
Coming out this week is the story of one woman's courage and sadness. It's the story of a reporter's death and the details that led to his murder, told through the eyes of his wife, Marianne. Marianne was in Afghanistan and pregnent when her husband Daniel was beheaded. Now comes her story to the big screen, "A Mighty Heart". Playing Marianne will be Oscar winner Angelina Jolie. The interesting thing about this is that Marianne is Afro-Cuban!
While race is NOT a factor in the film, and Jolie gives an Oscar caliber performance, I have go on record and ask why couldn't they cast a African American or Latina actress for the role. Granted, with Brad Pitt producing and Jolie starring in the film, visibility is at the highest level for the film, BUT when there is severely a lack of leading roles for Black and Latina actresses, a role like this would have done wonders for anyone of color. According to the folks of Paramount Vantage, it was Marianne's choice for Jolie to play her. If I had a choice to pick an actress to play Marianne when the book was first brought to be made into a film, I'd probably would have gone with Thandie Newton. She's talented, and credible, and would have given an equal perfomance as Jolie. It may not have had the same marketability, but I doubt anyone would have complained.
A colleague of mine, Edward Douglas from
www.comingsoon.net recently interviewed the director Michael Winterbottom and asked the question that most folks wants to know about the race issue. "I'm not sure how much you'd been reading in various places about perceptions of the movie, but there seems to be somewhat of a stir in the African-American community questioning the fact that you had Angelina playing the role of Mariane with darkened skin, rather than getting someone who already had dark skin such as Thandie Newton or even a Latina actress."

Michael Winterbottom: I can't really understand that. How would a Latina woman be more like Mariane, who's French, half Dutch, half Cuban and a quarter Chinese. It just seems incredible generic, like a non-American is somehow more like another non-American than an American, which is kind of bizarre. I mean Angie's mother is French, but I think the most tricky for Angelina becoming Mariane was the accent, so I think if there was any issue, it would like, "Why not get a French woman to play the part?" But then of course, you got another set of issues, because the whole film is English. From my point of view, I first met Angelina in Namibia and it was with Mariane, and when I got there, they already knew each other and were obviously friends. Mariane trusted Angelina, and apparently--I hadn't realized it at the time--but Mariane said in France at the press conference in Cannes that she was the person that asked Angelina to play the part. So Mariane thought she was the best person to play the part. It's really incredibly weird in America that you kind of feel that anyone who's not American is the same. It's a very strange thing.
"I'm not sure if it's an American vs. foreign thing. I think it's more about getting someone less high profile or someone who looks more like Mariane without having to use make-up."
Winterbottom: As I say, from my point of view, it was perfect, because it's incredibly difficult to tell a story about someone who's a real person who's alive. When I got there, they clearly were very similar people, they're friends and when they talked about, not only about the film or Mariane's experience, but when then talked about how they see their roles as women and their roles as journalists or actors, they're very similar people. As I say, Mariane actually wanted Angelina to play the part, so it was perfect.
Nevertheless, the choice was made and as stated before, Jolie gives an incredible performance. The story is from Marianne's book and it follows her ordeal of learning of Daniel's kipnapping and eventual death. With all the big studio films capturing the box office attention, hopefully there's room for people to see this riveting and heavily dramatic film. Not just for Jolie's perfomance, but for the story itself.
Comments: (176)
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By: ubee on 6/18/2007 1:07PM
I see this as being very wrong, but that’s just my opinion. I think race plays a big part in making a story believable. Race is how America and Hollywood has always portrayed its stories. The lady Angelina Jolie is playing doesn’t have a problem with it and it’s her story, so I guess its ok. I know personal I would hate to see Robert De Niro play Malcolm X in a movie or Denzel Washington play the God Father. I think this is a slap in the face to all those actors of color, who can’t play white people in movies regardless of their acting abilities. I’ve seen Jennifer Lopez play a white woman in nearly all her movies, but I have never seen Halle Berry who is half white cast in the same way.
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By: Miss Jay on 6/18/2007 2:10PM
Well there could be a few reasons why Mariane chose Angelina. For one, Mariane was married to a white man, two-she may have dark skin but she may not adapt her African/Black side of her heritage/roots. Third-all of the media attention Angelina has been getting lately will make the movie much more popular. I am sure Tiger Woods would not choose an African American actor to play him. I agree that someone who perhaps may have darken skin or resembled her the most without the hair and make up could have played her role. But that's hollywood for you!!
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By: Satin on 6/18/2007 4:50PM
I understand that Marianne chose her but it is the mindset behind choosing her that I am concerned about. I still think it says loud and clear that women of color are not quite good enough in Hollywood. But a white woman (a home wrecker at that) is good enough and we'll just darken her skin a little. I would have loved to see the movie because the book was interesting, but I think I'll pass or maybe I'll go to the corner store and see if the bootleg guy has it for $3.00 and talk him down to $1.50. Anybody want to buy the book? .75 is my final offer.
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By: Lisa on 6/18/2007 7:55PM
they could have got Thandie newton to play the part.
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By: Gee on 6/18/2007 9:54PM
I love my people no matter where they're from in this world. But sometimes I get really upset when I read some totally stupid mess like this. We're becoming worse than those racist that once oppressed us. Try looking at this from a human perspective please! This woman saw her husband decapitated. Have any of you ever seen that? I'll tell you what. Go look Daniel Pearl or Nick Berg up on the net. Watch those devils decapitate these men in the name of Allah. Oh yes, it's there for everyone to see but I guess that really doesn't matter does it? Watching someone being murdered right in front of your eyes, the screams, the gurgling and choking on their own blood while these maniacs are just sawing their heads off. Watch those snuff films please and imagine if that was your husband or loved one. And then if you don't feel like complete idiots for posting such stupidity then your not even human. Have we sank that low as a people? Have we become that petty? Wow! So a white woman has her skin darkened and her hair tight and curly to play the role of her friend who's husband was brutally murdered, HER FRIEND!!!! I'm lost for words and just disgusted really.
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By: Mki on 6/18/2007 11:43PM
Angelina identifies as part Native American Indian (Iroquois) via her late mother, though her dad Jon Voight has disputed this claim:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/health/main.jhtml?xml=/health/2001/10/02/fmjoli02.xml
If the claim is true, then maybe she, like Johnny Depp, Dean Cain, etc., is a performer of color who "passes."
Winterbottom could have gone with Thandie, Gina Torres, or Rosario Dawson, anong many others. Angelina's celebrity status, and her tendency to draw focus from other performers (e.g. Winona Ryder in _Girl, Interrupted_), might have hurt the film artistically, as well as politically. Lisa Schwarzbaum says in an _Entertainment Weekly_ review (http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20042379,00.html):
"...because A Mighty Heart stars Jolie — her skin somehow polished to reflect Mariane's Afro-Cuban/Dutch complexion, her wig a masterpiece of a casually corkscrewed updo, her accent the work of a good student — it's impossible not to be conscious of her performance at every turn. Her intensity, combined with the aura of her celebrity, becomes the story — and the character of the actual Danny Pearl (Dan Futterman, a spot-on physical match) recedes in importance."
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By: Sandi on 6/19/2007 12:45AM
Is it any different han Al Pacino playing Tony Montana?
Frankly, she played the part to the hilt.
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By: bella on 6/19/2007 10:18AM
Please, please.....
I'm so sick and tired of African Americans claiming every pitch of brown they see in people around the world. get over your insecure selves, Mrs Daniel Pearl doesn't belong to you. niether of her parents can from American. She's was born and breed in Europe and to that she belongs. If she choose to embrace another country: it would be Cuba and you African Americans don't belong to Cuba nor do you speak Spanish or any other tongue for that matter. Most of you barely speak English: That's a total shame. You can't even figure out what to call yourselves. Black, Colored, Black , Afro American , African American. You have the nerve to want to tell someone Whom is mixed race, from Europe, speaks several Languages, well traveled,whom is and will never be a part of your world. That you consider her to black like you... You have got to be kidding me.. You guys need to learn to really love yourselves and get your shit together. Your really a sad group of people. ( I do mean you African American ones ) Embrace your own Black selves... You might want to start by going to Africa and seeing what true Black beauty looks like. You'll find that it doesn't look Mrs Daniel Pearl or Many of the other mixed race people you all so desperately want to be Black.... Learn to love who you are.... Self hate is killing you by the thousands.
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By: Chee on 6/19/2007 12:10PM
In response to bella who posted a comment at 10:18. I am an American of color. Though no race is completely white or black, I consider myself to be an American, even though I am a combination of many races. My mother who is both black and native american, (yes, native american, as in one of my grandparents recieve a check from the government on a monthly basis) and her father black. My father on the the other hand is a black cuban, darker than most black people. I am both fluet in Spanish and English (no accent) So, there are black people in Cuba, and France, Italy, Japan, etc. The point of this story is to say that there are more actresses of color, non-americans, that could have done the role a little more justice (ex. Thandie Newton)Just because she's French, that doesn't make her white.
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By: willa on 6/19/2007 12:41PM
Seriously, has anyone seen a photo of Mariane Pearl's mother? I am a dark-skinned African American woman, and she is just as dark as I am. I would never doubt for a second that Mariane Pearl is a black woman. Whom are we kidding here? Clearly, this woman Angelina Jolie is portraying is a black woman, and the mere fact that she chooses Angelna to portray her reflects a lot of self-hatred.
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