India.Aire Perfectly Explains The Importance Of Appearance In The Nina Simone Biopic
India.Aire, one of the early fan picks to play the late Nina Simone, is speaking out again on an array of talking points surrounding the film starring Zoe Saldana.
In 2012, the singer penned a letter to Simone’s fan site after the first images of Saldana showed her in darker makeup and a fake nose. After watching an early version of the film, .Aire spoke to The Hollywood Reporter on what was done right and why Nina’s appearance is bigger than the public may think. The singer also explained why claims of Saldana not being “black enough” isn’t correct.
“It’s messy to put it that way,” she said. “I think the best way to say it is that they cast her against type and went too far to make her fit. It’s not my place to say how Zoe Saldana perceives herself, and I can’t say how anybody else perceives her either. In my open letter, I called it “black(er) face.” I didn’t know what to call it either. I have heard that there were black actors who played blackface, back when people did that. I think blackface was putting charcoal on your face and doing a certain type of act on stage, the shucking and jiving. You could be black or white. [The Nina portrayal] is a caricature. You had to put a whole other face on someone’s face.”
India.Aire, one of the early fan picks to play the late Nina Simone, is speaking out again on an array of talking points surrounding the film starring Zoe Saldana.
In 2012, the singer penned a letter to Simone’s fan site after the first images of Saldana showed her in darker makeup and a fake nose. After watching an early version of the film, .Aire spoke to The Hollywood Reporter on what was done right and why Nina’s appearance is bigger than the public may think. The singer also explained why claims of Saldana not being “black enough” isn’t correct.
“It’s messy to put it that way,” she said. “I think the best way to say it is that they cast her against type and went too far to make her fit. It’s not my place to say how Zoe Saldana perceives herself, and I can’t say how anybody else perceives her either. In my open letter, I called it “black(er) face.” I didn’t know what to call it either. I have heard that there were black actors who played blackface, back when people did that. I think blackface was putting charcoal on your face and doing a certain type of act on stage, the shucking and jiving. You could be black or white. [The Nina portrayal] is a caricature. You had to put a whole other face on someone’s face.”