Hooray for Hollywood?
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These two similar, yet distinctive, examples are representative of the complex relationship between African-Americans and the Oscars.
While McDaniel’s nomination and victory for best supporting actress was significant by any standard and commendable, it was not until a decade later in 1949 that another Black actress, Ethel Waters, was nominated for best supporting actress for her performance in the movie Pinky. Unlike McDaniel, Waters was unsuccessful in her quest to win an Academy Award. In 1954, jaw droppingly beautiful Dorothy Dandridge was the first Black woman nominated for best actress in a lead role for her performance in Carmen Jones. The Oscar that year went to Grace Kelly for her performance in The Country Girl. It was not until 1958 that a Black male, Sidney Poitier, was nominated for an Oscar. He portrayed a convict in The Defiant Ones. Poitier also was nominated in 1963 and became the first Black man to win an Oscar as well as the first to win as best actor for his lead role as a carpenter assisting a group of Arizona nuns in Lilies of the Field.
The ceremony itself grew in stature. From its origin as a small dinner party of a few actors and actresses, movie executives and producers in 1927, the Oscars
soon moved to ceremony status in 1929. Along with spectacles such as the Miss America Pageant, Super Bowl, Grammy Awards, etc., it has remained one of the most popular and watched annual events by Americans as well as viewers throughout the entire world. It has captivated millions.
Over the following several decades, a number of African-Americans were sporadically nominated for roles ranging from boxers to sharecroppers, to drug addicts, to welfare mothers to abused or scorned women, maids, psychics, drug dealers, prisoners, single mothers, gifted children, diplomats, presidents, dictators, domestics, musicians and famous people,
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By the early 1980s, the Hollywood branch of the NAACP criticized the academy for what it saw as a routinely chronic lack of Black nominees. Louis Gossett Jr. won an award in 1982 for his role as a tough drill sergeant in the movie An Officer and a Gentleman. Interestingly, during the mid-1980s, The Color Purple, a film directed by Stephen Spielberg and based on the 1983 Pulitzer Prize-winning novel by Alice Walker, was nominated for 11 Academy Awards. The film became a lightning rod of controversy and set off a number of heated and passionate debates in the Black community, particularly for its less than stellar depiction of Black men. In fact, even conservative publications such as the National Review denounced the film, stating that there were not any Black men in the movie that had any admirable or redeeming qualities.
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In 1987, Hollywood mega superstar Eddie Murphy took the academy to task for what he saw as the lack of recognition given to Black performers in the movie industry before giving the award for best picture that year.
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“the year of the Black Oscars,” the academy honored Poitier with a lifetime achievement award. Washington, Poitier and Halle Berry were also nominated for best actress/actor. Berry and Washington were victorious, and Berry would become the first Black woman to win best actress.
Later years would see Jamie Foxx (who became the first Black nominee to receive two nominations in the same year). He won the Academy Award for his spellbinding performance in the movie Ray. Freeman, Forrest Whitaker, Jennifer Hudson, Octavia Spencer and Mo’Nique have also taken home Hollywood’s most coveted honor.
2013 was a very good year for Black film and actors. A number of nominees—Chiwetel Ejiofor, Lupita Nyong’o, Barkhad Abdi—have been nominated in the best actor and supporting actor and actress categories and Black British director Steve McQueen has been awarded with a best director nod. If he wins, McQueen will be the first Black person to win in this category. Recent ads promoting the movie Twelve Years a Slave with the slogan “it’s time” unapologetically reinforce this message.
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by Dr. Elwood Watson
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