Stop calling Lupita Nyong’o “exotic”
The actress may be beautiful and polished and talented, but she's about as "exotic" as Meryl Streep
Lupita Nyong’o's anointment as People magazine’s “most beautiful,” mere days after she was revealed as the first black woman to become the face of Lancôme cosmetics, is clearly good news. These achievements have the potential to shift the rhetoric surrounding the actress from a lucky “Cinderella story” to that of a formidable African woman and power broker. But there’s also a deeper question to be asked about what people really mean when they comment on Nyong’o’s looks.
Media outlets from the Daily Mail to Forbes to the Hollywood Reporter have described Nyong’o with one particular word: “exotic.” This is basically a coded way of saying she is beautiful despite being black and dark-skinned. (Needless to say, they never mention other actresses’ whiteness or the socially constructed beauty ideals for all women in Hollywood.) The Hollywood Reporter piece expresses marked doubt as to how she will fit into the existing cultural paradigm. A piece by Demetria L. Lucas for the Root takes the discussion a step further, bemoaning the sheer lack of roles for black women. Nyong’o's ascent in Hollywood is often compared to that of other big-screen black stars like Whoopi Goldberg, Halle Berry or Thandie Newton. But the truth is that Nyong’o has far less in common with any of those actresses than she does with the most entrenched symbol of the Hollywood establishment — Meryl Streep.
Media outlets from the Daily Mail to Forbes to the Hollywood Reporter have described Nyong’o with one particular word: “exotic.” This is basically a coded way of saying she is beautiful despite being black and dark-skinned. (Needless to say, they never mention other actresses’ whiteness or the socially constructed beauty ideals for all women in Hollywood.) The Hollywood Reporter piece expresses marked doubt as to how she will fit into the existing cultural paradigm. A piece by Demetria L. Lucas for the Root takes the discussion a step further, bemoaning the sheer lack of roles for black women. Nyong’o's ascent in Hollywood is often compared to that of other big-screen black stars like Whoopi Goldberg, Halle Berry or Thandie Newton. But the truth is that Nyong’o has far less in common with any of those actresses than she does with the most entrenched symbol of the Hollywood establishment — Meryl Streep.
No comments:
Post a Comment