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Viola Davis on being a Black woman in Hollywood
Brut America
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5/19/2022
“There is value to anger.”
Viola Davis reflected on her experience being a Black woman in Hollywood during a talk at the 2022 Cannes Film Festival …
#Cannes2022
Category
🎥
Short film
Transcript
Display full video transcript
00:00
My anger, that six, eight-year-old Viola,
00:05
is because I was running from a world that was spitting me out,
00:09
that's what I felt,
00:12
with the boys, and really a culture calling me that ugly black n***a.
00:18
That what it motivated me to do is, yes, get out of my life,
00:22
but what it also motivated me to do in my anger
00:26
is to create a life that didn't spit any more Violas out.
00:42
I don't care what anyone says, when you leave this life,
00:45
you want everyone to know that you took up space in it.
00:49
So how do you do that, despite the fact that,
00:53
listen, at the end of the day, I grew up in a predominantly white community,
00:59
I didn't feel adored, I didn't feel pretty,
01:02
but despite all of those feelings, I still kept moving.
01:08
I keep, you know, sprouting the quote from Anne Lamont,
01:13
which is, all courage is, is fear said with prayers.
01:18
That I'm very good with understanding that I have fear,
01:24
understanding that I have anxiety, understanding that I have self-doubt,
01:28
but it doesn't keep my feet and my spirit from moving forward.
01:34
Any rejection that I've had, where people said that I was not pretty enough for a role,
01:40
really gets on my damn nerves.
01:43
It breaks my heart and it makes me angry.
01:51
For many reasons.
01:54
A lot of it is based in race. It really is.
01:59
Because let's be honest, if I had my same features and I were five shades lighter,
02:05
it would just be a little bit different.
02:09
And if I had blonde hair, blue eyes, and even a wide nose,
02:13
it would be even a little bit different than what it is now.
02:16
We could talk about colorism, we could talk about race, it pisses me off.
02:20
And it's broken my heart.
02:23
I got the help. I got the Oscar nomination for the help.
02:29
And then it was over, and then I thought, and now what?
02:33
I was getting the same types of roles.
02:36
Because how else are they going to cast a dark-skinned, black woman
02:41
who is really not a model?
02:44
So you're going to get three days here, two days there, two days there,
02:48
and I had hit my bottom.
02:51
And so I knew that then the only sort of position I could move into
02:57
that gave me some sense of worth, and the only way to reconcile that anger
03:04
was to find roles myself.
03:07
That was my response to that.
03:10
It was sort of a, excuse my language, a f*** it.
03:14
And there is value to anger.
03:20
There is value to a well-placed f*** it.
03:24
Because with that burst, I feel like that burst represents
03:30
that one moment of change.
03:33
That after that, you can never be the same.
03:35
You cannot be complacent afterwards.
03:38
You've got to do something about the anger,
03:40
because you don't want to go back there again.
03:43
Why aren't you hiring a dark-skinned woman?
03:45
When she walks in the room and you say she blows you away,
03:48
then create space and storytelling for her.
03:52
So when she thrives, she's not thriving despite of her circumstances.
03:57
She's thriving because of the circumstances.
04:01
Because in terms of storytelling that's expansive,
04:05
that is as expansive as one's imagination, that's not happening yet.
04:10
There's just certain genres and certain storytelling
04:13
that when you're in a room as a producer,
04:16
you have to really fight for those stories.
04:20
Like if I wanted to play a mother whose son relived in a challenging neighborhood,
04:27
and he was a gang member who died in a drive-by shooting,
04:31
I could get that made.
04:34
If I play the woman who was, I don't know,
04:37
looking to recreate herself by, I don't know,
04:40
flying to Nice and sleeping with five men at the age of 56 looking like me,
04:46
I'm going to have a hard time pushing that one.
04:48
Even as Viola Davis.
04:50
Because people can't reconcile the blackness with spiritual awakening.
04:56
And sexuality, it's too much.
05:01
It's too much when you look like my maid Louise.
05:05
And I say that because I actually had a director who did that to me.
05:09
Who said, Louise!
05:11
And I've known him for like 10 years and he called me Louise
05:14
and I found out it was because his maid's name is Louise.
05:19
So that has not changed.
05:21
You have to understand when people give you affirmations growing up
05:25
saying you can be anything, you can do whatever,
05:28
you know you're beautiful, right?
05:30
Oh, who told you you weren't beautiful?
05:32
And then you don't see any examples of people who look like you
05:35
who people are saying who are beautiful.
05:38
You don't see that.
05:39
That's a big thing with dark-skinned women.
05:41
People like, don't listen to that.
05:44
Do not listen to that, Viola.
05:46
Dark-skinned women are beautiful too.
05:48
And then you don't see any.
05:51
There's no vision.
05:55
Then you walk in the room and people don't really know that they're doing that
05:59
because, you know, I'm sort of famous so people see me.
06:02
But when people don't know who I am,
06:06
it's interesting how invisible you get.
06:12
You feel seen.
06:15
You know, and that's why even with young black girls
06:19
I'm really, really, really cognizant of this.
06:23
Of always telling them that they're worth it and beautiful.
06:27
First of all, because that's what I see.
06:29
And that's what I know, that I know, that I know
06:32
is the birthplace of everything.
06:35
It's a birthplace of survival.
06:37
It's a birthplace of self-love.
06:39
It's a birthplace of keeping breath in your friggin' lungs.
06:43
Even if you do mess up. I don't care.
06:45
You're still worth it.
06:47
You don't have to barter for it.
06:49
You don't have to do anything for it.
06:51
You don't have to be a certain weight.
06:53
You don't have to do nothing. You're worth it.
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