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The Black British Invasion: Samuel L. Jackson is Confused About Black British Actors

Samuel L Jackson’s recent statement about Black British actors taking roles from

African Americans is neither right nor wrong. It’s just too complicated an issue to

be wrapped up in a neat binary.

Either answer is just too solid a statement when the problems with race are an

unceasing flow of molten lava.

His remarks on DJ Ebro’s show on HOT 97 were not premeditated. It came in the

last third of an interview that was relaxed and conversational, and not one of

regimented rigour, as is the nature of the show.

Jackson brought up the film Get Out, but when he hesitated to say something

next, his hosts encouraged him. He succumbed and says he wonders what type of

movie it would have been like if Daniel Kaluuya was African-American.

It’s a valid question, sure, but just how much of an African-American’s real life

experiences would have transpired on the screen and show up where Kaluuya is

lacking is hard to say. Jackson himself couldn’t have known when he made his

remarks because, as he admitted, he had yet to see Get Out.

Another interviewer other than Ebro might have pressed Jackson for clarity on

precisely how the films with Black British actors—David Oyelowo’s portrayal of DrKing in Selma for instance—would have been different if played by an African-

American.

Will an American actor’s intensity ring truer than Oyelowo’s? Or would his

southern drawl be even more so? What exactly is the criteria for playing African-

American characters that Oyelowo, Kaluuya and others lack?

His two reasons for why Black Brits are chosen over Black Americans, told half in

jest, are that they’re cheaper and that “they think they’re better trained than

we are because they’re classically trained”.

Leave aside his shifting points of view, if at first the comments were all Jackson’s

own opinion, the second about superior training is conjecture. Jackson doesn’t

say if any particular Black British actor has specifically said this to him, or if at all

one or many carry an air of superiority.

Casting directors, studio execs and the forces of balance sheets and whatever

prejudice they’ve perfected againsts America’s blacks and minorities hold a

greater sway. Between the fact and feelings, neither is more credible a metre

than the other. Also, it is the feelings (racism) which created the facts

(sanctioned racism ) that are creating the feelings (racism to the nth degree).

Morgan Freeman did an admirable job playing Mandela in Invictus, but it was

always clear that it was Morgan Freeman doing an admirable job of playing

Mandela—not one of complete self-effacement. Weren’t there any South African

actors who would have bettered Freeman’s performance?

Here is the thing that Jackson may not have known or rather forgot to mention:

Daniel Kaluuya never trained as an actor, and surely isn’t “classically trained” asJackson posited, though he was also referring to the majority of black british

actors working in the US. But then no one with a working brain and who has seen

Kaluuya on stage would find fault in his acting abilities.

In May last year, I saw him in yet another revival of Joe Penhall Blue/Orange at

London’s Young Vic. The play has been presented an a goliath-battle to

investigate Britain’s National Health Service, but it’s actual conceit is rather daft

and deeply insulting.

It is essentially a debate between two white doctors on whether or not there’s

such a thing as “black psychosis” as different from any other psychosis that might

afflict someone from the many other races in the world. Kaluuya character’s fate

—whether or not he’ll be set free or sectioned indefinitely—rested in the hands of

his white doctors.

It sounds like intriguing drama and the dialogue sings, but the spirit behind the

premise is beyond foul. The intellectual heft of the debate and the power over

life is all in the hands of the white doctors. Kaluuya, in what to me was a superb

realisation of mental fragility, was in some scenes too well the very picture of

helplessness and lacking any real agency as a human being —even in his mental

imbalance. I don’t know a single black playwright who would cast a black man in

such unredeeming light.

The first time i saw Kaluuya on stage was at the same theatre, Young Vic, in its

production of Aime Cesaire’s A Season In The Congo alongside Chiwetel Ejiofor

who was the star draw. The many who saw that production will tell you they may

have gone into see Ejiofor who was excellent, but they also left with a secondbold impression made by Kaluuya who must have been either 23 or 24, but on

stage was every bit the imposing figure that Mobotu was.

Jackson could not have seen Kaluuya on stage or know of his not being

“classically trained,” as either of these facts would have greatly weakened his

point.

Another narrative thread here is that the role of Christopher in Blue/Orange was

first played by Chiwetel Ejiofor in 2000. This might have been Kaluuya following

in another black british actor’s footsteps, one who has gone on a successful

career in Hollywood as well as being Oscar nominated in 12 Years A Slave which

won for best picture.

Many a young black british actor looking at Ejiofor’s trajectory will aspire to it

and think nothing of truths or sentiments held by African Americans like Jackson.

Not because Jackson is wrong but because a trajectory like Ejiofor’s and Kaluuya’

is simply different from that of a “Black British Invasion” which Jackson has

challenged. This is where forcing the debate into two factions only exacerbates

the problem as it insist on a finality of opinion that isn’t available to it.

Kobna Holdbrook-Smith is the vice chair of Act For Change website whose

stated aim is to “strengthen diversity in the live and recorded arts” in Britain.

Holdbrook-Smith does not think Jackson is wrong, but believes that his comments

“overlook a trend and they also overlook the basic idea of acting.” He cites Meryl

Streep’s turn as Margaret Thatcher in The Iron lady and Forest Whitaker’s

portrayal of Idi Amin, the ex Ugandan president, in The Last King of Scotland—

both of whom won an Oscar for Best Actor.Holdbrook-Smith believes that Jackson, “has a point but his point can easily be

taken with a pinch of negative salt. That means it’s got the potential to be

harmful, but he still has a point”.

Holdbrook-Smith is a graduate of Guildford School of Acting and whose recent film

credits include Doctor Strange (2016) and is currently filming Mary Poppins

Return. Of his many theatre roles he’s played Laertes alongside Benedict

Cumberbatch in the Barbican’s production of Shakespeare’s Hamlet and is no

stranger to being cast in a role that wasn’t written for a black actor of Ghanaian

descent. To him, “acting is acting and people can come up by training or they can

come up organically, so to speak. As long as i believe them, it doesn’t matter.”

To the question on whether or not there is a real difference between the Black

British and Black American experience, his answer is, “there must be”. A

contributing factor may be the different styles of acting that some of these Black

British actors possess that happen to be popular in the US, and so makes casting

directors think they’re better trained, but he doesn’t believe that the actors

themselves believe that.

To him, it is less about what Jackson has said and the many reactions to it, “the

comments on the comments is where we really start to get divisive.” The real

problem Holdbrook-Smith says is “the way black actors around the globe are

being commodified and understood as being narrower than humanity should

allow.

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