Blackface
 |
This reproduction of a 1900 minstrel show poster, originally published by the Strobridge Litho Co., shows the transformation from white to "black". |
Blackface is a style of
theatrical makeup that originated in the
United States, used to affect the countenance of an
iconic,
racist,
American archetype - that of the
darky or
coon. Blackface also refers to a genre of musical and comedic theatrical presentation in which blackface makeup is worn.
White blackface performers in the past used burnt
cork and later greasepaint or
shoe polish to blacken their skin and exaggerate their lips, often wearing
woolly
wigs, gloves,
tails, or ragged clothes to complete the transformation. Later,
black artists also performed in blackface.
Blackface was an important performance tradition in the
American theater for over 100 years and was also popular overseas. Stereotypes embodied in the stock characters of blackface
minstrelsy played a significant role in cementing and proliferating racist images, attitudes and perceptions worldwide. In some quarters, the
caricatures that were the legacy of blackface persist to the present day and are a cause of ongoing controversy.
By the mid-20th century, changing attitudes about race and racism effectively ended the prominence of blackface performance in the U.S. and elsewhere. However, it remains in relatively limited use as a theatrical device, mostly outside the U.S., and is more commonly used today as edgy social commentary or
satire. Perhaps the most enduring effect of blackface is the precedent it established in the introduction of
African American culture to an international audience, albeit through a distorted lens. Blackface minstrelsy's groundbreaking
appropriation, exploitation, and assimilation of African-American cultureâ€"as well as the inter-ethnic artistic collaborations that stemmed from itâ€"were but a prologue to the lucrative packaging, marketing, and dissemination of African-American cultural expression and its myriad derivative forms in today's world popular culture.
Lewis Hallam, Jr., an
Anglo-American
comedic actor, brought blackface to prominence as a theatrical device when playing the role of an inebriated black man onstage in 1789. The play attracted notice, and other performers adopted the style. White
comedian Thomas D. Rice later popularized blackface, introducing the song "
Jump Jim Crow" accompanied by a dance in his stage act in 1828. The song had a
syncopated rhythm and purportedly recreated the dancing of a crippled,
black stable hand, Jim Cuff, or "Jim Crow", whom Rice had seen in
Cincinnati, Ohio:
First on de heel tap,:Den on the toe:Every time I wheel about:I jump Jim Crow.:Wheel about and turn about:An' do j's so.:And every time I wheel about,:I jump Jim Crow.:::â€" 1823 sheet music
 |
This postcard, published circa 1908, shows a white minstrel team. While both are wearing wigs, the man on the left is in blackface and drag. |
Rice traveled the
U.S., performing under the
pseudonym "Daddy Jim Crow". The name later became attached to
statutes that further codified the reinstitution of
segregation and
discrimination after
Reconstruction.
Initially, blackface performers were part of traveling troupes who performed in
minstrel shows. In addition to music and dance, minstrel shows featured comical skits in which performers portrayed buffoonish, lazy, superstitious black characters who were cowardly and lascivious, lusted after white women, who stole, lied pathologically, and mangled the English language. Such troupes in the early days of minstrelsy were all male, so cross-dressing white men also played black women who often were either unappealingly and grotesquely mannish; in the matronly,
mammy mold; or highly sexually provocative. At the time, the stage also featured comic
stereotypes of conniving, venal
Jews; cheap
Scotsmen; drunken
Irishmen; ignorant white
southerners; gullible rural folk and the like.
Minstrel shows were a very popular show business phenomenon in the U.S. from 1828 through the 1930s, also enjoying some popularity in the
UK and in other parts of
Europe in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. As a result, the genre played an important role in shaping perceptions of and prejudices about blacks generally and
African Americans in particular. Some social commentators have stated that blackface provided an outlet for whites' fear of the unknown and the unfamiliar, and a socially acceptable way of expressing their feelings and fears about race and control. Writes Eric Lott in
Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class, "The black mask offered a way to play with the collective fears of a degraded and threateningâ€"and maleâ€"Other while at the same time maintaining some symbolic control over them." (Lott, 25)
White minstrel shows featured white performers pretending to be blacks, playing their versions of black music and speaking
ersatz black dialects. Reminiscing about such shows he had seen in his youth, American humorist and author
Mark Twain commented in dictated notes almost 50 years later:
…I suppose, the real nigger-showâ€"the genuine nigger-show, the extravagant nigger-showâ€"the show which to me had no peer and whose peer has not yet arrived, in my experience. We have the grand opera; and I have witnessed, and greatly enjoyed, the first act of everything which Wagner created, but…the nigger-show [is] a standard and a summit to whose rarefied altitude the other forms of musical art may not hope to reach.
The songs of
northern composer
Stephen Foster figured prominently in blackface minstrel shows of the period. Though written in dialect and certainly politically incorrect by today's standards, his later songs were free of the ridicule and blatantly racist caricatures that typified other songs of the genre. Foster's works treated
slaves and the
South in general with an often cloying sentimentality that appealed to audiences of the day.
By 1840, African-American performers also were performing in blackface makeup.
Frederick Douglass wrote in 1849 about one such troupe,
Gavitt's Original Ethiopian Serenaders: "It is something to be gained when the colored man in any form can appear before a white audience." Nonetheless, Douglass generally abhorred blackface and was one of the first people to write against the institution of blackface minstrelsy, condemning it as racist in nature, with inauthentic, northern, white origins.
When all-black minstrel shows began to proliferate the 1860s, however, they in turn often were billed as "authentic" and "the real thing". Despite often smaller budgets and smaller venues, their public appeal sometimes rivalled that of white minstrel troupes. In the execution of authentic black music and the
percussive,
polyrhythmic tradition of "pattin' Juba", when the only
instruments performers used were their hands and feet, clapping and slapping their bodies and shuffling and stomping their feet, black troupes particularly excelled. One of the most successful black minstrel companies was
Sam Hague's Slave Troupe of Georgia Minstrels, managed by
Charles Hicks. This company eventually was taken over by
Charles Callendar. The Georgia Minstrels toured the United States and abroad and later became
Haverly's Colored Minstrels.
African-American blackface productions also contained buffoonery and comedy, but for many black artists it was simply good-natured self-parody. In the early days of African-American involvement in theatrical performance, blacks could not perform without blackface makeup, regardless of how dark-skinned they were, but blackface minstrelsy was a practical and often relatively lucrative livelihood when compared to the menial labor to which most blacks were relegated. Owing to the discrimination of the day, "corking up" (or "blacking up") provided an often singular opportunity for African-American musicians, actors, and dancers to practice their crafts. Some minstrel shows, particularly when performing outside the South, also managed subtly to poke fun at the racist attitudes and double standards of white society or champion the
abolitionist cause. It was through blackface performers, white and black, that the richness and exuberance of
African-American music, humor, and dance first reached mainstream, white audiences in the U.S. and abroad.
Blackface remained a popular theatrical device well into the 20th century, crossing over from the minstrel troupe touring circuit to
vaudeville, to
motion pictures, then to
television. In the
Theater Owners Booking Association (TOBA), an all-black vaudeville circuit organized in 1909, blackface acts were a popular staple. Called "Toby" for short, performers also nicknamed it "Tough on Black Actors" (or, variously, "Artists" or "Asses"), because earnings were so meager. Still, TOBA headliners could make a very good living, and even for lesser players, TOBA provided fairly steady, more desirable work than generally was available elsewhere. Blackface served as a springboard for hundreds of artists and entertainersâ€"black and whiteâ€"many of whom later would go on to find work in other performance traditions. In fact, one of the most famous stars of Haverly's European Minstrels was
Sam Lucas, who became known as the "Grand Old Man of the
Negro Theatre". It was Lucas who later played the title role in the first cinematic production of
Harriet Beecher Stowe's
Uncle Tom's Cabin.
Many well-known entertainers of stage and screen
also performed in blackface, including
Al Jolson,
Eddie Cantor,
Bing Crosby and
Bob Hope, as well as actor and comedian
Bert Williams, who was the first black performer in vaudeville and on
Broadway. But apart from cultural references such as those seen in theatrical cartoons, onstage blackface essentially was eliminated in the U.S. post-vaudeville, when public sensibilities regarding
race began to change and blackface became increasingly associated with
racism and
bigotry.
 |
Florence Kate Upton's Golliwogg and friends in 1895. Described as "a horrid sight, the blackest gnome," for many children, he was their introduction to black people. Note the formal minstrel attire. |
The darky icon itselfâ€"
googly-eyed, with inky skin; exaggerated white, pink or red lips; and bright, white teethâ€"became a common motif first in the U.S., then worldwide, in entertainment, children's literature, mechanical banks and other toys and games of all sorts,
cartoons and
comic strips, advertisements, jewelry, textiles, postcards, sheet music, food
branding and packaging, and other consumer goods.
In 1895, the
Golliwogg surfaced in
Great Britain, the product of American-born children's book illustrator
Florence Kate Upton, who modeled her ragdoll character
Golliwogg after a minstrel doll she had in the U.S. as a child. "Golly", as he later affectionately came to be called, had a jet-black face; wild, woolly hair; bright, red lips; and sported formal minstrel attire. The generic British golliwog later made its way back across the
Atlantic as dolls, toy tea sets, ladies' perfume and in a myriad of other forms. Lexicographers consider it likely that the word
golliwog was the origin of the
ethnic slur wog.
American darky images and Upton's minstrel-doll-inspired Golliwogg had a profound influence on the way blacks were depicted worldwide. Black and white minstrel troupes toured Europe and were somewhat successful for a time. As in the U.S., there was a history of involvement in the
trans-Atlantic slave trade, and an ongoing European
colonial presence in
Africa and the
Caribbean, as well. Shared notions of
white supremacy likely contributed to the popularity of darky iconography, which proliferated on both sides of the Atlantic. Unlike in the United States, however, in Europe and
Asia, scant resident populations of people of black African descent posed little challenge to the racist attitudes of the day. As a result, blackface and darky iconography and the stereotypes they perpetuated prompted no notable objections and, consequently, sensibilities regarding them often have been very different from those in
America. For Europeans and
Asians, many of whom had never seen a black person in the flesh before
World War II, the iconography of the blackface darky, as in the United States, became
de rigueur. Internationally, darky icons proliferated far beyond the minstrel stage and, for many nonblacks, became reified in the human beings they caricatured. The grinning, pop-eyed distortions acquired a life of their own. By the 1920s and
'30s, for example,
French posters advertising performances by even respected and beloved performers like
Josephine Baker and
Bill "Bojangles" Robinson routinely were in the darky mold. After the Second World War,
Japan flooded the U.S. with darky and
mammy kitchenware, ashtrays, toys, and ceramics.
|
Darky iconography frequently adorned the covers of sheet music from the 1870s through the 1940s, but virtually disappeared by the 1950s. |
U.S. cartoons from the 1930s and 1940s often featured characters in blackface gags as well as other racial and
ethnic caricatures. Blackface was one of the influences in the development of characters like
Mickey Mouse[Sacks and Sacks 158.]. The
United Artists 1933 release "
Mickey's Mellerdrammer" â€" the name a corruption of "
melodrama" thought to harken back to the earliest minstrel shows â€" was a film short based on a production of
Uncle Tom's Cabin by the Disney characters. Mickey, of course, was already black, but for his role in the play he dressed in blackface with exaggerated, orange lips; bushy, white sidewhiskers; and his now trademark white gloves.
|
Reproduction of an old, tin sign advertising Picaninny Freeze, a frozen treat. |
In the U.S., by the 1950s, the
NAACP had begun calling attention to such demeaning portrayals of African Americans and mounted a campaign to put an end to blackface performances and depictions. For decades, darky images had been ubiquitous, particularly in the branding of everyday products and commodities such as
Picaninny Freeze ice cream, the
Coon Chicken Inn[
1]
restaurant chain and the like. With the eventual successes of the modern day
Civil Rights Movement, such blatantly racist branding practices ended in the U.S., and blackface became an American
taboo.
Over time, blackface and darky iconography became artistic and stylistic devices associated with
art deco and the
Jazz Age. By the 1950s and
'60s, particularly in Europe, where it was more widely tolerated, blackface became a kind of
outré,
camp convention in some artistic circles.
The Black and White Minstrel Show was a popular
British musical
variety show that featured blackface performers, and remained on British television until 1978. Actors and dancers in blackface appeared in
music videos such as
Taco Ockerse's "
Puttin' on the Ritz" and
Grace Jones's "Slave to the Rhythm", which aired regularly on
MTV during the 1980s.
Darky iconography, while generally considered taboo in the U.S., still persists around the world. When trade and tourism produce a confluence of cultures, bringing differing sensibilities regarding blackface into contact with one another, the results can be jarring. Darky iconography is still popular in Japan today, but when Japanese toymaker
Sanrio Corporation exported a darky-icon character doll in the 1990s, the ensuing controversy prompted Sanrio to halt production. Foreigners visiting the
Netherlands in November and December are often shocked at the sight of whites in classic blackface as a character known as
Zwarte Piet, whom many Dutch nationals love as a holiday symbol. Travelers to
Spain have expressed dismay at seeing "Conguito", [
2] a tubby, little brown character with full, red lips, as the trademark for
Conguitos, a confection manufactured by the LACASA Group. In Britain, "Golly", [
3] a golliwog character, finally fell out of favor in 2001 after almost a century as the trademark of jam producer James Robertson & Sons; but the debate still continues whether the golliwog should be banished in all forms from further commercial production and display, or preserved as a treasured childhood icon. The influence of blackface on branding and advertising, as well as on perceptions and portrayals of blacks, generally, can be found worldwide. Black and brown products, particularly, such as
licorice and
chocolate, remain commodities most frequently paired with darky iconography.
The Netherlands' Zwarte Piet
Zwarte Piet, or "Black Peter", is a character in
Dutch and
Flemish Sinterklaas lore, described variously as a slave liberated by St. Nicholas or a servant of Sinterklaas whose feast, mainly targeted at children, is celebrated December 5th or 6th. Some sources indicate that Zwarte Piet originally was an enslaved devil, rather than a
Moor.[
4] Zwarte Piet is often characterized variously as buffoonish, mean, mischievous and stupid. Once portrayed realistically, Zwarte Piet became a classic darky icon in the mid-to-late 19th century, contemporaneous with the spread of darky iconography. To this day, holiday revellers in the
Netherlands blacken their faces; wear
afro wigs and bright, red lipstick; and walk the streets, throwing
candy to passersby, some of them behaving dim-wittedly and/or speaking mangled Dutch as embodiments of Zwarte Piet.
Accepted in the past without controversy in a once largely ethnically homogeneous nation, today Zwarte Piet is controversial and greeted with mixed reactions. Many see him as a cherished tradition and look forward to his annual appearance. Others detest himâ€"perhaps most notably, some of the country's
people of color. The lyrics of traditional Sinterklaas songs and some parents state that Zwarte Piet will leave well-behaved children presents, but that those who have been naughty will be punished. Zwarte Piet will kidnap bad children and carry them off in his sack to
Spain, where, legend has it, he and Sinterklaas dwell out of season. As a result, while most Dutch children love him and are fascinated by him, they also may be fearful of encounters with Zwarte Piet impersonators. Some white Dutch children believe their black classmates will grow up to be Zwarte Piet, and still others believe black people they meet in public
are Zwarte Piet.[
5],[
6] Blackfaced, googly-eyed, red-lipped Zwarte Piet dolls, diecuts and displays adorn store windows alongside brightly displayed, smartly packaged holiday merchandise.[
7]Foreign tourists, particularly Americans, are often bewildered and mortified. As a result of the allegations of racism, some attempts have been made to replace the blackface makeup worn by Zwarte Piet impersonators with face paint in alternative colors such as green or purple. This practice, however, has not caught on. So, at least once a year in the Netherlands, the debate over the harmlessness, or racism, of Zwarte Piet resurfacesâ€"along with, the usual, smiling golliwog dolls; strolling
Zwarte Pieten tossing sweets to eager children and other passersby; and the sometimes jarring storefront-darky images.
The "coons" of Cape Town and Auckland
Inspired by blackface minstrels who visited
Cape Town,
South Africa, in 1848, former
Javan and
Malaysian slaves took up the minstrel tradition, holding emancipation celebrations which consisted of music, dancing and parades. In the African-American
cakewalk tradition, their songs often parodied their former masters and the privileged, white
class. Such celebrations eventually became consolidated into an annual, year-end event known as the
Cape Coon Carnival.
Today, carnival minstrels are mostly
Coloured ("mixed race"),
Afrikaans-speaking revellers. Often in a pared down style of blackface which exaggerates only the lips, they parade down the streets of the city in colorful costumes, in a celebration of
Creole culture. Participants also pay homage to the carnival's African-American roots, playing
Negro spirituals and
jazz featuring traditional
Dixieland jazz instruments, including
horns,
banjos, and
tambourines.[
8]
The term "coon" has been appropriated by carnival participants over time, who don't regard it as a pejorative. However, the name was changed to the
Cape Town Minstrel Carnival in 2003, so as to avoid offending tourists. Former
South African president
Nelson Mandela endorsed the carnival in 1986, and is a member of the Cape Town Minstrel Carnival Association, which presides over the event. Now officially more than a hundred years old, the carnival has become a major tourist attraction, vigorously promoted by the nation's tourism authority, complete with
corporate sponsorship.
A multi-ethnic group of
New Zealanders, taking their cue from the Cape Town tradition, have started their own "Cape Coon troupe", calling themselves the "
Auckland City Dukes". Wearing modified minstrel attire and modified blackface similar to that of their Cape Town counterparts, the Dukes participate in the annual Cape Town Minstrel Carnival and enthusiastically embrace the "coon" moniker.
In the U.S.
The darky, or coon, archetype that blackface played such a profound role in creating remains a persistent thread in American culture. It continues to resurface.
Animation utilizing darky iconography aired on U.S. television routinely as late as the mid-1990s, and still can be seen in specialty time slots on such
networks as
TCM. In 1993, white actor
Ted Danson ignited a firestorm of controversy when he appeared at a
Friars Club roast in blackface, delivering a risqué
shtick written by his then love interest, African-American
comedienne Whoopi Goldberg. Recently,
gay white performer
Chuck Knipp has used
drag, blackface, and broad racial caricature while portraying a character named "
Shirley Q. Liquor" in his
cabaret act, generally performed for all-white audiences. Knipp's outrageously stereotypical character has drawn criticism and prompted
demonstrations from black,
gay and
transgender activists.[
9]
In
New Orleans in the early 1900s, a group of African American laborers began a marching club in the annual
Mardi Gras parade, dressed as hobos and calling themselves "The Tramps". Wanting a flashier look, they later renamed themselves "
Zulus" and copied their costumes from a blackface vaudeville skit performed at a local black jazz club and cabaret.[
10] The result is one of the best known and most striking
krewes of Mardi Gras, the
Zulu Social Aid and Pleasure Club. Dressed in grass skirts, top hats and exaggerated blackface, the Zulus of New Orleans are controversial as well as popular.
Illinois Congressman and House Republican minority leader
Bob Michel caused a minor stir in the early 1990s, when he fondly recalled minstrel shows in which he had participated as a young man and expressed his regret that they had fallen out of fashion.
Blackface and minstrelsy also serve as the theme of
Spike Lee's
film Bamboozled (2000). It tells of a black television executive who reintroduces the old blackface style and is horrified by its success.
|
This elaborate, figural, Art deco Ronson tabletop cigarette lighter, manufactured in 1936, is an example of an everyday consumer item rendered in classic darky iconographical style. It sold on eBay in June 2006 for $2,225. |
In 2002 and 2003, there were several inflammatory blackface "incidents" where white
college students donned blackface as part of possibly innocent, but insensitive, gags, or as part of an acknowledged climate of racism and intolerance on campus. [
11]
In November 2005, controversy erupted when African American journalist Steve Gilliard posted a photograph on his
blog. The image was of black
Republican Maryland lieutenant governor
Michael S. Steele, then a candidate for
U.S. Senate. It had been doctored to include bushy, white eyebrows and big, red lips. The caption read, "I's simple
Sambo and I's running for the big house." Steele has been criticized by other African Americans who consider him a "race traitor" due to his conservative politics. Gilliard defended the image, commenting that Steele has "refused to stand up for his people,"[
12] and explained that he pulled the photograph only because he did not have permission to use the original image.
Further, commodities bearing iconic darky images, from tableware, soap, and toy marbles to home accessories and T-shirts, continue to be manufactured and marketed in the U.S. and elsewhere. Some are reproductions of historical
artifacts, while others are so-called "fantasy" items, newly designed and manufactured for the marketplace. There is a thriving
niche market for such items in the U.S., particularly, as well as for original artifacts of darky iconography. The value of many vintage pieces has skyrocketed since the 1970s.
Despite its racist portrayals, blackface minstrelsy was the conduit through which African-American and African-American-influenced music, comedy, and dance first reached the American mainstream. It played a seminal role in the introduction of African-American culture to world audiences. Wrote
jazz historian Gary Giddings in
Bing Crosby: A Pocketful of Dreams, The Early Years 1903-1940:
Though antebellum (minstrel) troupes were white, the form developed in a form of racial collaboration, illustrating the axiom that definesâ€"and continues to defineâ€"American music as it developed over the next century and a half: African-American innovations metamorphose into American popular culture when white performers learn to mimic black ones.
Virtually every major, new genre of popular music in the United States from the twilight of the 19th century to the dawn of the 21st centuryâ€"from the tight harmonies of
barbershop quartets to
ragtime, to
blues, to
jazz and
swing, to
rhythm and blues and
rock and roll, to
funk and
classic rock, to
hip hop and
neo soulâ€" is a product or byproduct of African-American innovation.[
13],[
14] Indeed, the broad spectrum of popular music as it exists today would be unrecognizable absent the influence of African-American culture. Standard early jazz tunes included numbers such as "The Darktown Strutters Ball", a song about the slave cakewalk tradition, and "The Birth of the Blues". Even into the '50s,
R&B artists from
Louis Jordan (in, for example, "Saturday Night Fish Fry") to the
Dominoes (in "The Deacon is Moving In") harkened back to minstrelsy. A lot of vaudeville shtick, and its earliest comedians, musicians and actors as well, were transplants from the blackface minstrel traditionâ€"among them
Laugh-In's
Pigmeat Markham. The radio antics of "
Amos 'n' Andy", which featured white actors impersonating blacks, were straight from the minstrel stage. The popular radio show lasted more than a decade and then moved to television, utilizing black actors, in the 1950s. Under fire from critics as being demeaning to blacks, it ran until only 1953.
Country music and humor, too, were deeply influenced by blackface minstrelsy. According to Dale Cockrell's account in
The Encyclopedia of Country Music, many traditional
hillbilly fiddle tunes, including "
Turkey in the Straw" and
Old Dan Tucker came from minstrelsy,[
15] as did much of the format and content of the (still running)
Grand Ole Opry radio show. In part because of the popularity of blackface minstrelsy, the
banjo, which is African-American in origin, became a standard feature of country and
bluegrass music. Cockrell notes that
Hee Haw "in structure, humor, characterization, and, in many ways, music, was a minstrel show in 'rube face'". As with jazz, many of country's earliest starsâ€"such as
Jimmie Rodgers and
Bob Willsâ€"were veterans of blackface performance.
The immense popularity and profitability of blackface were testaments to the power, appeal, and commercial viability of not only black music and dance, but also of black style. This led to cross-cultural collaborations, as Giddings writes; but, particularly in times past, to the often ruthless exploitation and outright theft of African-American artistic genius, as wellâ€" by other, white performers and composers; agents; promoters; publishers; and record company executives. The precedent set by blackface, of aggressive white exploitation and appropriation of black culture, is alive today in, for example, the anointed, white, so-called "royalty" of essentially African-American music forms:
Benny Goodman, widely known as the "King of Swing";
Paul Whiteman, who called himself the "King of Jazz";
Elvis Presley, known as the "King of Rock and Roll"; and
Janis Joplin, crowned "Queen of the Blues".
For more than a century, when white performers have wanted to appear sexy, (like
Elvis); or streetwise, (like
Eminem); or hip, (like
Mezz Mezzrow); or
cool, (like actor
John Travolta's Chili Palmer,
Johnny Cash, and
ZZ Top); or urbane, (like
Frank Sinatra), they often have turned to African-American performance styles, stage presence and personas. Sometimes this has been done out of genuine admiration, as in the case of blues revivalists. Sometimes it is done with a good deal of calculation by, for example, the many white lead performers who use black backup singers and musicians. Author
bell hooks argues that
Madonna uses black male dancers to give her stage show a transgressive, sexually charged patina.
Pop culture referencing and
cultural appropriation of African-American performance and stylistic traditionsâ€"often resulting in tremendous profitâ€"is a tradition with origins in blackface minstrelsy.
The international imprint of African-American culture is pronounced in its depth and breadth, in indigenous expressions, as well as in myriad, blatantly mimetic and subtler, more attenuated forms. This "browning", Ă la
Richard Rodriguez, of American and world popular culture began with blackface minstrelsy. It is a continuum of pervasive African-American influence which has many prominent manifestations today, among them the ubiquity of the
cool aesthetic and hip hop culture .
Related types of performances are
yellowface, in which performers adopt Asian identities,
brownface, for
East Indian or non-white
Latino, and
redface, for
Native Americans.
Whiteface, or
paleface, is sometimes used to describe non-white actors performing white parts (for example, in the film
White Chicks), although it more commonly describes the
clown or
mime traditions of white makeup.
Dooley Wilson, famous for the role of Sam the piano player in
Casablanca, earned his stage name "Dooley" from performing in whiteface as an Irishman.
*
Amos 'n' AndyBamboozled â€" 2000
Spike Lee film featuring blackface
The Black and White Minstrel Show â€" a
British BBC television series (1958â€"1978)
*
Bosko*
Blackface minstrel songs, list of*
Blackface minstrel troupes, list of*
Censored Eleven*
Contemporary performers using blackface, list of*
Cool (aesthetic)*
Cultural appropriation*
Jynx- a controversial Pokémon character
*
Entertainers known to have performed in blackface, list of*
MemĂn PinguĂn*
Mickey Mouse*
Minstrel show*
Papa Lazarou*
Two Black CrowsYoung and Innocent â€" 1937
Alfred Hitchcock movie
*
Gollywog*
Border Morris, a traditional English male folk dance tradition from the borders of
England and
Wales*
Ganguro, a
fashion trend among
Japanese girls
*
The Song of Hiawatha pageant, featuring predominantly Caucasian children dressing up and playing Native American.
*
*
* Sacks, Howard L, and Sacks Judith (1993).
Way up North in Dixie: A Black Family's Claim to the Confederate Anthem. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Press.
*
*
*
*
*
*
*
General
*
"Auckland gets its own Cape Coon troupe" from the SANZ Charitable Trust*
Blackface and other historic racial images from the Authentic History Center*
"Bambizzoozled - Blackface in Movies and Television"*
"Banned Cartoons" from Rotten.com*
The Black and White Minstrel Show from the Museum of Broadcast Communications*
"The Blackface Stereotype", Manthia Diawara*
"Coon Carnival, Cape Town" from Africape Tours*
"Nigger and Caricatures", Jim Crow Museum of Racist Memorabilia, from Ferris State University*
Recent blackface stories in the news, from the Colorblind Society*
"Zulu Blackface: The Real Story!"Zwarte Piet
*
Zwarte Piet? - Boom Chicago rap video satire of Run DMC's "Christmas in Hollis"
*
"Dutch Sinterklaas and Zwarte Piet: innocent fun or a racist tradition?", Wispr, Wageningen international student paper, 2002/34*
Expatica's Dutch News in English: Annual Zwarte Piet Debate*
"Man, I Don't 'Get' Zwarte Piet" from "Downwind of Amsterdam"*
"Who is Black Peter?" from Ferris State University*
Zwarte Piet film by Adwa Foundation, Rotterdam, and the Global Afrikan Congress*
Zwarte Piet (in Dutch)
*
"Zwarte Piet â€" a sinister symbol in a 'tolerant' country" from Expatica.com