
Passing
Fannie
Nellie
Bly


 
 



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November 15, 2003, Vol. 43, Iss. 16, p. 3
By DAVID STOKES
Forget that the movie co-stars award winners Sir Anthony Hopkins, Nicole
Kidman, Anna Deveare Smith and Ed Harris, respectively.
Forget the well-educated, upper middle class African-American family depicted
in the film originally taped 18 months ago in Vancouver. The 126 minutes
of film is worth watching, and ultimately provokes the same, if not more,
dialogue as did Gene Hackman's "Mississippi Burning" in 1988.
In the first scene of "The Human Stain," a lone car is traveling
down a desolate, snow-laden road: an appropriate introduction of the engrossing
plot, yet, not an analysis of the psychological demon that cripples both
blacks, as victims, and (mostly) whites who continue, in general, to value
skin color as oppose to an individual's character.
From Phillip Roth's compelling novel of the same name arrives the tale
of one black man-"passing" for white-who suffers from shame,
depression, loneliness and eventual redemption upon acknowledging his
true heritage. Hopkins and (biracial) newcomer Wentworth Miller are the
primary characters in this biography loosely taken from the life of Gregory
Williams' father.
Williams, president of the City College of New York, and author of "Life
on the Color Line: The True Story of a White Boy Who Discovered He Was
Black (Dutton, 1995)," reveals the tale of a long-held family secret.
Hence, "The Human Slain" absorbs and examines festering wounds
of deception, guilt and self-annihilation within the confines of race.
The year, for Williams, was 1954 when his world was shattered at age 10.
Father James "Buster" Williams revealed the secret that caused
his family's disintegration. His light skin enticed him to marry white,
escape and "be free from" African-American life and the projects
of Muncie, Ind., become a successful Virginia businessman. Seen (and perceived)
as Greek or Italian, the elder Williams became prosperous and a pillar
of his community. However, he possessed "many demons" that led
to eventual shame and alcoholism causing bankruptcy and the loss of his
family.
"I crossed the color line overnight...living in Virginia as a white
boy, but going to live in Indiana's projects as a black boy." Gregory
opined, and at She same time, learning the family cook was indeed his
grandmother.
"The Human Stain" offers us Coleman Silk, dean of English and
distinguished classics professor of Athena College in Athena, Mass. After
being accused and terminated for voicing a racial epithet during roll
call, Silk goes into justifiable tirades over "absurdity," thus,
causing the unexpected death of his wife.
As Hopkins' Silk contemplates his life of the past 50 years, viewers are
enmeshed with Miller as the young Silk, taking us hack to his conscious
decisions of checking the "white" box on his U.S. Navy application
or choosing to disown his black parents and siblings prior to partnering
with his white spouse, along with remaining childless.
"To look so lily-white, you think like a slave," proclaims his
brown-skinned mother, portrayed by Deveare Smith. "Murderer,"
she cries in conclusion, as her youngest exits for good.
(Though "Human Stain" reminds you of Lana Turner's "Imitation
of Life," it does not exhibit grandstanding with an ostentatious
funeral or a New Millennium-style Mahalia Jackson.)
For many generations, racial "passing" has been the blot of
African-American existence. Notwithstanding societal prejudices involving
economics, health and wealth, blacks, in becoming something contrived
and unnatural, create self-imposed hardship which leads to the destruction
of family and self. "Passing" has its roots when light-skinned
slaves sought to "get over" to escape the life of servitude
and bondage. The term, furthermore, was asserted derogatorily by family
and friends left behind on plantations, or, within 20th Century literature
and life, enslaved with a plantation mentality. (The conundrum has been
explored in print by Harlem Renaissance novelists Nella Larsen ("Passing")
and George Schulyer ("Black No More").
One's interpretation of the meaning of "passing" undoubtedly
evokes catharsis. Identity of self, as well as betrayal of loved ones,
is the significant factor for which the phenomenon exists. Beyond professional
examination of causes and remedies, "The Human Stain" offers
neither, other than to suggest opportunities and success thwarted for
a group of people due to skin color is acted upon by greed and freedom
- even though living as another compounds life. Diabolically, "passing"
has also rendered among black Americans the schism that is "light-skinned,"
brown-skinned," or "dark-skinned," as sophomorically addressed
in Spike Lee's "School Daze" and "Do The Right Thing".
A personal aside from "Human Stain" recollects the great-grandparents
who were literally, in skin tone, anyway, "day and night". Tales
of knockdown, drag-out (verbal) fights are remembered, for, even with
their love and respect of one another, words of the color line would spitefully
overflow. Needless to say, this space would bear someone else's byline
if not for their union.
Leaving the movie, proverbial questions, as posed by New York University
professor Brooke Kroeger, do envelop one's mind. Kroeger, author of "Passing:
When People Can't Be Who They Are," asks, does authenticity matter?
How much information is owed another? When is nondisclosure lying, and
more profoundly, how does lying (about your being, existing) affect the
soul?
Copyright © Atlanta Inquirer Nov 15, 2003
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