We made these #mixedlovenotes for wonderful YOU!
Mixed Love Notes #14 #mixedlovenotes
Mixed Love Notes #13 #mixedlovenotes
We created #mixedlovenotes just for wonderful YOU!
Cush Jumbo: On Growing Up Biracial & Performance
If you’re in New York, you don’t want to miss this one-woman show with Cush Jumbo at the Joe’s Pub, Josephine and I.
After a stunning Broadway run in The River with Hugh Jackman, Jumbo is owning the stage as the iconic Josephine Baker.
“I don’t need to be put into a box,” the English/Nigerian actress has said. Go see this show by an emerging and talented mixed actress who is dedicated to telling our stories!–Heidi Durrow, Festival Founder & Executive Director
Festival Faves Key & Peele in the New Yorker on Growing Up Biracial
We are huge fans of Key & Peele who accepted the Mixed Remixed Festival’s Storyteller’s Prize at the Mixed Remixed Festival in 2014. We absolutely love this New Yorker article written by another favorite of ours Zadie Smith.
Here are some of the gems from the article out this week:
- “The one thing that you don’t figure out as an improviser or a sketch performer is ‘What am I?’ ” Jordan Peele observed. The essence of his talent is multivocal, and he has, in the past, attributed this to his childhood anxiety at having the wrong voice, which, in his case, meant speaking like his mother—that is, speaking “white.”
- “They make you say what race you are, where you check out, and I think that’s ultimately an unhealthy tradition,” says Jordan Peele. His eyes, naturally rather narrow, widened dramatically. “It is crazy that as a kid we’re taught, ‘What is your identity?’ We’re asked that!” Key, who sat at the other end of the trailer, going from having hair to being bald to having hair again, is similarly struck by the irrational nature of racial categories. “The limbic system is alive and well,” he said. “And it’s going, ‘I need to find a category. I need to find a category. If I don’t find a category, I’m not safe.’ ”
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Key: “Jordan and I are . . . we’re biracial.”
Peele: “Yes. Half black, half white.”
Key: “And because of that we find ourselves particularly adept at lying, er, because on a daily basis we have to adjust our blackness.”
[youtube]http://youtu.be/D7VRVQgbDvE[/youtube]
Mixed Love Notes #12 #mixedlovenotes
We created #mixedlovenotes just for YOU!
Mixed Love Notes #11 #mixedlovenotes
Are Those Your Eyes? My Long-time Dermatologist Asks
Another installment in my series Are those your eyes? = What are you?:
I came out to my dermatologist as biracial because she greeted me by saying: “Wow. Did you change your eyes? What color are they?”
“They’re blue–green–gray–They are different colors depending on light and mood and . . .”
“I don’t remember your eyes like that.”
Granted, I’ve only seen her once a year for the last four years –and last year she was on maternity leave so I saw her colleague instead. But still–really? She didn’t see that my eyes are very light on a beige-colored person? It’s usually the first thing people notice about me.
She checked out the “mole” in question and gave me a referral in case I want to have it removed in a way that won’t leave a giant scar–it’s nothing to worry about. She’s a nice woman and a doctor with a good bedside manner, but her greeting really threw me? Was she really seeing me?
I was nearly out the door when I asked if I could talk to the doctor again — She was talking to a pharmaceutical rep but led me back into the examining room when I told her I had a question and I said: “I hope you don’t think this is stupid. But I thought it was important to tell you that I am biracial. I am both black and white. I’m not sure what you maybe thought I was–but I just wanted to let you know . . . in case, well, in case, you need to look at me differently.”
Read the rest of the post here.—Heidi Durrow
Mixed Love Notes #10 #mixedlovenotes
Mixed Love Notes #9 #mixedlovenotes
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