I'm glad for her and little black girls. I still wish I could say little black 
boys would have something to celebrate this weekend... 

Until we make and distribute our own stuff, I guess we'll keep having to deal 
with white folk saying no one wants to see two black people have a romance on 
screen... 



I'll go to support it, because I'm pleased to see all the young girls so 
excited, but I hope like hell this is a first step and Disney gets it 
*right*--or someone does--and gives us a black prince as well as princess next 
time. 


----- Original Message ----- 
From: "brent wodehouse" <brent_wodeho...@thefence.us> 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Sunday, December 6, 2009 6:23:43 PM GMT -05:00 US/Canada Eastern 
Subject: [scifinoir2] 'Princess' star reduced to tears 

  




http://jam.canoe.ca/Movies/2009/12/04/12041171-sun.html 

'Princess' star reduced to tears 

By KEVIN WILLIAMSON -- Sun Media 

LOS ANGELES -- Mickey Mouse may be black and white, but that doesn't make 
Disney's The Princess and the Frog any less of a landmark. 

Yes, the titular frog is green. But for a studio famed for Snow White, 
Cinderella and Sleeping Beauty, it's the identity of its newest princess 
that reduced its star, Anika Noni Rose, to tears. The character she 
voices, Tiana, is African-American. 

"I just started crying. Even talking about it now, I'm such a wuss," says 
the 37-year-old actress, recalling the first time she saw her animated 
alter-ego projected on a big screen at a New York toy fair. 

"It was the most amazing, awesome. I don't even know if I have real words 
for it ... This is something I've always dreamed of doing." 

Yet even while this self-described "Disney geek" dreamed as a child, she 
remained realistic. 

"I do remember wondering to myself whether there would ever be a Chocolate 
Brown and not just Snow White. I mean, they named it (Snow White)! But I 
didn't necessarily feel deprived. When you're a child, you don't know. 
You're living in your world." 

Voicing Tiana, not surprisingly, exceeds all expectations, she says. "I 
could have been a dandelion and I would have been really happy. So this is 
like when your dreams take off and become bigger than what you had 
imagined." 

In the musical comedy, which will also mark the comeback of 2D hand-drawn 
animation when it opens Friday, Tiana is a waitress in 1920s, jazz-fuelled 
New Orleans whose lifelong ambition is to open her own restaurant. But 
those plans -- and everything else -- are derailed when she meets a 
Brazilian prince (Bruno Campos) who has been transformed into a frog by a 
Voodoo-wielding con man. 

But instead of returning the prince to human form when she kisses him, 
she's turned into a frog as well. Together, the amphibious pair, aided by 
a trumpet-playing alligator and a Cajun firefly, fight to reverse the 
spell. 

For Terrence Howard, who voices Tiana's caring hard-working father, the 
role presents obvious parallels both to the present-day political 
landscape and his own personal life. 

"When they began production on this film, the initial talks on this film, 
Barack Obama wasn't in the White House. So it's very apropos we have two 
African-American princesses at the same time this movie is coming out. 
It's a happy accident, a wonderful coincidence. But there's always been 
nobility in every culture and every race, just the same way there's 
geniuses in every culture and every race. It's nice to have Disney 
platform that." 

He adds, "It's also one of the easiest roles I've ever done because I've 
got two daughters who are my princesses ... (Playing the part) came from a 
natural inclination to teach my own children." 

Still, The Princess and the Frog remains a showcase for Rose, who appeared 
in Dreamgirls, won a Tony for the Broadway musical, Caroline, Or Change 
and starred in the HBO series The No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency. None of 
those roles compare to the impact -- culturally and on her career -- The 
Princess and the Frog may present. And she admits she still isn't prepared 
to be called a role model for young girls. 

"That's difficult. I'm honoured that people would think of me as a role 
model. On the other hand, I think that it's sort of dangerous to choose a 
person and lift them up so high -- because you know, I'm going to play a 
role that somebody doesn't like. At some point, they're going to be like, 
'She was awful!' I think if we can separate those things and think I like 
how she handles her career and how she handles herself as a person, then 
I'm honoured." 

She believes the film itself will "mean different things to different 
people, as they sit in that theatre. It will mean different things, 
depending on what time they grew up in. For my nephew, it will be the 
norm. He will think nothing of it. It will be his first princess -- period. 

"For my mother, it will be something she's been waiting for ... And for my 
grandmother, it will be something she never thought would happen. Each 
person sitting in that theatre will have a different journey that they're 
bringing to the story and it will make the story different for them. 

"So I think that's something that's really beautiful about what's being 
made. Disney is Americana and we have simply opened a new chapter in 
Americana -- something that's been here for a very long time but hasn't 
necessarily been shared. So in that respect, it's just another step in the 
completion of the story of what America is in this fantasy world." 

For his part, while Howard is thrilled with the new ground the movie 
breaks, he also observes, "Disney has always covered most of the world in 
the films they have made because the little mermaid was a fish but every 
little girl could relate to that fish." 


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