themakeupgallery blog

Dans la peau d’un noir update

Posted in 'reality TV', TV shows, blackface by themakeupgalleryblogger on January 30th, 2007

I have just discovered that one of the participants, Laurent Richier, is an actor: check out his Blog.

The same thing happened with Black.White. — Bruno Wurgel, teacher, turned out to be Bruno Marcotulli, bit part actor and teacher, and Rose Wurgel turned out to be Rose Bloomfield, wannabe actress.

I’m not sure what that means for the honesty of the show but it sure doesn’t do much for it’s perceived integrity. Anyway, it’s starting tonight on Canal+ (France) so you can judge for yourselves. Please let me know what you think of it if you watch it.  

Dans la peau d’un noir

Posted in 'reality TV', TV shows, blackface by themakeupgalleryblogger on January 26th, 2007

Famillie RichierDans la peau d’un noir (official site & themakeupgallery feature) is a French docu-tainment TV show inspired by — or maybe franchised from — Actual Reality’s Black.White. (official site & themakeupgallery feature).

Like Black.White. it takes a black family and a white family and swaps their apparent racial identity with makeup. It then films them in ‘real-life’ situations, and examines their reactions using the standard tools of reality TV (video diaries, the hot-house environment of sharing a house, etc).

Famillie Richier - transformedHaving, at last, seen Black.White. on DVD I remain as unconvinced about its serious, investigative value and less convinced of its ‘reality’ than I was when I originally posted. How Dans la peau d’un noir shapes up remains to be seen: though not by me as I don’t get Canal+.

If anyone watches it when it shows next week, I’d be interested to hear your views (or to see better images of the makeup.). I’d also like to know if there are any other international franchised versions forthcoming.

Is Blackface Ever Okay?

Posted in 'reality TV', TV shows, blackface, makeups by themakeupgalleryblogger on February 2nd, 2006

Blackface and yellowface makeups have always made me cringe.
Rose WurgelRose Wurgel (in makeup)
I can live with a lot of movie fat-suits - though not the cheap fat jokes. But blackface and yellowface are different. It’s bad enough in a dramatic role that avoids stereotyping but when it’s done for fun in a “fakeover” show it’s really disturbing. It’s odd because I don’t see anything wrong in and of itself with an actress playing a character whose ethnic origin is other than her own (anymore than I objected to Rock Hudson playing all those straight roles) but…

The whole issue is entangled (possibly inseparably) with the issues of how non-whites have been portrayed in films and, for decades, the practical exclusion of non-white actors and actresses from the Hollywood system But it’s more than that.
Renee SparksRenee Sparks (in makeup)
There’s a lot of interesting information on the issues around yellowface and blackface and their ignoble history in the movies in Robert Ito’s ‘A Certain Slant‘ (Bright Lights Film Journal) and at Bambizzoozled.

So what about the forthcoming FX Networks show Black.White. which according to the press release ‘examines race with an extraordinary approach by putting new faces on an African-American family, the Sparks, and Caucasian family, the Wurgels’? The BBC did something similar, though far less ambitous, in a show called Trading Races a couple of years ago but I was deeply unconvinced that anything of value came out of it (or by the makeups for that matter).
Carmen WurgelCarmen Wurgel (in makeup)
But Black.White. does come with powerful backing from Ice Cube. The makeups are by Keith Vanderlaan, and the first publicity images showing Rose Wurgel transformed into a black girl looked convincing; I am less sure about about the more recent images showing the transformation of Renee Sparks into a white woman.

Hopefully, Black.White. will live up to its aspiration to be extraordinarily provocative, entertaining and deep. It’s a big ask. One thing that worries me is that if (maybe especially if) it is even half-way decent it will open the floodgates for a whole set of valueless black-for-a-day investigations like the recent plague of ‘investigative’ fat-suits.