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Wednesday, February 03, 2010
Precious, The Good Girl, North Country: How Hollywood makes beautiful actresses look working class
Slate Magazine: "Every now and again, Hollywood makes a go at depicting the working class, often around Oscar season and usually to hilarious effect. The story is generally some slow-moving, minor-key piece involving ordinary folks struggling with ordinary problems in ordinary parts of the country. To offset the dreariness of such an errand, the lead character—a waitress, maid, or stripper with kid/husband problems—is usually played by a jaw-droppingly attractive star, who wins positive press for being willing to subvert her beauty in order to portray one of the great unwashed doing whatever it is they do out there in the dull diabetic landmass between Los Angeles and New York City. (Hiring ugly people to play working class is a job best left to the English.)"
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I'm not entirely sure if I've just completely lost faith in the "acting" skills of most Hollywood actors or that this article is a little farfetched, but I'm hoping that more thought is put into a persona than a sweater and intermittent swearing. What a character looks like and what class they are isn't so huge of a gap, at least in my mind, that you need to intentionally make stars "ugly" to have them look middle class. Being middle class puts you in a bracket for what clothing choices you might make--but it doesn't mean that all of middle America kicks back Rolling Rocks and plays darts.
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