Showing posts with label Academy Award. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Academy Award. Show all posts

June 10 - Happy Birthday, Hattie McDaniel

Posted on June 10, 2018

Actress, singer-songwriter, and comedian.

The first black woman to sing on the radio in the United States.

Actress on TV.

Appearances in more than 300 movies.

First black entertainer to win an Academy Award.





Being the daughter of two people who'd been enslaved...

Being a black woman born in 1895...

Being a black woman in Hollywood in the mid-1900s...

OF COURSE Hattie McDaniel faced a ton of discrimination, segregation, and disrespect. Because she is most famous for her enslaved maid role as "Mammy" in Gone with the Wind, some black people and organizations also criticized her. For example, at one point the NAACP said she furthered negative stereotypes of black people. Indeed, Hollywood DID typecast her, since 74 out of 94 roles listed on McDaniel's IMDb were maids. (McDaniel said that she would rather play a maid than BE a maid. She and members of her family had certainly had to do plenty of work as maids, so she knew what she was talking about!)



As to "negative stereotypes" in her slave and maid roles, especially as Mammy, McDaniel could have acted subservient, like a proper enslaved servant - respectful, eyes downcast, minding every word of command from her masters. Instead, she spoke her mind, at times criticized her mistress (Scarlett O'Hara), and at times gave wise counsel.

Of course, that fed into a particular stereotype, too: the sassy maid. But McDaniel did the best she could with the opportunities afforded her, and she DID push the boundaries for black entertainers on more than one occasion. 




McDaniel was born into extreme poverty. She was born in Kansas, but her family soon moved to Denver, Colorado. She was one of 13 kids - and several of them became actors or entertainers.

When she achieved her biggest success, in 1940 - winning the Academy Award for best supporting actress - she was still treated poorly. She was not seated at the Gone With the Wind table like the other GWTW nominees, but instead she was seated at a small table in the very back. And that was still a "gracious" concession, because the Academy Awards show was being held in The Ambassador Hotel - which had a strict no-black-people-allowed policy! (That policy was overturned in 1959 - almost two decades later! - when California finally passed a law that outlawed racial discrimination.) So the producer of GWTW actually had to call in a special favor just to get the hotel people to allow McDaniel into the building!!!

Apparently, the Hollywood folks watching McDaniel accept her Oscar were choked up with emotion over the "first" - and maybe were emotional because she gave such a wonderful speech, including these words: "I shall always hold it as a beacon for anything I may be able to do in the future. I sincerely hope that I shall always be a credit to my race and the motion picture industry."

But, emotion and awards aside, McDaniels was still treated poorly after her big win. Her final wish was to be buried in Hollywood Cemetery, and that wish was denied -

- because, of course, there was a no-black-people-allowed policy!

One of McDaniel's grandnephews made sure that Hattie was eventually a part of the Hollywood Cemetery (now called Hollywood Forever Cemetery); in 1999, a marble memorial to the actress was placed there. (Her family decided to keep her remains in the original burial site.)




August 24 – Happy Birthday, Marlee Matlin!

Posted August 24, 2013

Marlee Matlin is an accomplished actress and author who just happens to be deaf.

She is the first and so far only deaf performer ever to win an Academy Award—and she won THE biggie: Best Actress in a Leading Role. She is also the youngest woman ever to win this coveted Best Actress/leading role Oscar! 

(I know, it seems like  Jennifer Lawrence would have been the youngest—but Lawrence was 22 when she won in 2013, and Matlin was only 21 when she won in 1987!) 

Matlin has also won a Golden Globe and several nominations for Golden Globes Emmys.

In her Oscar-winning role, Matlin's deafness was an important part of the story. The movie Children of a Lesser God is about two employees of a school for the deaf. Matlin played a deaf janitor who falls for a hearing speech teacher (who also falls for her); their romance is made difficult by their different feelings about deafness and speech. When Matlin won the Oscar for this role, she gave her acceptance speech in sign, with an interpreter giving voice to her heartfelt words.

Ironically, Matlin's Oscar win led to a controversy that is similar to the tension between deafness and speech in that movie. As is the custom for Best Actress winners, Matlin was asked to present the Best Actor award at the next year's Oscars. Some deaf people were devastated that, after signing her introductory remarks, Matlin spoke all the names of the nominees and the name of the winner. I suppose that those who were disappointed thought that their one chance to have an entire presentation in sign language was snatched away. On the other hand, I thought it was brave for Matlin to voice the nominees's names


Since the age of 18 months, Matlin has had only 20% hearing in one ear and no hearing in her other ear. Although she contributes her time and effort to the National Association of the Deaf and the Starkey Hearing Foundation, Matlin does not put herself into a box labeled “deaf.” She has played many different sorts of roles, including an expert pollster in the acclaimed TV drama West Wing and an assistant D.A. in Reasonable Doubts. She has written books, worked with charities such as Easter Seals, married a police officer, and had and raised four lovely (hearing) children.

Does it surprise you to know that Marlee Matlin also danced in front of millions of people in the show “Dancing with the Stars”? (Remember, she can hear a little bit, and all deaf people can feel strong beats as vibrations, especially through the floor.)

To the right is a picture of Matlin with her star on Hollywood's Walk of Fame.







Also on this date:














Plan ahead:

Here are my Pinterest pages on August holidayshistorical anniversaries in August, and August birthdays.





February 20, 2013 - Happy Birthday, Sidney Poitier

There are so many pro athletes, musicians, and actors who happen to be black, it's hard to remember—hard to believe, even—that there was a time when these professions were basically closed to people of African or African American descent. But in all these fields, there were “firsts” who strove and tried and worked and cried, and who broke down racial barriers.


Sidney Poitier, who was born in Florida on this date in 1927, lived with his family on Cat Island in the Bahamas and traveled with them as they sold produce from their farm. At age 15 he moved to the U.S. for good—first to Miami with his brother, then, at age 17, to New York City. He earned money by washing dishes at restaurants, and he learned to read from a kind Jewish waiter who sat with him every night for several weeks helping him read a newspaper. He served in the army; when he got out he continued to work as a dishwasher until he landed a spot in the American Negro Theater.

Audiences didn't take to him at first. They expected black actors to sing—and he was tone deaf. They probably didn't understand him very well—because he had a noticeable Bahamian accent.

There was nothing Poitier could do about his tone deafness, but he worked hard to get rid of his accent and dedicated himself to his acting. He started to get good reviews, and soon he was getting noticed in interesting and challenging roles.

Sidney Poitier became the first male black actor to be nominated for a competitive Academy Award, for 1958's The Defiant Ones, and later he became the first black actor to win the Academy Award for Best Actor, for 1963's Lilies of the Field. Later he made such popular films such as Guess Who's Coming to Dinner, To Sir with Love, and In the Heat of the Night. For years he was the only major black actor in the American film industry.
I only saw a few movies when I
was a kid. (I'm talking maybe five
times before I was in college
that I went into a movie theater!)
And two of those movies were
these, starring Sidney Poitier!
















In 2002 Sidney Poitier received an Honorary Academy Award, and in 2009 he received the highest civilian honor in the U.S., the Presidential Medal of Freedom, from President Barack Obama.

Also on this date:


Frederick Douglass Day