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Praise Yeezus! Kanye West Jesus Statue Rises In Hollywood

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Kanye West is now a religious experience.


A gold statue of the rapper as Jesus during the crucifixion has risen in Hollywood, outlets reported.


Street artist Plastic Jesus unveiled the piece Wednesday at a Hollywood Boulevard corner.




The work is titled “False Idol” and is more a commentary on how West is treated by the press and public than an act of worship, the artist explained.


“He’s a genius at writing and producing but he’s not a God, and that’s where we put him,” the artist told The Hollywood Reporter. “Until there’s an issue in his life or a hiccup in his career, then we crucify him.”


Plastic Jesus previously did another provocative public work around the Academy Awards ― a statue of an Oscar snorting cocaine in 2015, the trade publication noted.


His current project, in collaboration with Las Vegas artist Ginger, is eventually headed to the old Tower Records space for an art show, according to his Instagram.


West, of course, is no stranger to Jesus associations. He once wore a crown of thorns as Jesus on a Rolling Stone cover and posed Christ-like under the Christ the Redeemer statue in Brazil. He also called a song “Jesus Walks” and brought a Christ look-alike onstage during his Yeezus tour a few years ago.

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New Podcast To Explore Richard Simmons' Disappearance From The Public Eye

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“In February of 2014, Richard Simmons ghosted the world.”


The words of filmmaker Dan Taberski, host of the new podcast “Missing Richard Simmons,” deftly sum up the mysterious radio silence from the effervescent fitness guru, as well as the impetus for Taberski’s audio project: a weekly podcast series in which he aims to connect once more with the “Sweatin’ to the Oldies” icon.


What makes this venture more than just a news investigation is Taberski’s personal investment in the project. He was once a friend to Simmons, and a regular at the 68-year-old’s long-running exercise class in his Los Angeles studio Slimmons.


Rumors swirled in 2016 that Simmons was being held hostage in his Hollywood home after two years had gone by without a peep from the typically extroverted celebrity. The news caused a stir, leading Simmons to assure fans that he was not in danger with a Facebook post on his personal page. The page is regularly updated in a cheery voice, encouraging followers to keep their spirits up and think healthy.


Yet, listening to the podcast, we learn that everyone from decadeslong attendees of his class to close friends to fans across the country who leaned on him for support had long stopped hearing from Simmons. Taberski dutifully chronicles the many mysterious ways Simmons cut himself off from the public, even installing a security fence around the home where he once happily perched, waiting for vans of tourists looking for a famous face. 



The stories from the fans and friends paint a clear picture of the impact Simmons had long after his workout tapes became a VCR staple and the shockwaves his absence has left. Through these interviews, the podcast becomes a meditation on public figures, their obligation to their fans, and whether one can truly disappear.


Who knows where Taberski’s investigation will lead — could an audio plea and renewed widespread interest in the star be the thing to lure him out once more? — but the journey is fascinating thus far.


Subscribe to “Missing Richard Simmons” on iTunes.

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Here's Why Donald Trump Won't Be Watching The Oscars

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President Donald Trump likely won’t be watching the Academy Awards on Sunday night because, duh.


But we’ll let White House press secretary Sean Spicer share the official reason why:



I think Hollywood is known for being rather far to the left in its opinions, and I’ve got to be honest with you, I think the president will be hosting the Governors’ Ball that night. Mrs. Trump looks forward to putting on a phenomenal event. And the first lady’s put a lot of time into this event, in welcoming our nation’s governors to the capital, and I have a feeling that’s where the president and first lady are going to be focused on Sunday night.




The former reality star has fired up feuds with the likes of Meryl Streep (who’s nominated) and has also gotten roasted at previous award shows, so he probably isn’t feeling chummy with show business right about now. Plus, given the anti-administration yuks that will likely spill forth at the Oscars, perhaps Trump wants to spare his ego.


While he may not tune in, we have a sneaking suspicion that the commander-in-chief won’t tune out what transpires on Oscar night. Got that, Twitter?


He apparently hasn’t been such a fan of the ceremony anyway, tweeting in 2014 that it was “amateur night” and “bullshit.” In 2015, he issued this politicized critique: 





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A Beginner's Guide To Isabelle Huppert

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If anyone scores Best Actress over front-runner Emma Stone at Sunday’s Oscars, it’ll probably be 63-year-old “Elle” star Isabelle Huppert. For some at home, it would make for the night’s most exciting moment. For others, it’ll incite a shrug and a big ol’ “Who?!” 


If you’re in the latter camp, I’m here to help. It’s high time you know that Isabelle Huppert is a certified legend. 


She’s France’s most decorated actress.


Huppert has more nominations (16) from the César Awards, France’s equivalent of the Oscars, than any other actress. (One more and she’ll tie record holder Gérard Depardieu, her co-star from 1974’s “Going Places,” 1980’s “Loulou” and 2015’s “Valley of Love.”) Phrased differently, Huppert is France’s Meryl Streep. 


Really, Huppert and Streep have little in common apart from their prestige. Where Streep often plays outsized characters, Huppert is an actress of small proportions ― her performances are relatively restrained, even minimalistic. Roger Ebert described her characters as “repressed, closed-off, sexually alert women” who are “not safe to scorn.” 


Despite her 45-year movie career and 46-year theater career, this is Huppert’s first Oscar nomination. For fans, a win would double as a de facto lifetime achievement recognition. 


“Doing movies for me is like a vacation,” Huppert said in 2014. “Stage for me is like climbing a big mountain, and movies for me is like doing a nice little walk.”



One of her movies caused a minor firestorm last year.


In “Elle,” Huppert plays a video-game executive who refuses to grieve after being raped in the film’s opening scene. Instead, she turns the assault into a game of cat and mouse, luring her attacker into a seductive power play. That’s angered some critics and moviegoers, particularly women, who feel the character’s response is a disservice to rape victims. Huppert disagrees. 


“She does not fall into the caricature of the classical vengeful woman taking the gun and shooting the guy, the James Bond type,” Huppert told me last October during the New York Film Festival. “Maybe that’s what certain persons would expect from her, but then that would follow precisely a male pattern. That’s why I would call her a postfeminist character, making her own way. ... In a way, it is a revenge film. ... It’s like giving birth to a new prototype of a woman. Of course it’s a fiction character and it’s certainly not someone you would meet walking in the subway, meaning it’s not a completely realistic character. But it’s a very, very special character. Even in fiction, you’ve never seen someone like her.”


Huppert is even more subdued in her second movie of 2016, “Things to Come,” portraying a philosopher facing professional setbacks and an impending divorce. 


“As a performer, it’s my natural instinct to put this kind of irony, no matter what I do,” she said when discussing the film. “It certainly also avoids any sentimentality or sentimentalism or psychological heaviness.” 



She’s worked with great directors on both sides of the pond. 


For “Elle,” Huppert partnered with Paul Verhoeven, the Dutch shlock master known for “Total Recall,” “Basic Instinct” and “Showgirls.” Verhoeven is the latest in a long line of veteran filmmakers who have sought out Huppert’s enigmatic screen presence. 


Early in her career, Huppert was associated with masters of the French New Wave, a group of socially conscious filmmakers who introduced open-ended narrative structures and radical techniques in the 1950s and ‘60s. After breaking out with 1977’s “The Lacemaker,” which earned her BAFTA’s Most Promising Newcomer prize, Huppert won the Cannes Film Festival’s best actress accolade for playing a nefarious 18-year-old sex worker in “Violette Nozière.” That marked the first of Huppert’s seven collaborations with director Claude Chabrol, a father of the French New Wave movement. 


Huppert would soon work with Jean-Luc Godard, another French New Wave pioneer, on 1980’s “Every Man for Himself” and 1982’s “Passion.” In between, Huppert’s American debut, the nearly four-hour western “Heaven’s Gate,” became one of the most controversial projects of all time when it effectively bankrupted United Artists. Hot off the Oscar-winning Vietnam War epic “The Deer Hunter,” director Michael Cimino insisted on casting Huppert despite studio executives’ protests that she was “too French” and “simply wrong.” In his 1999 book about the “Heaven’s Gate” debacle, former United Artists honcho Stephen Bach wrote that he told Cimino, “For Christ’s sake, Michael. [Kris Kristofferson] and [Christopher Walken] are so much more attractive than she is that the audience will spend the entire film wondering why they’re fucking her instead of each other!” Cimino then run amok with the budget, calling for elaborate set designs and extensive reshoots. The movie bombed, earning $3.5 million domestically off an estimated $44 million budget. Suffering financial loss as a result, UA was sold to a private investment corporation and acquired by MGM in 1981.


The 1987 drama “Story of Women” is one of Huppert’s most distinguished performances. The movie, a favorite of John Waters, tells the true story of Marie-Louise Giraud, a meager housewife who was guillotined in Nazi-occupied France for performing abortions. It earned a Golden Globe nod for Best Foreign Language Film, and Huppert picked up the Venice Film Festival’s best actress honor.


In 1995, after seven losses, Huppert won her first ― and, to date, only ― César Award, for the Chabrol-directed crime mystery “La Cérémonie.” The true story on which it’s based ― two maids who murdered their employer in 1933 France ― was also the source of a 1947 play by Jean Genet, a 2013 revival of which starred Huppert, Cate Blanchett and Elizabeth Debicki.


The 2000s and 2010s have brought about some of Huppert’s most acclaimed parts, namely Michael Haneke’s erotic thriller “The Piano Teacher” (often cited as her finest performance), David O. Russell’s quirky existential dramedy “I Heart Huckabees,” and supporting spots in Haneke’s old-age romance “Amour” and Ned Benson’s dual-perspective relationship drama “The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby.” 


She also starred on an episode of “Law and Order: SVU.”


Playing a mother whose kidnapped son dies, Huppert goes bonkers on Mariska Hargitay. Exemplifying America’s disregard, NBC’s promo for the 2010 episode touts Sharon Stone as a guest star, but not Huppert.





We don’t know much about Huppert’s personal life.


Here’s something else Huppert has in common with Meryl Streep: Both have children from long marriages ― Huppert’s dates back to 1982, and Streep’s to 1978. Beyond that, we don’t know a ton of gossip about either, which contributes to their indestructible statures in the film world. 


Huppert has three children, including actress Lolita Chammah. They starred together in the 2010 comedy “Copacabana.” Her husband, the Lebanon-born Ronald Chammah, directed Huppert in 1988’s “Milan Noir.”


Critical appraisals have always been glowing, often noting her alluring inscrutability as an actress.


“As in everything else she is called upon to do in this film, Isabelle Huppert shows herself to be a superb actress, able to convey in every gesture, in every utterance and facial expression, that special combination of passivity and violence that is the essential mark of Violette’s personality. So persuasive is her performance of this role that even in those moments when she is most nakedly wicked, she continues to puzzle and even enchant us with her air of innocence and indifference.” ― The New York Times, on “Violette Nozière” (1978)


“It is the unique ability of Isabelle Huppert to betray almost nothing to the camera, when she chooses to. Some of the best moments in her performances come when she regards the camera as if daring us to guess what she is thinking.” ― Robert Ebert, on “Story of Women” (1990)


“Like Jennifer Jason Leigh, Huppert isn’t afraid to play nasty, unattractive women, and she doesn’t balance her character’s evil with sympathetic, mitigating qualities that would make us pity her. ... Even as the film builds to a shocking, kick-in-the-guts finale, Huppert never shirks from her sinister goal, never betrays a glimmer of goodness.” ― The San Francisco Chronicle, on “La Cérémonie” (1997)


“Isabelle Huppert gives the performance of her career as Professor Erika Kohut, a distinguished piano teacher and Schubert scholar at the Vienna Conservatory. She is brilliant, demanding, unsmiling.” ― The Guardian, on “The Piano Teacher” (2001)


“This makes Pascale yet another choice role for Ms. Huppert, a hypnotically controlled actress who has become more implacably mysterious as she has gotten older. Her characters never plead for our sympathy or understanding. ... She remains one of the most sensual and erotic presences in the cinema, despite a persistent inscrutability of expression.” ― The New York Observer, on “Private Property” (2007)


“One of the most daring and assured of film actresses, Huppert embraces the aloneness, foreignness and impudence of her characters.” ― The Los Angeles Times, on “In Another Country” (2013)


“Though she appears in the fewest scenes, Isabelle Huppert provides the movie with its emotional foundation. ... After a prolonged discussion of her troubled double-life, the director cuts to an extreme close-up of her face and holds the shot for close to half a minute, the ambiguity registering on her face speaking volumes about the speculative nature of the plot.” ― IndieWire, on “Louder Than Bombs” (2015)


“To follow the arc described by Isabelle Huppert, for instance, from her breakout role, in ‘The Lacemaker’ (1977), to her new movie, ‘Elle,’ is to ask yourself, year after year, how someone so at ease with the blazing extremes of emotion can also prove so adept at preserving her cool. It is as if she were guarding secrets that no plot can plumb. Who else can match that mystery?” ― The New Yorker, on “Elle” (2016)


She’s meme-worthy.





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A Free, Lady-Led Zine Is Here To School You On Reproductive Rights

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It’s 2017 and, sadly, the question of whether women should be trusted to make decisions regarding their own bodies is still up for debate. With a new administration threatening to roll back rights for women and LGBTQ communities, it is crucial for people of all ages, genders and origins to know what they are legally entitled to when it comes to sexuality and reproductive health. 


With “Repro Rights Zine,” activists India Menuez, Layla Alter and Emma Holland hope to do just that. Their downloadable feminist zine aims to provide information and empowerment in this alarming time ― for free.


Following in the radical tradition of DIY zines, the mission of the publication is threefold: inform others about the current state of reproductive rights, warn them of what is at risk over the next four years, and list the precautions that can be taken to protect ourselves and each other. Oh, and share some quality feminist art.


The framing of these issues is really key,” Holland explained in an interview with i-D, “and this is where awareness changes a lot across the country. In general, this country still — for some insane reason — hasn’t accepted and institutionalized the idea of health as a basic human right. This is obvious in the way our healthcare system functions (or doesn’t) and its fundamental exploitative nature, particularly towards anyone who isn’t a white male with ample means.”



”When it comes to reproductive rights,” she continued, “the conversation often skews even further away from the idea of them as a right to health and safety and control over your own existence. And that’s if there’s a conversation at all. Doing this has made us even more aware of the lack of knowledge around these issues, even in our immediate communities.”


Repro Rights Zine offers information on how to get an IUD, reproductive rights for trans and gender-nonconforming individuals, who to call to help protect the Affordable Care Act, and where to find the specifics of reproductive rights state-by-state. 


The first edition of the zine, published shortly before Trump’s inauguration, is available for free download on the Repro Rights Zine website. The goal is, with the help of social media, to get the reading material to anyone and everyone who might benefit from its contents, from a middle school girl in conservative Texas to a non-binary, queer teen in Middle America. 


For the second edition, the zine-masters enlisted artists Petra Collins, Meriem Bennani, Lola Ogbara, Ser Serpas, Alia Penner, Aidan Koch and Raina Hamner to create limited edition posters to stick inside the zines. These special artist editions sell for $20 each, with all proceeds going to the Center for Reproductive Rights.


We reached out to contributing artist Ogbara to learn more. 



How did you get involved with Repro Rights Zine? What stood out to you about the publication, in relation to other material on women’s sexual health? 


I was approached by India Menuez. She sought me out via Instagram and emailed me about the project. I think what stood out the most for me was the way the Repro Rights Zine, compared to other publications, took on a strong political stance on the subject of women’s reproductive issues while simultaneously being current, timely and relatable.


What can art teach women about reproductive rights and health that writing or scientific data cannot? 


I think there’s an important difference in the way we are learning and going about obtaining information. Art compared to scientific data/writing is more visual and, in today’s world, having a visual of anything grabs the attention of the masses. I think people, in general, are seeing the importance of art more and more each day. Hopefully when realizing that, women will take their reproductive health and rights more seriously. What better way to approach learning than through art? 


Who, in your opinion, is this zine meant for?


I believe this zine is for anyone and everyone. Reproductive rights not only affect women but a whole family. It’s something everyone should be able to understand. The more we understand the more we can make strides toward progress.



Can you talk about the work you contributed to the artist edition? Was this something you made specifically for the zine or decided to submit? What are you hoping to communicate through the piece? 


I had been working on a uterus drawing a few weeks back that I never finished and had been sitting in a folder on my computer. When the opportunity to create something outside my own personal interest came, specifically something with purpose, that’s when I thought of the drawing I had done. I revisited the drawing, added to it and expanded it.


I aimed for a vintage psychedelic poster aesthetic and used simple line work to achieve it. I connected with the early 1960s and ‘70s era because that era birthed a more radical political stance on women’s rights. It was seen as the second wave of feminism. I wanted to send a message that was bold but clear from the beginning of the movement [1920s] to now. Nothing has changed — our bodies, our decisions.  


In your artist statement you write: “I gravitate towards a more literal and abstract functionality of the female aesthetic.” Can you expand upon what you mean by that? 


I work in multiple mediums — whether it’s drawing, sculpture or painting, my undertones tend to concentrate on the female form, aesthetic, or way of life. It could be as literal as a drawing of a female figure or more subtle and abstract as in my paintings using delicate shapes and certain color palettes. However we are functioning and evolving in today’s society, I am a storyteller of that process.


How does the political climate we’re in right now shape your ideas regarding the efficacy of art activism? 


My art has always had a purpose; an activism rooted in any adversity I felt connected to. As a black woman living in America, there will always be some type of adversity for me so I will always feel inspired to express that. I think our current political standing expands to a demographic of artists that may not have been affected before and, as a result, more artists are participating in this new wave of art activism. To reach any change, I think it’s necessary that art activism grows to help make society better for everyone. 


What is one thing you wish everyone knew in terms of women’s health and reproductive rights?


It’s not just an issue for women, it’s an issue for everyone. The idea that If you educate a man, you educate an individual; but if you educate a woman, you educate a family (nation) — applies to this situation, as well. If you tend to a woman, you tend to the family (nation).  


Download a free copy of Repro Rights Zine here and purchase an artist edition here. 


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Brilliant Dentist Has 'Where's Waldo?' Scene On His Ceiling For Patients

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A dentist in the U.K. has a brilliant way to keep patients calm and entertained while reclining in the dental chair.


Reddit user Michael Mannion shared a photo he took at a mydentist office in Rugeley, Staffordshire in England.



As the photo shows, part of the ceiling over the chair where patients sit is covered with a scene from the Where’s Waldo? series (or Where’s Wally? as they call it across the pond). Waldo fans on Reddit identified it as a portion of the “Fairground” scene. 


Mannion told The Huffington Post he was a big fan of the decor. 


“The poster was probably put up for children specifically, but I know it would calm me down and distract me no matter what age I was,” Mannion said. “They only have one room for examinations, so all patients will see it.”



He was also delighted to find how many people on Reddit enjoyed the set-up. “I didn’t expect much from it but the discussion is great, especially learning about what Where’s Wally? is called in different countries.”


After the photo received so much attention, maybe other dentists will follow the Where’s Waldo? model.

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Woman's Raw Illustrations Show The Reality Of Battling An Eating Disorder

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Warning: Some of the below images may be considered upsetting or triggering to those who have struggled with disordered eating.


After four years of battling eating disorders, Christie Begnell found healing in art. The results are honest and striking illustrations, which have been compiled together in a book, Me and My ED. Each image represents the harsh reality of living with anorexia and OSFED (Other Specified Feeding or Eating Disorder).




“When I draw I am at my calmest and I am able to think things through with a clear and focused mind,” the 24-year-old from Sydney, Australia, told The Huffington Post. “Drawing is my mental health. I contribute a lot of the progress I have made in recovery to my art.”



Begnell’s journey towards self-clarity has been a long and winding one.


When Begnell turned 20, her life began to slowly unravel. She had just gotten out of a long-term relationship, and her anxiety and depression, which she told HuffPost she had always knew she had but didn’t address, began to worsen. 



She started having urges to self-harm and was beginning to gain weight. She decided to attempt to regain some control over her life by dieting.


“I found it a great distraction from everything that was happening in my life,” Begnell said. “In a world where I felt like I was spinning out of control, I gained control in the numbers and my weight.”


Her behavior soon became obsessive, and It spiraled into anorexia.



Once it was clear to Begnell that she had a problem, she began to see a therapist and started a journal in order to write down her thoughts.


Then, in May of 2016, Begnell’s condition began to worsen and she decided she needed more intensive help. She tried to admit herself to a public hospital for an eating disorder, but was rejected because the hospital staff deemed her BMI “too healthy.”



So, she admitted herself as someone with chronic suicidal thoughts in order to get help, but did not have a positive experience.



“What I needed at that time was a hospital admission where I could be kept safe and have the support to work on my eating disorder recovery,” she said. “What I received was a lot of dismissal from nursing and medical staff, stating that I was basically not sick enough to warrant help for my eating disorder.”


Frustrated, Begnell began to journal her feelings more often, and soon the writing transformed into drawings as a means to communicate what she was struggling with.



“I used it as a way to separate my healthy self from my disordered self and that was so very important,” Begnell told HuffPost. 


This impulse to separate herself from her issues sparked the creation of “Ana.” Short for “Anorexia,” Ana is a character in many of Begnell’s drawings, and that character represents her eating disorder.


“Personifying an eating disorder is something that is quite common with the illness,” Begnell said, explaining that many refer to bulimia as “Mia” and eating disorders as “Ed.”


Begnell said she felt that Ana was in her head, speaking to her.



“Ana would promise me things that I needed at the time, if I followed her rules,” she explained. “For example, I would be loved and cared for if I lost a certain amount of kilos. As my illness went on and I became more and more unwell, I became very enmeshed with Ana and I lost a lot of my values.” 


Soon after Begnell began drawing these types of images, her mother found her private clinic that specialized in eating disorders and admitted her daughter in August of 2016.


It was here that Begnell finally began to recover.



She also kept drawing.


Some of her nurses and therapists noticed her illustrations and encouraged her to share them in group sessions. She began to do so, and soon realized that other women related to them.



A therapist suggested she gather all her illustrations and publish them in a book. Begnell took that advice.



Begnell is now in recovery, but she said she still feels Ana’s presence.


“I’m the best I’ve been in years,” Begnell told HuffPost. “I still have days where Ana is loud, but I’m lucky to have a great support network around me who can recognize Ana’s voice and help me challenge her.”



She said she even trolls Ana sometimes.


“I post a lot of photos exposing my belly rolls and back fat now simply because Ana doesn’t want me to,” she said.



It’s acts of self-expression like posting those photos and creating her drawings which have truly helped Begnell recover.


“Expression is going to look different for everyone, but the key is to not let what is happening in your head stay in there,” she said. “The more we talk about our problems and seek help and advice, the more that stigma of eating disorders is broken down.”



If you’re struggling with an eating disorder, call the National Eating Disorder Association hotline at 1-800-931-2237.

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Get Ready For More Color In Your Life, Lisa Frank Makeup Is On Its Way

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Lisa Frank is making our glittery, colorful dreams come true by blessing us with a makeup line


The line is a partnership between Lisa Frank and Glamour Dolls Makeup, an indie makeup brand that puts out cruelty-free, vegan cosmetics. Though the project is currently in its Kickstarter phase, it’s already surpassed its funding goal by almost three times the asking amount. 


“The Glamour Dolls makeup line will be the first line that Lisa Frank has done specifically for adults,” makeup artist and vlogger Kandee Johnson said in a video about the exciting news. “The line is geared toward that ‘80s and ‘90s kid that grew up loving all these fun patterns, colors, prints and characters and wants a little bit more of that in their life.” 





The colorful collaboration will reportedly include lip balm, eyeliner, a “unicorn lippie,” matte mousse foundation, highlighter and vegan makeup bag, according to the Kickstarter page


For people anxious to get their hands on a product, there’s already a Lisa Frank/Glamour Dolls blush brush available for pre-sale: 



 The HuffPost Lifestyle newsletter will make you happier and healthier, one email at a time. Sign up here.


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Art Museums Provide Safe Spaces For Trans Students Across The Country

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All Genders Welcome #AtTheWalker

A post shared by Walker Art Center (@walkerartcenter) on




Not long after President Donald Trump’s administration announced on Wednesday that it will no longer stop schools from discriminating against transgender students ― rescinding a policy put in place by former President Barack Obama’s administration ― the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, Minnesota, posted a powerful image on Instagram.


The photo, a simple shot of its all-gender restroom logo, was accompanied by a caption that reads: “All Genders Welcome.” 


As students like Gavin Grimm, a transgender teen in Virginia who sued his school for the right to use the boys bathroom, fight to have access to the restroom consistent with their gender identity, the Walker’s Instagram post is a quiet reminder of how inclusivity can take shape functionally in public spaces.


The Walker is but one of several museums, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the American Folk Art Museum and the Chicago Children’s Museum, that have opted to make a seemingly small but effective gesture toward providing safe and inclusive spaces within its walls. 


In 2014, the Whitney announced its move to include all-gender restrooms in its galleries, writing online that the decision came out of a discussion on museums as safe spaces that took place at the LGBT Community Center on West 13th Street in New York City. Quoting artist Gordon Hall of the Center for Experimental Lectures, they wrote: “The arts have long been a home for individuals who may not find support in the culture at large, and have served as a harbinger of broad social changes. The Whitney’s visitors, artists, and staff represent a wide range of gender identities and expressions, and this change will help make the Museum a welcoming space for us.”


The 2016 edition of TrendsWatch, issued by the Center for the Future of Museums (CFM), part of the American Alliance of Museums, reiterated the importance of all-gender restrooms, encouraging museums not already doing so to “take a fresh look at their own environment and the overt and subtle signals they might send about the categories in which they place visitors, potentially signaling who is welcome and not welcome.”



The arts have long been a home for individuals who may not find support in the culture at large, and have served as a harbinger of broad social changes.
Gordon Hall


According to The New York Times, “all-gender” is the preferred terminology when it comes to inclusive restrooms. “To me, saying gender-neutral is like saying colorblind,” the Stonewall Center’s Genny Beemyn told the Times. “We see gender. To deny it is to deny people’s reality. We’re trying to increase recognition of the diversity of gender rather than to erase it.”


Smaller institutions like the Jewett Arts Center and Worcester Art Museum in Massachusetts, the Regina Miller Gallery in Pennsylvania, and the Doty Fine Arts Building in Texas, have publicized moves toward all-gender restrooms, too. (The Utah Museum of Fine Arts opts for “gender-neutral.”)


Ahead of its decision to rescind Obama-era policy on discrimination, Trump’s administration characterized transgender rights as “a states’ rights issue and not one for the federal government.” Going forward, the onus of change may fall on individual institutions like museums to continue advocating for basic protections and to recognize the role they play in educating their visitors ― whether it’s using a canvas or not.


If recent efforts by museums to combat some of Trump’s discriminatory and ill-advised orders are any indication ― see: the Museum of Modern Art, the Museum of the City of New York, the Davis Museum at Wellesley College, the Metropolitan Museum of Art ― we should expect art institutions to play a big role in activism to come.




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Mahershala Ali: Discrimination Is 'Not New' For Black Muslims

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Actor Mahershala Ali brings diversity to this year’s Academy Awards in two vital ways. He’s a black actor at an awards show that’s been heavily criticized for being #sowhite, and he’s Muslim, part of a religion that is often vilified and exploited in Hollywood. 


In an interview in the Radio Times, Ali spoke out the struggles of occupying this specific intersection of race and religion in America. Although these identities make his presence so important at the Academy Awards, being a black Muslim man out in the real world often means you’re a target for multiple kinds of bigotry. 


The “Moonlight” actor, who converted to Islam when he was 25 years old, told the magazine that he isn’t shocked by Islamophobia ― as a black man, he already knows what it feels like to be a victim of discrimination.


If you convert to Islam after a couple of decades of being a black man in the U.S., the discrimination you receive as a Muslim doesn’t feel like a shock. I’ve been pulled over, asked where my gun is, asked if I’m a pimp, had my car pulled apart,” Ali said in the interview. “[Some] Muslims will feel like there’s this new discrimination that they hadn’t received before – but it’s not new for us.” 


Ali also spoke about how his wife, Amatus Sami-Karim, the daughter of an imam, stopped wearing a head scarf because “she had so many bad experiences. She didn’t feel safe anymore.”



Black Muslims make up a significant percentage of America’s Muslim populationAccording to a 2011 Pew Research Center study, 40 percent of native-born American Muslims describe themselves as black. On the other hand, most foreign-born Muslim Americans are from Arab countries (41 percent) and describe themselves as white (60 percent).


Some black Muslims claim their stories are erased by the stereotype that to be Muslim is to be Arab. Others have written about facing racial discrimination from within their own faith community. 


, a contributor for Buzzfeed, put it this way:



I’ve inherited a legacy and community where on paper, I should fit into many groups — black, Muslim, black and Muslim. In practice, I am not always welcomed into them, and if I am, people aren’t always sure exactly how I fit ... There was a time when being Muslim in America meant being black, but in 2016, I’m the anomaly. I navigate a landscape where I am as likely to remind white Americans that Black Lives Matter as I am to explain it to South Asian and Arab Muslims.



While accepting a Screen Actors Guild Award earlier this year, Ali spoke about how important it was to embrace and celebrate all of the things that make people unique. 


“I think what I’ve learned from working on “Moonlight” is we see what happens when you persecute people. They fold into themselves. And what I was so grateful about in having the opportunity to play Juan was playing a gentleman who saw a young man folding into himself as a result of the persecution of his community and taking that opportunity to uplift him and to tell him he mattered, that he was OK, and accept him. I hope that we do a better job of that.”

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Oscar Isaac To Play Title Role In New York Production Of 'Hamlet'

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Shakespearean tragedy has never made us feel so giddy. 


The New York Times reports that Oscar Isaac is slated to play the title role in director Sam Gold’s upcoming production of “Hamlet.” The highly anticipated staging will run at New York’s Public Theater from June 20 to Sept. 3, 2017. 


Gold, who won a Tony for his direction of Broadway’s “Fun Home,” began work on the production in 2014, which was expected to run this year at Theater for a New Audience’s Polonsky Shakespeare Center in Brooklyn. Because of artistic differences, however, between Gold and artistic director Jeffrey Horowitz, the show was pulled in June 2016. 


Now, the play, having controversially switched venues and artistic directors, is officially back on the docket. And we could picture few people better than Mr. Llewyn Davis himself to play the brooding, emo lead. 







Oh, and one more bonus: Horatio will be played by Keegan-Michael Key, of “Key and Peele,” in his first New York stage performance. According to Slate, however, Key was classically trained as a Shakespearean actor before veering into improv comedy, so our expectations are pretty high. 


Tickets will go on sale for Public members on March 9, with non-member tickets available at an unspecified later date.


H/T The New York Times

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The 20 Funniest Tweets From Women This Week

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The ladies of Twitter never fail to brighten our days with their brilliant ― but succinct ― wisdom. Each week, HuffPost Women rounds up hilarious 140-character musings. For this week’s great tweets from women, scroll through the list below. Then visit our Funniest Tweets From Women page for our past collections.

















































































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Jeffrey Dean Morgan Responds To 'Racist' T-Shirt Controversy

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Negan is not happy.


Walking Dead” seemed to find itself in a big pile of shirt after news broke that one of its products was being pulled from international retailer Primark for being “racist” and “offensive.”


The shirt in question shows a picture of Negan’s signature barbed wire baseball bat and reads, ”Eeny, Meeny, Miny, Moe,” which Jeffrey Dean Morgan’s character says while picking out his victim in the Season 6 finale.






In “The Walking Dead,” the phrase is followed by “catch a tiger by his toe,” but some historical versions of the rhyme did include a racial slur, replacing “tiger” with the N-word. 


That’s why the controversy erupted. Primark reportedly received a complaint, and the shirt was pulled.


Now, Morgan is responding to the debacle, and he’s about as blunt as Negan.


“Holy crap people are stupid,” the actor wrote on Twitter.






Morgan’s sentiment was echoed online. 


“He’s not wrong,” said one Redditor, while another added, “If a shirt that says ‘Eeny meeny miny moe’ genuinely outrages you, you have bigger problems in life.”


Many Twitter users seemed to agree.


As we previously reported, the line isn’t meant to be a racist comment on the show. In an ironic twist, Negan actually says the rhyme in the comics so he won’t be perceived as racist. He wants his victim to be chosen at random. 


Still, as one Twitter user pointed out while criticizing the shirt design, the product didn’t even display “Walking Dead” on the front. It just had the graphic imagery and the rhyme. 


If Negan truly wanted to eliminate the possibility of appearing racist, he probably shouldn’t have used the line in the first place, but the “outrage” and confusion over it appears to come down to context.


As Entertainment Weekly points out, the Season 6 finale, in which the line was uttered, aired in April 2016. This discussion is happening almost a full year later.

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Harry Belafonte’s New 19-Track Album Highlights Need For Racial Unity

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Over his 68-year-long career, Harry Belafonte has made remarkable contributions to both the world of music and activism.


In commemoration of his upcoming 90th birthday on March 1, Legacy Recordings will highlight the entertainment icon’s esteemed cultural impact with the release of a 19-track single-disc anthology, “When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte.” The album, which was curated by Belafonte and produced by his son, David, will feature a selection of his notable hits, including “Scarlet Ribbons (For Her Hair),” “Turn The World Around,” and “Banana Boat Song (Day-O).”


The retrospective project will also include a remake ― performed by a multi-cultural children’s choir ― of Belafonte’s 1957 song about racial unity, “Island In The Sun.”


In an effort to bridge the generational gap between Belafonte’s fans, David Belafonte told The Huffington Post that he and his father decided to take a fresh approach to convey his message.


“The task that I assigned Harry with when we set out to do this was to take a look at all the years he spent building out this incredibly diverse collection of music,” David said. “If he had to cherry pick his top dozen, top 20 songs and introduce to a constituency that didn’t know you, but would best reflect those that are on point in terms of your message and on point with things that you just like about them, that’s what was selected. Handpicked by the man himself.”       


He added that a complementary video documentary chronicling Belafonte’s illustrious career is also in the works, and tentatively expected for release in the coming weeks.


In 1956, the civil rights activist became the first recording artist to achieve platinum success by selling over a million copies of his third album, “Calypso.” The intersection of his musical and humanitarian efforts would later lead him to create the star-studded “We Are The World” charity single in 1985 to benefit the famine crisis in Africa.



Recorded by a super group of 46 artists and produced by Quincy Jones, the USA for Africa initiative raised more than $60 million for hunger relief, making it one of the best-selling singles in history, according to the Sun Sentinel.


David hopes “When Colors Come Together” will provide a case study of sorts for a younger generation working to alleviate systemic societal issues.


“There is such an intense disruption in our world right now that you don’t know what to believe anymore. There aren’t any iconic leaders anymore, which is another reason why I felt it was important for kids to have a perspective on men like Harry. We’re being led by social media, we follow shallow studies on most stuff. Don’t know what is factual, what is real, and we’re living in a world of infinite rage,” he said.


“I looked at this as an opportunity to say, here is a good chance to find one thing to do and spark some change somewhere,” he continued. “Find some way to relieve some of that pressure from that rage I think we all feel.”


“When Colors Come Together... The Legacy of Harry Belafonte” hits stores and digital retailers Feb. 24.






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Why Emma Thompson Won't Be Returning For 'Love Actually' Sequel

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Grab the tissues. 


Emma Thompson won’t be returning for the upcoming “Love Actually” mini-sequel, and her reasoning is heartbreaking: It’s because of Alan Rickman. 


“[Director] Richard [Curtis] wrote to me and said, ‘Darling, I can’t write anything for you because of Alan’ and I said, ‘No, of course you can’t, it would be sad, too sad, it’s too soon,’” she told Reuters Thursday night while on the red carpet for the UK release of Disney’s “Beauty and the Beast.”


Rickman played Harry, the husband of Thompson’s Karen, in the 2003 holiday hit. He died last January at the age of 69 following a battle with cancer. 


“It’s absolutely right, it’s supposed to be for Comic Relief and there isn’t much comic relief in the loss of our dear friend really only just over a year ago,” Thompson added. “We thought and thought, but it just seemed wrong.”







After Rickman’s death, Thompson wrote a touching tribute to her peer and friend. 


"He was the finest of actors and directors," she wrote in a note to the New York Times. "I couldn’t wait to see what he was going to do with his face next. I consider myself hugely privileged to have worked with him so many times and to have been directed by him. He was the ultimate ally. In life, art and politics. I trusted him absolutely." 






Curtis, who is behind the 10-minute mini-sequel titled “Red Nose Day Actually” ― to be released on Red Nose Day to help raise money for Comic Relief’s effort to fight injustice and poverty ― first revealed his choice not to include Thompson or a tribute to Rickman while speaking with the Press Association. 


“You know, dealing with Alan is very complicated,” he said. 

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Arrest Made In Decadelong Cold Case After Podcast Renews National Attention

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Tara Grinstead, a teacher in Ocilla, Georgia, was last seen on Oct. 22, 2005. After more than a decade of false leads and dead ends, police arrested the individual they believe is responsible for her death.


On Thursday, the Georgia Bureau of Investigation announced that Ryan Alexander Duke was arrested in connection to Grinstead’s murder. Duke was a student at the high school where Grinstead taught, and became a person of interest for investigators after they received a tip linking him to Grinstead.


“We did find the person that was responsible for Tara’s death,” GBI agent J.T. Ricketson said at the courthouse news conference, per CBS.


An extensive effort was made across the state to find the missing 30-year-old since her disappearance. Reports show that her house was left locked with her cell phone inside, and her purse and wallet were missing from the unlocked car in her garage, on the day she was reported missing. Other than a latex glove found in her yard, law enforcement had little physical evidence to use in the investigation. Television outlets like CBS News’ “48 Hours” and Investigation Discovery’s “Disappeared” have covered the case. 


Georgia filmmaker Payne Lindsey began his own investigation of the cold case in mid 2016, through a podcast called “Up and Vanished.” The show went over, in minute detail, the circumstances of Grinstead’s disappearance. Lindsey interviewed friends of the teacher, former law enforcement, and other individuals who might have been able to shed light on the case.


“Up and Vanished” certainly isn’t the first podcast of its kind. When people think “true crime” and “audio,” naturally minds jump to runaway hit “Serial,” which followed the disputed conviction of Adnan Syed. The public’s hunger for true crime, meted out in weekly installments, was evident, and soon other shows followed: “Accused,” “Someone Knows Something,” “In the Dark.” Many focused on long-cold cases.


“Crime is one of those topics that kind of taps into our base curiosity about things: good and bad, right and wrong, and also human emotions,” “Criminal” podcast host Phoebe Judge told The Huffington Post in 2016. “True crime allows the listener to be a detective for a minute.” Still, as many learned with “Serial,” listeners can’t always expect an ambiguous case to be neatly concluded at the end of a season. There’s a base level of expectation that a cold case will remain old news.


It turns out, that’s not the case for “Up and Vanished.” On Thursday, Lindsay posted two brief updates on the podcast feed. In the first, Lindsey announced that the GBI would be holding a press conference, and for listeners to check back in later. His next update: “Ryan Duke killed Tara Grinstead.”





The three-minute clip is a conversation between Lindsey and a female source, where she tells him of Duke’s arrest.


“Listen, I’m going to tell you something,” the woman says. “I know I haven’t helped you very much, because it’s really honestly hard to deal with [...] this, but if it hadn’t been for you, none of this would’ve happened.” Later, an unidentified male voice tells Lindsey that Duke admitted to killing Grinstead.


Without further details, there’s no telling what kind of impact the podcast had on the case of Tara Grinstead. Still, it’s undeniable that the tight focus Lindsey placed on her case, delivering it to the crime-hungry public who could consume each detail on their daily commutes or workouts, increased nationwide attention on the missing teacher. The show earned nearly 3,000 ratings on iTunes. Several news outlets covered the podcast after its first few episodes, making an 11-year-old case worthy of headlines once more. 


Lindsey appeared on “Good Morning America” Friday to discuss the revelation of Duke’s involvement, telling host Amy Robach he believed the arrest was “one piece to a bigger puzzle.”


When asked what role he believed “Up and Vanished” played in the development, Lindsey said, “The podcast opened up this atmosphere in Ocilla that created this trust factor and a line of communication, an open channel.”


Listeners can only wait to discover just how impactful the audio program was.

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Asian Actors Have Earned Just 1 Percent Of Oscar Nominations In 89 Years

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Merle Oberon is the only Asian woman to have been nominated for a Best Actress Oscar in 89 years. The year was 1935. She didn’t win. 


And ― in a sign of the times ― it’s reported that she felt compelled to conceal her Indian heritage and say she was born in Tasmania, Australia. How’s that for Asian representation? 


When you add it all up, of the 1,500 total Oscar acting nominations over the years, only 16 have gone to Asian actors. That’s just 1 percent. 


What’s more, of those 16 nominations, four went to Ben Kingsley. Massoud Behrani is the only other Asian man who has been nominated in the Best Actor category. Exactly zero East Asian actors have ever been nominated for either of the Best Actor or Actress roles. 


So it makes Dev Patel’s nomination for Best Actor in a Supporting Role for his performance in “Lion” this year a small victory. He’s the 13th Asian and third Indian to be nominated in an acting category.


All of these factors are why Asian communities continue to emphatically speak out about whitewashing in film. It’s why people accused Scarlett Johansson and Tilda Swinton of using feminism to downplay race when they were asked about cultural appropriation in their respective films. 


It’s why Asian Twitter sounded off about Matt Damon in “The Great Wall,” launching #thanksmattdamon to prove a tongue-in-cheek point about white savior depictions. 


The problem goes beyond just lead actor roles as well: Asian actors nabbed only 3.9 percent of speaking roles in film ― a huge discrepancy from the amount white entertainers receive at 73.7 percent, according to a 2016 diversity study


Watch our video above to learn more. 

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Taylor Talks About That Brutal Two-On-One And Diversity On 'The Bachelor'

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Taylor Nolan, a 23-year-old mental health counselor from Seattle, seemed to click with Nick Viall early in this season of “The Bachelor.” Soon, however, she got swept up in a bitter feud with sometime house villain Corinne Olympios ― and, after getting sent on a two-on-one date in the bayou near New Orleans with Corinne, Taylor was sent home. (Corinne is one of four remaining women vying for Nick’s hand.)


In a few tense moments that aired between the rivals, Taylor said Corinne lacked in maturity and emotional intelligence ― judgments that many viewers found condescending at best ― while Corinne lambasted Taylor as a “dumb bitch” who, she claimed, no one else among the bachelorettes liked. 


Yikes.


Now safely off the air ― at least until the “Women Tell All” reunion episode ― Taylor caught up with HuffPost’s Here to Make Friends podcast about how the conflict played out, her connection with Nick, the franchise’s diversity problem, and her dramatic two-on-one date. Here are a few highlights:


On moments from the show that make her cringe now:


“The first thing that I said that I definitely cringed at ― because I tried very hard to make sure I wasn’t labeling, I wasn’t personalizing things, and I can’t tell if it was a splice or if it was really just, I had reached the end of my rope ― and I said “She’s a manipulative bitch.” And I was like, oh, Taylor, no ... I didn’t like that I said that. 


“The other really cringeworthy thing was hearing Corinne say, “I can’t believe she’s a mental health counselor, and that people would go to you for advice.” Hearing things about my professionalism, that wasn’t part of the show and who I was in that environment, definitely hit a nerve for me.” 


On the diversity problem of the “Bachelor” franchise:


“For me, I’m half-black half-white, and that was something I’ve had to face some adversity on and struggle with my own identity in terms of my race and my culture, but I think it is disappointing that we have to have this conversation about race on this show that has such a national platform. But I think they’re definitely going in the right direction now, and I think Rachel is a fantastic pick to be the person to break this cycle of whiteness on the show ... There were some seasons where it was literally a full-white cast.


“I think this show in some ways reflects society, and in some ways can try to lead society in a different direction ... I think Rachel being the Bachelorette is definitely a new direction of pushing society in a different way.”


On how race played into her own “Bachelor” experience:


“Reflecting on my two-on-one and talking with some previous cast members and cast members from my season, one thing I found super interesting was that, in struggling with my racial identity growing up, Corinne definitely reminded me of those girls in middle school and high school who would make fun of me or bully me for being part black. I found it so ironic that of course I end up on a two-on-one, directly compared to a woman who is white and has had a very privileged life. It really put things in perspective for me, looking back.”


On Rachel as Bachelorette:


“My initial thought as I left was definitely that Rachel was going to be the next Bachelorette. I think all of us were kind of pulling for her and hoping it was going to be her.”


For more from Taylor on her experience on “The Bachelor,” and life after the show, check out HuffPost’s “Here To Make Friends” podcast below: 






Do people love “The Bachelor,” “The Bachelorette” and “Bachelor in Paradise,” or do they love to hate these shows? It’s unclear. But here at “Here to Make Friends,” we both love and love to hate them — and we love to snarkily dissect each episode in vivid detail. Podcast edited by Nick Offenberg.




Want more “Bachelor” stories in your life? Sign up for HuffPost’s Entertainment email for extra hot goss about The Bachelor, his 30 bachelorettes, and the most dramatic rose ceremonies ever. The newsletter will also serve you up some juicy celeb news, hilarious late-night bits, awards coverage and more. Sign up for the newsletter here.


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11 Times The Oscars Honored White Actors For Playing People Of Color

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The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences has made strides to become more diverse in recent years, but there’s a long road ahead to make up for the organization’s long legacy of exclusion.


Throughout its 90-year history, the Academy has not only failed to recognize the talent of many actors and actresses of color but awarded whitewashed roles in the industry.


Hollywood has consistently given diverse roles to white actors over the years; in fact, quite recently Tilda Swinton was cast as a Tibetan monk in 2016’s “Doctor Strange.” And the Oscars haven’t helped alleviate this long-standing issue by rewarding this kind of whitewashing. 


Several notable white actors have been nominated for an Oscar for portraying people of color through the years. Many of them have actually won. 


Take a look at 11 times the academy has nominated actors for blackface, brownface and yellowface. 


Jennifer Connelly, “A Beautiful Mind”



Jennifer Connelly portrayed Alicia, the wife of mathematician John Nash in 2001’s “A Beautiful Mind.” In real-life, Alicia Nash (born Alicia Lardé) was Salvadorian. The actress, who has no Latin American roots, won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress for the role.


William Hurt, “Kiss of the Spider Woman”



In “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” William Hurt plays Luis Molina, a queer South American prisoner. The film was adapted from Argentine author Manuel Puig’s novel of the same name. Hurt, a white man who doesn’t identify as LGBTQ or Latino, won an Oscar for Best Actor for the role in 1985. 


Linda Hunt, “The Year of Living Dangerously”



Actress Linda Hunt won an Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in 1983 for portraying Billy Kwan in “The Year of Living Dangerously.” In the film, Kwan is a Chinese-Australian male photographer with dwarfism working in Jakarta, Indonesia.


 Laurence Olivier, “Othello”



Shakespeare’s “Othello” is a Christian Moor, who is often portrayed as having a dark-complexion. Legendary British actor Laurence Olivier wore blackface when he portrayed Othello in the 1965 film version. The actor was nominated by The Academy in the Best Actor category for the role. 


George Chakiris, “West Side Story”



Greek-American actor George Chakiris portrayed Bernardo, leader of the Puerto Rican gang The Sharks in “West Side Story.” He, as well as other white actors portraying Latino characters in the film, darkened their complexion with make-up. Chakiris won an Oscar in the Best Supporting Actor category for the role. 


Hugh Griffith, “Ben-Hur”



Hugh Griffith portrayed Sheik Ilderim, an Arab character who owns the horses Judah ends up using in his chariot race, in 1959’s “Ben-Hur.” The British actor won the Oscar for Best Supporting Actor for this role. 


Spencer Tracy, “The Old Man and the Sea”



Fans of Ernest Hemingway’s novel The Old Man and the Sea might recall the book’s titular character is a Cuban fisherman. But in the 1958 film adaptation of the novel, Spencer Tracy was given the titular role. The actor, who is not Latino, was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Actor category for his role. 


Yul Brynner, “The King and I”



Yul Brynner, who is mainly of Russian descent, starred as the King of Siam (present-day Thailand) in the 1956 musical “The King and I.” The actor won an Oscar in the Best Actor category for the role. 


Marlon Brando, “Viva Zapata!”



Hollywood brought the story of Mexican revolutionary Emiliano Zapata to life in the 1952 film “Viva Zapata!” The titular role went to Marlon Brando, who is not Latino. The actor was nominated for an Oscar in the Best Actor category for the role. 


Luise Rainer, “The Good Earth” 



“The Good Earth” is a 1937 film based on the historical novel of the same name, its story focuses on a family of Chinese farmers. Actress Luise Rainer wore yellowface to portray O-Lan, one of the film’s protagonists, and she took home an Oscar for Best Actress for the role. 


Gale Sondergaard, “Anna and the King of Siam”



Gale Sondergaard portrayed Lady Thiang, the king’s head wife, in “Anna and the King of Siam.” The actress, who is not of Asian descent, was nominated for the role in the The Academy’s Best Supporting Actress category. 


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This 13-Year-Old Raised Money For Over 800 People To See 'Hidden Figures'

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At only 13 years old, aspiring astronaut and devoted “Hidden Figures” fan Taylor Richardson is leading quite the philanthropic cause. 


Earlier this week, Richardson was deemed GoFundMe’s February “Hero of the Month” after raising $17,000 through the fundraising website for people throughout the nation to go see the hit movie. “Hidden Figures” is centered around three black women mathematicians who played a pivotal role in sending the first American into space.


“I hope [the movie] inspires them to know they can do anything they put their mind to,” Richardson told The Huffington Post earlier this week.  


Thus far, Richardson and her mother have given over 800 people the opportunity to attend a free screening of the movie (with snacks) and ― for a number of them ― receive the Hidden Figures book.


Richardson said her initial infatuation with “Hidden Figures” came after her regal experience attending The White House Hidden Figures in Space Exploration event in December where the movie was screened. 


“It shows me that women, and especially African-American women, can do anything a guy can do and anything a white male can do,” she said of the movie. 





Richardson said her initiative to send people to free screenings initially targeted young girls, but she and her mother later decided to broaden the audience. 


“We wanted to have other groups see not just what three black women did, but just to know [of our] contributions,” Richardson’s mother said. 


While the two know the movie won’t compel everyone to aspire towards having a career in space, like it has with Richardson, they hope that through the Hidden Figures books, kids will at least be able to develop a heightened interest in literacy, something Richardson has regularly been working towards in her community.


When she was nine years old, Richardson said she encountered a young boy at a hospital who didn’t have easy access to books. After that, she decided to hold broke drives in her hometown in his honor called “Taylor Takes Flight With A Book.”


To date, Richardson has collected and donated over 5,000 books in Jacksonville and read to over 300 children. 



She’s also worked on an anti-bullying campaign with the CEOs of Florida First Coast YMCA and Girl Scouts of Gateway Council.


But Richardson’s philanthropic trajectory isn’t what’s made her mother most proud: it’s her resilience. 


“I tell people all the time: what makes me most proud of Taylor is not what you hear and all these success stories, but how she handles her failures,” her mother told HuffPost.


But the persevering spirit of Richardson ― who was bullied, held back in the second grade and once struggled with literacy ― can best captured in the way she turned around her ADHD diagnosis. 


“She calls ADHD: Abundantly Different Happily Divine,” her mother said. “I hope I live to see her go Mars.”

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