The Guardian (USA)

Helen Mirren addresses Golda controvers­y: ‘I told the director that I’m not Jewish’

- Catherine Shoard

Helen Mirren has spoken of her dismay at the controvers­y sparked by her casting as Golda Meir, former prime minister of Israel.

The actor, and the biopic of Meir in which she stars, faced considerab­le backlash as Mirren herself is not Jewish, and heavy prosthetic­s were employed in her transforma­tion.

Speaking to Radio Times magazine, Mirren said: “I’ve had other Jewish roles [in Woman in Gold and The Debt], but not an uber-Jewish role like Golda Meir. I did tell [director] Guy [Nattiv] that I’m not Jewish, in case he thought I was.”

Her casting was prompted by Meir’s grandson, Gideon, expressing the hope that Mirren would play the role; her subsequent involvemen­t, said writer Nicholas Martin, was crucial in “getting the project going”.

“The whole issue of casting has exploded out of the water fairly recently,” said Mirren, in response to criticism from assorted actors and writers including Maureen Lipman and David Baddiel.

Writing for the Guardian, Baddiel argued that at a time when it is now commonplac­e assumption a non-Black actor will not play a Black character,

Jews are not afforded the same protection­s as other marginalis­ed groups.

“Primarily,” wrote Baddiel, “it’s about

Jews being assumed, antisemiti­cally, to be successful and privileged and powerful, and therefore not in need of the protection­s that identity politics affords other minorities. In the case of casting, that falls down as: ‘Well, Jews are everywhere in showbiz, so Jewish actors don’t need that leg-up.’”

He continued: “It’s odd, then, that so many Jewish parts are notcast with Jewish actors, even when the characters and storylines are very Jewish indeed. Why, if there are so many Jews in showbiz, is Gary Oldman cast as Herman Mankiewicz, or Rachel Brosnahan as Mrs Maisel? Why did the makers of recent BBC drama Ridley Road, about antisemiti­sm in London after the war, have to scrabble around, after I pointed out the lack of Jews in the cast, saying that the female actor playing the main character had just discovered that she had one Jewish grandfathe­r? Why are the four main characters of the only recognisab­ly Jewish sitcom on British TV, Friday

Night Dinner, all played by non-Jews, apart from Tom Rosenthal who has said publicly that he doesn’t consider himself Jewish? If there are so many Jewish actors, they must all be quite shit, as they really aren’t getting the Jewish jobs.”

Mirren went on to defend her acceptance of the role by saying that she had told the director: “‘If that’s an issue, I’ll step away, no problem.’ But he said, ‘No, it’s not an issue. I want you to play Golda.’ And off we went.”

Martin told the Radio Times he felt the debate had become an unhealthy one. “I don’t feel like all this discussion about gentiles playing Jews is helpful,” he said. “Helen’s job was to portray Golda authentica­lly, which Golda’s family would say she has. A leading Israeli historian said that Helen is ‘more Golda than Golda’.

“I find it very worrying that there is a creeping authoritar­ianism in entertainm­ent saying you cannot do this or that. Am I just supposed to write about middle-aged men living in south London?”

rature.

The winners will be announced at a ceremony on Wednesday, 15 November, at New York’s Cipriani Wall Street, featuring Oprah Winfrey as a special guest. First-place selections receive $10,000, a bronze medal and a statute; all finalists receive $1,000 and a bronze medal.

The ceremony will also feature lifetime achievemen­t awards for the Pulitzer Prize-winning poet Rita Dove and Paul Yamazaki, the principal buyer at City Lights Bookseller­s and Publishers.

Last year’s winners included Tess Gunty for her debut novel the Rabbit Hutch, set at a low-income housing community in Indiana, and the historian Imani Perry’s South to America:

A Journey Below the Mason-Dixon to Understand the Soul of a Nation.

 ?? ?? Helen Mirren as Golda Meir in Golda. Photograph: Sean Gleason/AP
Helen Mirren as Golda Meir in Golda. Photograph: Sean Gleason/AP

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