White hairdressers saw Whoopi Goldberg’s dreads and asked ‘What are we supposed to do with this s—?’
“As soon as they started to spray your hair with water, you knew it was game over and that you would have to make a stink. And I did.
Whoopi Goldberg is sharing her experience with racism in the hair and makeup departments on film sets.
In her new book Bits and Pieces: My Mother, My Brother, and Me, the Ghost star discusses the prejudice she faced on predominantly white productions. “The producers or stylists would look at my hair, which I had been wearing in dreads since the late ‘70s, and say, ‘What are we supposed to do with this s—?’” Goldberg recalls. ”I guess that every Black actress they had worked with before me had either straightened her hair or worn it very short or worn a wig because that’s what made the film people comfortable. I wasn’t about to change my hair.”
“People would continue to say things to me like, ‘Oh, you’re so articulate,’ as if that was a pleasant surprise,” she remembers.
Goldberg also explains how her friend and hair stylist, Julia Walker, offered sound advice after the actress expressed her frustration. “Julia said, ‘They don’t know any better. They don’t know anyone like you,’” Goldberg writes. “‘So to them, you are this kind of unicorn, somebody they’ve never come across. You don’t quiet your mouth when you have something to say. I think you are very hard for them to understand. They thought you should be a lot easier to deal with than you are.’”
“I came to understand that Julia was also a first for many people because she was a Black woman who could do any actor’s hair,” Goldberg continues. “Rarely did they ever let her, though. The stylist was usually someone white who was limited in what they could do because they couldn’t do Black hair. Often folks would say they could, but as soon as they started to spray your hair with water, you knew it was game over and that you would have to make a stink. And I did.”
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Goldberg writes about how her hair and makeup team helped Hollywood improve its treatment of Black talent. “My makeup man, who comes from makeup royalty, was Mike Germain, and he agreed with Julia,” she says. “We spent many great years together, and I watched the two of them teach an industry that really didn’t have much of a clue about black skin or hair to help move the needle forward. This was in the 1980s and 1990s, a long time ago, it seems, but Julia was right about a few things in all of this.”