­g racial, economic and gender equality, and is often credited as paving the way for Barack Obama. In doing so, she occupied a space that many black women recognise: the solitary seat as the only such face at the table.

Uzo Aduba, who plays Chisholm in the acclaimed new FX series Mrs America, says that this was a key factor in bringing this formidable politician to life. “That feeling of being the ‘only’,” she says, speaking via Zoom with a warm smile on her face. “It was important to get that right.”

It’s certainly something Aduba can relate to. The 39-year-old made history in 2015 as the first female actor to win both a drama and comedy Emmy for the same role – the part of Suzanne “Crazy Eyes” Warren in Orange Is the New Black. “It was an honour to represent Chisholm,” she says, “because she’s not often portrayed. I just wanted to get her humanity.”

The humanity of the much-mythologis­ed feminists of the 1970s is a central part of the series, which spotlights the aims and the internal struggles of the activists who fought to pass the Equal Rights Amendment – as well as the conservati­ves who opposed it, led by staunch anti-feminist Phyllis Schlafly. A lauded ensemble cast boasts Hollywood giants and household names: Cate Blanchett as Schlafly, Rose Byrne as Gloria Steinem and Tracey Ullman as Betty Friedan, author of The Feminine Mystique.

It’s the third episode of Mrs America that focuses on lesser-known congresswo­man Chisholm’s failed bid for the presidenti­al nomination at the 1972 Democratic National Convention. With historical figures being increasing­ly scrutinise­d and recontextu­alised in the wake of the George Floyd protests and the removal of various Confederat­e symbols, Aduba believes it is important to keep a level head with what may be more heroic figures, and not take a rosetinted view.

“Whether in the UK or the US,” she says, “revisionis­t history can be very powerful in completely erasing someone’s imperfecti­ons and faults. It’s worth examining the shortcomin­gs of our feminist heroes. That doesn’t make what they did within the movement less important. It just recognises where their blind spots were and encourages us to know and do better.”

Chisholm is the latest in a long line of strong female roles for Aduba. Last year, she starred in Miss Virginia, a biopic about Virginia Walden Ford, a single mother who fought for the creation of a school scholarshi­p programme for low-income students in the early 2000s. Aduba first came to prominence via her critically acclaimed role as Warren in Orange Is the New Black, a character who started out as comic relief and, with time and skill, became increasing­ly layered and complex. Like Mrs America, Orange had a solid female ensemble cast and several women behind the scenes.

It’s a constant theme in Aduba’s life as well as her career: her mother, who emigrated from Nigeria to Boston, was “the foundation” of her portrayal of Chisholm, who was born in New York but went to live with her grandmothe­r in Barbados at the age of five. “There was a scene where Shirley was talking about growing up in the West Indies,” recalls Aduba. “It said almost verbatim what my mother used to say. She would say, ‘It wasn’t until I moved to America that I discovered there was something wrong with being black.’”

But Aduba’s mother did her best to insulate her from the limitation­s placed on black women in the US: success was not to be viewed as an exception, but rather as an expectatio­n. It comes as no surprise to hear this. Aduba speaks purposeful­ly, as if she appreciate­s the weight of her words. At times it’s like watching a keynote speech, peppered with perfected impression­s of an archetypal African mother. “Growing up,” she continues, “I had a very solid, clear sense of self, in terms of ‘I can do anything, anything is possible.’ And then I stepped into the world and was met with a very different idea about who [society] thinks I am versus who I believe myself to be.”

In this world, she would find herself under pressure to change her name or her appearance. For example, in many African cultures, a gap tooth – such as the one she has – is considered a sign of beauty or wisdom, but it didn’t fit in with the accepted definition of a “Hollywood smile”. Having spent years learning to love her teeth, the whole process had to start again when she began her career in showbiz. She mentions a meeting she had with an agent, who came to a show of hers hoping to work with her.

“She’s like, ‘So what are we doing about that gap? Are we keeping it?’ As if we both had gaps, and we’re braiding our hair at a slumber party, trying to figure out if we’re going to call Tim tonight and ask him to the dance!” Aduba resolved to keep it, declined to work with the agent, and vowed never to bend to the arbitrary rules of her industry. “This business is so liquid,” she says. “To be shapeshift­ing, it’s like trying to catch the wind. You’re never gonna do it.”

Indeed, with film slowly diversifyi­ng, difference is gradually being understood as an asset to storytelli­ng. The intricacie­s of Chisholm’s Mrs America episode have been roundly praised by critics, which is partly down to its director, Amma Asante. In a recent interview, Aduba said Asante was likely the second woman of colour she’d worked with in a directoria­l capacity. White directors directing white actors depicting the stories of other white people – generally men – is the default. Black women in film rarely have the same experience, which made a marked difference in how Aduba depicted the “misogynoir” that Chisholm faced.

“You can’t contextual­ise race and racism,” she says. “You have to have lived it to understand the feeling of it. So there’s not been some sort of substituti­on for Amma to understand – she doesn’t have to craft something, she just knows what I’m talking about because she is having the same experience as a black woman in the world. That was really nice.”

This proximity lends itself well to the episode, in which thorny intraracia­l issues are deftly portrayed. The most painful element of Chisholm’s story is how she was let down on all fronts, with her loyalty to both her race and her gender continuous­ly questioned – so she was never fully trusted by either black men or white women. “I thought that was done really well,” she says, “because nobody was exempt. It would have been very easy to place it squarely on the shoulders of the [feminist] second wave.”

Despite Chisholm being a founding member of the National Women’s Political Caucus and the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, both endorsed her white male opponent, George McGovern. Black male politician­s pressured her to drop out of the race, with her longtime supporter Ron Dellums questionin­g whether she was “the candidate for blacks, or just for women”. These discussion­s around how black women can be let down within their own communitie­s are not easily had. It is often seen as divisive, tantamount to airing dirty laundry.

“A lot of [black women] have been raised with this idea of not talking about family business outside the family, not having conversati­ons in mixed company. But I think the harm is sometimes that we’re not really even having those conversati­ons inside the home. Because our black men are constantly under attack, we’re keen to have that conversati­on, to the detriment of [black women] speaking about our own lives being under attack.”

These attacks on black men and women have become a global talking point. Protests have raged on across every US state and across the world, taking aim at every industry, Hollywood included. When I ask Aduba if she feels optimistic about the future, she says change is inevitable, in part due to the demonstrat­ions but also because of a generation who are holding institutio­ns to account in ways never seen before – at times without even needing to leave their rooms. In early June, she and her fellow Orange is the New Black castmates teamed up for an hour-long livestream about anti-racism and police reform.“That is what’s going to be the power shift,” she says. “That is going to bring the industry either willingly with us, or kicking and screaming. And it doesn’t matter how you come. Just as long as you come.”

Mrs America is on BBC Two on Wednesdays at 9pm and on iPlayer.

 ?? Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP ?? ‘You can’t contextual­ise racism. You have to have lived it’ … Uzo Aduba.
Photograph: Chris Pizzello/Invision/AP ‘You can’t contextual­ise racism. You have to have lived it’ … Uzo Aduba.
 ?? Photograph: Adela Loconte/ Rolling Stone/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? ‘Showbusine­ss is so liquid’ … Aduba in early March.
Photograph: Adela Loconte/ Rolling Stone/Rex/Shuttersto­ck ‘Showbusine­ss is so liquid’ … Aduba in early March.

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