When it comes to dramatic actors and specifically Black dramatic actors, you canโt talk about the genre without mentioning the name Lynn Whitfield. From Eveโs Bayou to Greenleaf, the legendary actress has been a force onscreen for years and only continues to get better.
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But as she discussed on Saturday, during SpringHill and CNN Originalsโ Clips and Conversation event celebrating their forthcoming docuseries, See It Loud: The History of Black Television, roles for Black women werenโt always as complex and fully-fleshed out as they are now.
โOne of the ways that it changed is that when I started auditioning, I was auditioning for Aunjanue [Ellis] roles, and of course now itโs more complex, more mature women,โ she said during a panel discussion alongside comedian Deon Cole, , series co-executive producer Courtney Whitaker and series showrunner Jodi Gomes.
โBut what has happened in drama isโover the 30 or 40 years that you all are talking aboutโis magnificent. Itโs magnificent that Shondaland came along and started talking about women who were accomplished in their own rights, in certain fields with complex lives and juicy stories and very free with their sensuality and sexuality.โ
She continued:
โI think dramas early onโthere was not much sensuality with Black women in television. It was kind of like the [sculptor] Michaelangelo, his women were never sexy. But the dudes were like โheyyyyโ (laughs). So early on, I think,โnot true in the movies because went to Blaxploitation and all that. But in television, they were really terrified with womenโs sexuality. We got all wonderful things, but never just a woman being full of herself. And I think you see more of that now. So that is glorious. Thatโs the women part.
But I just think now weโve gone from maybe the stories of our struggle, from thr struggle of outer resistance and more stories about the struggle from within. Because, I donโt know if yโall have, but I have been to Africa. We are complex all by ourselves, without anybody tampering with us. We are a complex, interesting people. And I think now in television, thereโs more possibility of just talking about us without having to talk about the opposition.
In addition to the conversation, the event previewed exclusive clips from the forthcoming five-part docuseries which will explore the journey from Black televisionโs origins in sitcoms like The Jeffersons, to blockbuster dramas like Roots, the emerging opportunities for Black voices in sci-fi and horror, and examine the cultural impact of the reality and unscripted genre on Black culture.
See It Loud: The History of Black Television premieres Sunday, July 9 on CNN.
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