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Viola Davis Talks ‘The Help’, Dismantling Systemic Racism And More As She Covers Vanity Fair’s Latest Issue

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The incredible Viola Davis is the cover star for Vanity Fair August issue.

Viola Davis

The star actress shared with the magazine her journey into Hollywood, protesting systemic racism and the attention her movie ‘The Help’ has gathered after the Black Lives Matter protest broke out.

Describing Viola, the magazine says:
Let me tell you about that voice. I know you’ve heard it. But to be enveloped by it, to have it directed at you, while she is swaddled in plush black terry cloth, at ease in her kitchen, is spine-tingling. Davis’s voice, so much like the stringed instrument she shares a name with, is deeper than you might expect—resonant, warm, filled with purpose. Her presence radiates even through cyberspace.
At times, Davis is delivering a reckoning, or a buried history, or a call to arms.

Read excerpts from the interview below:
Davis has also been busy protesting systemic racism and the killing of Black people in the United States. After the death of George Floyd, she called her friend and neighbour, Octavia Spencer, and told her she planned to march. Due to concerns about the coronavirus and potentially jeopardizing the health of vulnerable family members, they decided to stage their own socially distant protest with a close-knit group

Black Lives Matter protest in the US

We said we’d just be out there for a few minutes, and it ended up being hours, hours… Almost like a big dam bursting open… We got a lot of beeps. We got a few fingers. (She means middle fingers, of course). But this was the first time the fingers did not bother me.

I feel like my entire life has been a protest. My production company is my protest. Me not wearing a wig at the Oscars in 2012 was my protest. It is a part of my voice, just like introducing myself to you and saying, ‘Hello, my name is Viola Davis.’

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How the resurgence of “The Help” reignited backlash

Not a lot of narratives are also invested in our humanity. They’re invested in the idea of what it means to be Black, but…it’s catering to the white audience. The white audience at the most can sit and get an academic lesson into how we are. Then they leave the movie theatre and they talk about what it meant. They’re not moved by who we were.
Atticus Finch was the hero. Tom Robinson was slaughtered and killed in a prison for something he did not do!… He’s not the hero.

 

There’s no one who’s not entertained by The Help. But there’s a part of me that feels like I betrayed myself, and my people, because I was in a movie that wasn’t ready to [tell the whole truth]. The Help, like so many other movies, was “created in the filter and the cesspool of systemic racism.”

voila davis

On the MeToo movement in Hollywood Viola Davis says

We know as women, when you speak up, you’re labeled a bitch—immediately. Unruly—immediately. Just as a woman. As a woman of color, there is very, very, very little you have to do. All you have to do is maybe roll your eyes, and that’s it… If there is a place that is a metaphor for just fitting in and squelching your own authentic voice, Hollywood would be the place.

 

Read the full interview here

 

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