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| Kerry Washington as Olivia Pope in Scandal |
I love Grey’s Anatomy. Is it melodramatic? Absolutely. But its dramatic storylines, sharp dialogue and diverse cast have hooked me from the very first episode. So when I discovered writer, producer, showrunner Shonda Rhimes created Scandal, a political thriller TV series revolving around a woman of color, I knew I had to watch.
Kerry Washington (a feminist in real life…huzzah!) plays
Olivia Pope, an assertive attorney who’s a “crisis management expert,” inspired
by former George H.W. Bush administration press aide Judy Smith (who also
happens to be a producer of the show). Olivia runs a small organization of lawyers
who fix scandals and clean up messes like murder charges and infidelity. With a
subtle and nuanced performance, Washington is definitely the best part of the
series.
What’s so interesting (and fucking sad) is that Scandal is the only prime-time TV show
on right now centering around an African American woman. And it's the first network show with a black female lead in 30 years (that is horrifying). I’ve often heard
Washington is a fantastic actor and she was great in the heartbreaking For Colored Girls. Here she commands the screen with confidence and
poise. Olivia is an intelligent, successful and empowered woman. Others look up to her,
revere her and even fear her shrewd insights and relentlessness to finish a job. She’s
demanding, requiring her staff to pull all-nighters and enforcing rules like no
crying in the office and not answering “I don’t know” to a question she asks. Powerful politicians turn to her for advice. She negotiates deals on her terms. While
new employee Quinn (Katie Lowes) idolizes her, Olivia is far from a paragon of perfection.
She’s vulnerable with a messy and complicated love life. She’s flawed, not
always likeable (although I personally love her!) and uses Machiavellian tactics
to complete a job. But this mélange makes her all the more interesting.
Washington
was recently on The Melissa Harris-Perry
Show (one of my absolute favorite feminist icons EVER!!!). She talked
about inclusivity and how she and Harris-Perry, as two women of color on TV,
are “expanding the idea of who ‘We the People’ is.” She also discussed playing
a complex female character on-screen:
“…When
I read this script, I was so blown away by this woman who in one area of her
life, in her professional life, she’s brilliant and sophisticated and in power.
And then in her personal life she’s vulnerable and torn and confused. And I
thought this is an incredible challenge for any actor. But we also don’t get to
do that often -- as women in this business, as people of color in this business
-- to have all of that complexity to explore.”
And she’s right. We too often don’t see complex women,
especially women of color, on-screen.
I loved the political intrigue and the focus on a single, accomplished, career-driven woman. And of course how could I
not be delighted that Henry Ian Cusick (aka dreamy Desmond from LOST) has found a new series. I was thrilled
that the show opens from Quinn's perspective, taking a job with Olivia
because of her reverence for her stellar reputation. I also loved that within
the first 7 minutes, a character derided a potential client because he was an
anti-choice, anti-gay Republican. While many people assume the media suffers
from a liberal bias, too few shows actually discuss abortion or LGBTQ issues.
While most of it is good, some of the dialogue felt a bit staged
or forced. I cringed when Olivia body polices and chastises new employee Quinn for
displaying too much cleavage and when Abby (Darby Stanchfield), one of Olivia’s employees, gleefully
calls a female murder victim a whore…and drops the whore word a few more times
in the next episode too. While there are several female characters (none of whom are really fleshed out yet beyond Olivia), most of the
time they’re interacting with men. Although Olivia does have conversations with
a young woman who claims is having an affair with the president (Olivia’s former
boss) and with the wife of a Supreme Court nominee. No strong female
friendships emerge yet. But we're only 2 episodes into the series. Female friendships comprise the cores of Rhimes’ other
shows, Grey’s Anatomy and Private Practice. So I’m hopeful that we’ll
see more female interaction as the series progresses.
Much like its complicated protagonist, the series isn’t
perfect yet. But it’s got potential. I’m rooting for it because we can never have
too many sharp political dramas. And we can never have too many female leads,
especially with women of color.
Scandal is a big
deal. Not only do we have a woman of color protagonist, we have a series
written and created by a woman of color. With Grey’s Anatomy, Private Practice and Scandal, Rhimes belongs “in
an elite group of TV show runners who have multiple series on the air at the
same time.” In each of Rhimes’ television shows, she puts women at the forefront.
While she has held open casting calls for all ethnicities and has African
American, Latina, Asian American and white women in her shows, she’s never had
a series revolve around a woman of color. Until now.
In an Essence
interview, Kerry Washington said
she felt “lucky” to be a woman of color in Hollywood right now:
"I think it's a really special time to be a woman of color in
this business. The landscape of who has the power is changing. We are in
more influential positions and are able to have a say in the stories
that are told. I feel very lucky to be in the business now..."
But The Grio’s Veronica Miller asserts that it’s hard to
have faith in “Hollywood’s relationship with black actresses:”
“It
will be easier when black actresses become more visible in roles across the
spectrum, (think fantasy hits like Harry Potter, or
romantic dramas like The Notebook)
and not just ones that call for an African-American female.”
Racialicious’ Kendra James points
out the pressure TV shows like Scandal
with black leads face:
“It’s
risky for a network that depends on millions of viewers for advertising revenue
to cast a lead that the majority of viewers (read: white people) may not relate
to. While a show like Pan Am (fondly known as Carefree White Girls Explore the Third World) can fail to take off without consequence, it feels, at times, as if the fate of every black actor and actress on television rides on the success or failure of one show each season.”
Here at Bitch Flicks, we talk a lot about the need for more women in film and TV, in front of and behind the camera. Women comprise only 15% of TV writers and 41%-43% of TV roles are female. But we also desperately need more women of color.
In a time when Trayvon Martin was shot for being a young black man wearing a hoodie…when racist Hunger Games fans can’t empathize with a black character in the film adaptation…when accomplished and ridiculously talented black female actors like Viola Davis have a hard time finding roles…when black female actors must play either maids or drug addicts or sassy best friends…when female actors of color get sidelined from the cover of Vanity Fair -- our society tells people of color over and over and over again implicitly and explicitly that their bodies and their lives don’t matter.
It’s time to change that. It’s time for our media to stop
revolving around white men’s stories and reflect the diversity of our world.

4 comments:
Thank you for this post - you've definitely convinced me to give it a try! I was going to give it a miss because I don't usually like the characters Shonda Rhimes writes (except Bailey, who is awesome) but it sounds like I'd enjoy this a lot more.
Thanks to this post, I just watched both episodes on Hulu. I LOVE IT! Thank you!
And THANK YOU Becky and Angie for your comments! I think this show has a lot of potential (love Kerry Washington!) and it's wonderful to see a black woman front and center on-screen. Oh, and while Christina Yang is my absolute fave on 'Grey's Anatomy,' I adore Bailey too.
yesss! thank you for this! so glad we have TV shows like Scandal and Southland to prove how diverse our black female characters can be!
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