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May The Ability To Whitewash Forever Be In Your Favor

Nearly six months have passed since the final installment of the Harry Potter movies was released, and the Twilight saga will be coming to an end sometime in 2012. With the two highest grossing film series in history wrapping up, Hollywood started searching for the next money-making franchise that could be brought to the big screen. Thankfully, Hollywood found it’s next profitable series with nearly no trouble, when, in 2009, Lionsgate Entertainment acquired the rights to worldwide distribution of Suzanne Collins script for “The Hunger Games.” Filming began in May 2011 and was finished in September. Shortly afterwards, the Internet exploded in a “Hunger Games” frenzy. With Harry Potter and Twilight already moldering away on the shelves, people began counting down the days until March 23rd, the official US release date for “The Hunger Games.”

The movie is based on Suzanne Collin’s book by the same name, which is the first book in the “Hunger Games” trilogy. Set in a generically dystopian future, where the government is all-knowing and all controlling, the books focus on Katniss Everdeen. She’s a bright, brave young woman whose archery skills could put Robin Hood to shame, and whose ability to start a rebellion probably has our own government feeling thankful that she’s nothing more than a fictional character. True, she does come off is a bit of a poster child for feminist readers, but since it’s been a while since a book featuring a female lead character has gotten this big, she’s likable enough. Readers can’t help but cheer her on while she kicks butt, saves her sister’s life, starts a rebellion, gets in touch with her own inner sense of ruthless justice, and, yes, falls in love.

But Katniss had more going for her in terms of appeal than just what she said and did. Many readers fell in love with Katniss for the way she looked, because she was one of the very rare cases of an ambiguously raced character. Fan theories flourished as people speculated on Ms. Everdeen’s nationality, because the only hints Suzanne Collins gave us were dark hair, olive skin, and gray eyes. Was she black? Hispanic? Native American? Indian? Greek? No one knew for certain, although the two most readily accepted fan theories of Katniss’s race label her as either biracial or of Native American descent. However that was the truly wonderful part. No one knew anything about Katniss’s racial heritage, so the possibilities for her ethnicity were endless.

By leaving Katniss’s race vague and open to interpretation, Mrs. Collins did a beautiful thing. Katniss wasn’t just another token black character, but neither was she one of the countless white females who overrun teen fiction. Katniss was someone that everyone could relate to, regardless of race. Whether Caucasian or Hispanic or Indian or biracial, this was a character to whom people could relate. With dark hair, olive skin and gray eyes, Katniss fit the appearance of various different people.

Gary Ross, director of the Hunger Games films, blatantly ignored the chance he was given to put a minority actress up on the big screen. Like many people involved in the media world, Mr. Ross fell prey to a terrible sickness, a disease that has been affecting the film industry since day one. Known as whitewashing, this affliction can be seen when movie producers and directors change the race or ethnicity of a character. Although it can be used to describe situations where a white or Caucasian character has been changed to represent a minority, whitewashing usually refers to instances where a character of color has been recreated to represent the white “majority” of America. The casting call that went out for Katniss left no wiggle room or space for questions. The actress trying out for the lead role of the trilogy “should be Caucasian, between ages 15 and 20, who could portray someone ‘underfed but strong,’ and ‘naturally pretty underneath her tomboyishness.’” (Quote through Racebending.com and Breakdown services)

Never mind the fact that Suzanne Collins never stated what race her character was or that the term “olive skin” is nearly always used to describe people of color. According to Mr. Ross’s vision for “The Hunger Games”, Katniss couldn’t be anything other than white.

Jennifer Lawrence, a natural blond, was told to dye her hair brown to better portray Katniss.

At first, it can be difficult to see why casting Katniss as white is such a damaging decision. Many people ask “Apart from being unfair to minority actresses, what’s wrong making Katniss white?” Well, a lot of things are wrong with making Katniss white. Most importantly, this decision says, loud and clear, that unless explicitly stated to be a person of color, a character is white. Unless a character says to the readers “I’m Native American,” or “I’m black,”, that character is white. Regardless of what that character may look like, or what color that character’s skin may be, if that character is not stated plainly to be something else, a then he or she is white.

But what’s more, young women of color who read this book rejoiced at finally finding a book with a main character to whom they  could relate, especially readers of biracial or Native American descent, who have a particularly hard time finding characters of a similar background. “The Hunger Games” were a step in a right direction, a step forward for young adult books, a glimpse into a future where characters of books are universally relatable.

The movie, on the other hand, were a step backwards, a slip back into the old mentality that white people cannot relate to anyone other than a white characters on the big screen (despite the fact that Hollywood asks people of color to do this with nearly every single movie). And when journalists expressed concern over casting Jennifer Lawrence (a naturally blond hair and blue-eyed actress) as someone with dark skin and black hair, Gary Ross waved worries away with “I promise all the avid fans of The Hunger Games that we can easily deal with Jennifer’s hair color.” (Quote through Racebending.com and Entertainment Weekly). Racial discrimination, apparently, can now be fixed with a bottle of hair dye. And when a similar question was posed to Mrs. Collins herself, the answer she gave was insulting and ignorant, to the point of where one wonders if she knew of the possibilities she created with a racially ambiguous character. “They (Katniss, Peeta and Gale) were not particularly intended to be biracial. It is a time period where hundreds of years have passed from now. There’s been a lot of ethnic mixing. But I think I describe them as having dark hair, grey eyes, and sort of olive skin. You know, we have hair and makeup.” (Quote through Racebending.com and Entertainment Weekly)

These sentences are eerily close to what Hollywood was saying during the thirties and forties, when white actresses and actors taped the corners of their eyes into slants to portray Asian characters. It’s all well and good to say that race doesn’t matter, and that everyone is the same deep down, but in this case, make-up cannot and should not be used to give white actors the “appearance” of colored characters.

In this case, race does matter.

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About the Contributor
Eva Hattie L. Schueler
Eva Hattie L. Schueler, Senior Reporter
Eva Hattie L. Schueler has been working on the Communicator since their freshman year in 2009 and enjoys making sure the Communicator has a steady supply of op-eds. When not writing angry editors, they can be found taking charge of the A&E section and criticing big-name Hollywood films. They aspire to one day write snarky movie reviews for the New Yorker. In their freetime, Eva Hattie enjoys writing papers on cannibals, sociopaths and Wuthering Heights, although not always at the same time.

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May The Ability To Whitewash Forever Be In Your Favor