“Black Hair in Hollywood: A Tangled Issue”

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Black Hair in Hollywood: A Tangled Issue

Angela Bassett, Tiffany Haddish, Sanaa Lathan, Tia Mowry-Hardrict

October 2019Los Angeles, California03:49English

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This entry was contributed by

Laila Anderson, Fall '25

Analysis

Black Hair in Hollywood: A Tangled Issue addresses ongoing discrimination against Black hair in the entertainment industry through the voices of prominent Black actresses, including Halle Berry, Tia Mowry-Hardrict, Angela Bassett, Sanaa Lathan, and Tiffany Haddish. Because the speakers are well-known figures who have directly experienced these issues, the interviews establish strong ethos. Their credibility comes not only from their fame but from their lived experiences navigating Hollywood spaces where their hair and appearance have been scrutinized.

The central argument is that Black hair is normal, worthy, and deserving of respect—and that Hollywood’s failure to properly understand and care for Black hair reflects a deeper cultural and racial problem. Tia Mowry’s statement about being misrepresented on television highlights how poor hair and makeup are not just technical mistakes but public issues that lead to criticism and stereotyping. This argument connects personal experience to systemic inequality.

The rhetorical situation is shaped by an ongoing exigence: widespread hair discrimination affecting Black actors, models, students, and professionals. The constraints include limited speaking time and the need to address a broad audience while remaining professional and unified despite different backgrounds. These constraints explain the speech’s concise yet emotionally powerful delivery.

The actresses effectively uses pathos by emphasizing how hair is tied to Black culture and identity. The speakers explain that when their hair is mishandled, they—not the stylists—are blamed, which creates emotional harm and public humiliation. Logos is present through references to repeated testimonies and widespread industry patterns, reinforcing that this is not an isolated issue. Ethos, pathos, and logos work together to make the message persuasive and relatable.

Several rhetorical techniques strengthen the interviews. Repetition of the concept of “representation” reinforces its importance. Implicit contrast compares the positive representation in projects like Hair Love with the lack of industry training and respect behind the scenes. The structure moves from gratitude and purpose to broader social critique and a call for respect, creating a clear and effective flow.

Overall, the speech fits within African American rhetorical traditions of affirmation, resistance, and cultural pride. Its impact is evident in the praise it received and the ongoing conversations it sparked about representation and professional accountability in Hollywood.

Speaker Background

This video package on Black hair in Hollywood features four highly influential Black actresses, whose collective experiences lend powerful ethos to the topic.

Angela Bassett: A revered, award-winning actress known for commanding roles, including playing Tina Turner in What’s Love Got to Do with It. Her decades of experience in the industry represent the historical depth of the problem.

Tia Mowry-Hardrict: An actress who achieved early fame on the sitcom Sister, Sister. Her presence speaks to the public scrutiny and pressure faced by younger stars and those in mainstream television.

Sanaa Lathan: Known for films like Love & Basketball and Brown Sugar, she often portrays characters who are icons of Black womanhood, making her testimony on hair standards particularly resonant.

Tiffany Haddish: A comedian and actress whose recent meteoric rise brings a current, unapologetic voice to the conversation, contrasting with the more cautious approach of the preceding generation.

Speech Occasion & Context

The video Black Hair in Hollywood: A Tangled Issue, produced by the Associated Press, was released in October 2019 and features interviews with Black actresses discussing hair representation in Hollywood. The piece was prompted by growing attention to the film Hair Love and a broader industry conversation about the persistent lack of trained hair and makeup professionals for Black actors. At the time, many Black actresses were publicly sharing experiences of discrimination on set, including stylists being unable or unwilling to work with textured hair, invasive touching of Black hair, and mispronunciation of Black names. These repeated experiences revealed that the issue was not merely technical but cultural, reflecting deeper patterns of racial disrespect and exclusion within the entertainment industry. The video served as a response to those ongoing experiences and aimed to bring visibility to the emotional, professional, and cultural consequences of hair discrimination. By speaking collectively, the actresses validated shared struggles, challenged Hollywood norms, and called for greater respect, representation, and accountability in film and television production.

Speech Details

Date

October 2019

Location

Los Angeles, California

Length

03:49

Language

English

Primary Audience

Hollywood Reporter subscribers, readers, viewers

Secondary Audience

YouTube users

References

Drury, S., & Weinberg, L. (2020, February 7). Hollywood's Black hair problem on set: "We've all cried in our trailers." The Hollywood Reporter. https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/movies/movie-news/hollywood-s-black-hair-problem-set-we-ve-all-cried-trailers-1274876/

Roberts, C. (2022, July 24). 15 Black actors who shared their struggles with hair and makeup discrimination on film sets. BuzzFeed. https://www.buzzfeed.com/cacheroberts/15-black-actors-who-shared-their-struggles-with-hair-and

Peck, P. (2019, March 18). Black actors are using the #ActingWhileBlack hashtag to share bad on-set hair and makeup experiences. BuzzFeed News. https://www.buzzfeed.com/patricepeck/black-actors-natural-hair-makeup-actingwhileblack-twitter

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