Malc wrote:
Compare the skin tone of the Aussie lot to Mr Walliams, the aussie lot are not much better than those Spaniards pretending to be "Hamilton's familly"
Malc
The concept of "black face" is an interesting one. Where do you draw the line? What is offensive?
I think it depends on the context and how well something is done. It's not clear cut. The Aussies sticking boot polish on their faces and dancing around like that is at best thoughtless at worst downright offensive. But it's Australia which is actually pretty backwards when it comes to such things. Remember the discussions we had about the "chk chk boom" woman a few months ago?
Recently I've been watching episodes of It Ain't Half Hot Mum on DVD. For those who don't know, it was by Jimmy Croft and David Perry and ran for several series from the early 70's to the early 80's. It's pretty much Dads Army set in the jungle. In fact while Dads Army was loosely based on Jimmy Perry's experiences during the war, It Ain't Half Hot Mum was based on the experience of David Croft.
Although it was an equal hit to Dads Army in its day, it's hardly ever been repeated on the BBC. Why? Well the main Indian character was a white man who was blacked up. Looking at that fact on the surface, it looks cut and dried. Racist sitcom, not to be aired.
Or is it? Back in the early 70's when casting the series, Croft and Perry struggled to get Indian actors. The main Indian role was based on an old man David Croft knew in India. It was a lynchpin role and they were really struggling (as it was they were already having to cast people from other Asian countries in the other Indian roles).
Someone at the BBC mentioned the name Michael Bates to them. Bates was a well known character actor of the era who was at that time playing the "third man" in Last of the Summer Wine. Crucially Bates had been born in India and had only come to the UK after partition. Fluent in Hindi and also able to speak Urdu, during the war he had fought in an Indian only regiment.
Bates agreed to take on the role, basing his performance around someone he knew while he was growing up. He also insisted on adding his own Indian jewelry to his costume for authenticy. He was also able to throw authentic lines of Hindi into the scripts so Indian characters could be seen talking to each other in an authentic way. I saw an interview with that guy from Goodness Gracious Me a few years ago when he commented that the first time he ever saw Indians talking realistically to each other was in It Ain't Half Hot Mum and it was only years later he realised it wasn't a real Indian!
Now I'm not saying in 2009 that you could do that, but what I am saying is that in 2009 we still get endless repeats of bloody Dads Army when there is an arguably better sitcom sitting in the archive.