Martin Luther King Jr. Day turned out to be quite eventful for Hollywood. Jada Pinkett Smith announced via video that she would be boycotting this year’s Academy Awards because of the exclusion of black performances in the four major acting categories. This is the second year in a row that black actors have been shut out.
Spike Lee, who received an honorary Oscar at last year’s Governors Awards, also announced on Facebook that he and his wife, Tonya Lewis Lee, would be skipping the festivities, too.
To me it seemed like an appropriate response to the general outrage about blacks being excluded—again—as documented in the #OscarsSoWhite hashtag that populated Twitter the day the nominees were announced.
By nightfall, actress Janet Hubert, best known for her role as the original Aunt Viv on the ’90s sitcom The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air (and her public refusal to let go of her 20-plus-year grudge against Will Smith) had jumped into the fray. No, she wasn’t boycotting the Oscars, too; she would have had to be invited for that to happen. She popped up from obscurity to blast the Smiths.
Hubert uploaded a grainy, four-minute video in which she addressed Pinkett Smith as “Miss Thing,” then accused her of boycotting the Oscars because Pinkett Smith’s superstar husband, Will Smith, wasn’t nominated by the academy for his role in Concussion. It went downhill from there, with Hubert adding, more or less, that the Smiths’ concern about the Oscars is frivolous in the face of greater injustices against Americans of African descent, and calling the Smiths “a part of the system that is unfair to other actors.”
Anticipating a negative response to her video, Hubert concluded her rant by addressing those who would dismiss her perspective as bitter with “Bitches, please.”
Sigh.
Surprisingly, the reaction to her (unnecessary) clap-back wasn’t all negative. Hubert’s video displayed mighty (and misguided) huevos. More than anything, people were wildly amused by just how messy Hubert could get, spilling (more) decades-old Hollywood tea and going all retro, calling Pinkett Smith “Miss Thing.” And then there was just the abundant pettiness of it all. Lots of people are laughing, but it’s not really with Hubert; it’s at her.
In fairness, there are people who agree with her that an Oscar boycott is pointless or at least frivolous, compared to, say, the Flint, Mich., water crisis or Black Lives Matter. No one in his or her right mind would argue that awards outweigh contaminated water or dead black bodies. But caring about the Oscars doesn’t mean that all other issues are off the table. It is possible to care about more than one issue at a time.
Hubert did made a valid point about Idris Elba being a great actor who deserved an Oscar nod for Beasts of No Nation (and while we’re at it, so did Abraham Attah, who played Agu). And she was right about Smith’s Nigerian accent in Concussion. I’m not Nigerian, and I know it’s bad. Nigerians must be appalled. I do think Smith is a good actor, though.
But regarding everything else in Hubert’s video? I guess I’m the “bitch” she’s saying “please” to, because I found her video to be mostly a bitter, baseless rant.
It’s not as if a plethora of black people got nominated and only Will Smith got snubbed. No black people, at all, in the major categories ... for the second year in a row.
The call for a boycott isn’t about an individual being snubbed. It’s much bigger than Smith. It’s about another example of institutional racism. It points to the lack of opportunity for roles that Viola Davis spoke of at the Emmys last year. It’s an overall lack of acknowledgment of and respect for black actors.
And yes, actually, black actors matter. Because actors tell stories. And stories become the image and legacy of a culture. And black stories matter just as much as everyone else’s. Perhaps the Oscars do not matter to Hubert, a working actress, because she does TV, not film, and her roles in the two decades since Fresh Prince have not been substantive enough for her to earn nominations of any kind. (No shade.)
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