Till actor Danielle Deadwyler says racism, misogynoir played into Oscar snub - Action News
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Entertainment

Till actor Danielle Deadwyler says racism, misogynoir played into Oscar snub

Danielle Deadwyler says racism and misogynoir played a role in this year's Academy Awards nominations, where she and Viola Davis were overlooked in the best actress category.

Snub partly fuelled backlash to Andrea Riseborough's Best Actress nomination

A Black woman standing at a podium speaks into a microphone.
Danielle Deadwyler accepts the breakthrough performance by an actress award for Till at the 34th annual Palm Springs International Film Festival Awards Gala on Thursday, Jan. 5, 2023, in Palm Springs, Calif. Deadwyler said in an interview that misogynoir and racism played a part in her Oscar snub. (Chris Pizzello/The Associated Press)

Danielle Deadwyler says racism and misogynoir played a role in this year's Academy Awards nominations, where she and Viola Davis were overlooked in the best actress category.

Going into Oscar nominations last month, Deadwyler was widely seen as a likely nominee for her lauded performance as Mamie Till-Mobley in Till.But the best actress field, perhaps the most competitive category this year, didn't shake out as expected: Both Deadwyler and Davis were left out.

Davis, a four-time Oscar nominee and one-time winner for her performance in Fences,had been celebrated for the historical epic The Woman King.Deadwyler had been nominated by the Screen Actors Guild Awards and the BAFTAs in the run-up to Oscar nominations, and won best lead performance at the Gotham Awards.

That two prominent Black actors were among the most striking snubs seen by some as a reflection of racial bias in the film industry.

The day after the Oscar nominations, Tilldirector Chinonye Chukwu posted on Instagram: "We live in a world and work in industries that are so aggressively committed to upholding whiteness and perpetuating an unabashed misogyny towards Black women."

Asked for her reaction to that comment on an episode of the Kermode & Mayo's Takepodcast posted on Friday, Deadwyler strongly agreed with Chukwu.

"We're talking about people who perhaps chose not to see the film we're talking about misogynoir like it comes in all kinds of ways, whether it's direct or indirect," said Deadwyler. "It impacts who we are. I think the question is more on people who are living in whiteness, white people's assessment of the spaces they are privileged by."

Misogynoir, a term coined by the Black feminist author and activist Moya Bailey, refers to misogyny and prejudice directed at Black women.

"We've seen it exist in a governmental capacity," added Deadwyler. "It can exist on a societal capacity, be it global or national."

Backlash to Riseborough's nomination

Actress Andrea Riseborough in a scene from the film To Leslie.
Andrea Riseborough received a Best Actress nomination for her performance in the film To Leslie after an army of celebrities endorsed her, sparking a conversation about how money, race, status and connections can influence awards campaigns. (Momentum Films)

That Deadwyler and Davis were edged out of an Oscar nomination is part of what fuelled the initial backlash to the star-studded grassroots campaign for actress Andrea Riseborough. After a string of celebrity-hosted screenings (a regular feature of Hollywood's awards season), Riseborough unexpectedly landed a nomination for her performance in the indie drama To Leslie,alongside Michelle Yeoh (Everything Everywhere All at Once), Cate Blanchett (Tar), Ana de Armas (Blonde) and Michelle Williams (The Fabelmans).

After the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences announced an inquiry into the Riseborough campaign, it found no reason to rescind her nomination or take any other action though Bill Kramer, academy president, said some social media and outreach campaigning tactics "caused concern."

Canadian entertainment reporter Teri Hart explains how the controversy around Andrea Riseborough's Best Actress Oscar nomination for the little-known film To Leslie came to be, and what happens next. Plus, with The Last Of Us dominating our Sunday night viewing schedule, Elamin catches up with Felix Gillette and John Koblin, authors of It's Not TV: The Spectacular Rise, Revolution, and Future of HBO, to talk about what makes the streaming giant so good at getting people's attention and keeping it.

But conversation has continued on how money, race, status and connections can influence awards campaigns. The Woman Kingdirector Gina Prince-Bythewood said earlier this week that she questioned how people in the film industry are using their social capital.

"People like to say, 'Well, Viola and Danielle had studios behind them.' But we just very clearly saw that social capital is more valuable than that," Prince-Bythewood told The Hollywood Reporter. "That type of power is exercised in more casual ways in social circles, where folks are your friends or your acquaintances. There may be diversity on your sets but not in your lives. And Black women in this industry, we don't have that power."

Deadwyler, whoThe Associated Press named one of the breakthrough performers of last year, said on the podcast it was everyone's responsibility to ensure an equitable playing field.

"Nobody is absolved of not participating in racism and not knowing that there is a possibility of its lingering effect on the spaces and the institution," she said.