In season three of “The Morning Present,” a race scandal rocks UBA, the printed community that serves because the present’s backdrop. The storyline sees Karen Pittman’s Mia and Greta Lee’s Stella strikingly depict the realities of girls of coloration in largely white, company areas like community tv. “That is me and Greta really, in an actual approach,” Pittman tells POPSUGAR after talking on the 2024 Makers Convention on Feb. 28.
By way of characters like Mia and Nya on “And Simply Like That…,” Pittman brings unbelievable nuance to her portrayal of robust Black girls who navigate their race of their respective environments, which she opened up about in dialog with “Succession” actor J. Smith-Cameron. The 2 spoke on the three-day summit hosted by Makers, a community-focused media model owned by Yahoo that is centered on accelerating fairness for ladies within the office.
“I pleasure myself on having characters that do not resemble me as an actor.”
For Pittman, identity-driven storytelling is inherently intentional. “I feel the storytellers and writers are at all times on the lookout for methods to imbue your private, genuine perspective, no matter you could have been by means of in your life,” she says. However for the actor and activist, that authenticity is much less about sharing her lived experiences and extra about bringing complicated feelings to her characters. “I pleasure myself on having characters that do not resemble me as an actor,” she explains. “I do not see any of myself in Mia, and I hope to by no means see any of myself.”
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As an alternative, she “influences the storytelling” by making certain there’s depth to her characters. “I remind [writers], ‘Let’s make sure that we present the center of this character as a substitute of simply displaying she’s a powerful lady.’ That may find yourself being a trope,” she says. She likes to create characters by means of their “emotional panorama” specifically. “Realizing what the center of that lady is and with the ability to convey that to the digicam visually is actually the place I really feel like the best affect I’ve as an actor in any story. That’s what makes an viewers join.”
With a high-powered, impartial TV producer like Mia, she’s centered on channeling vulnerability, a high quality not typically related to Black girls on display screen. “The writers of [‘The Morning Show’] are at all times hoping to replicate again the energy and the nimbleness of African American girls,” she says. “Generally that may be one-sided, so I am at all times making an attempt to infuse moments of fragility, softness, tenderness, and suppleness of what it means to be a girl in that job, in the identical ways in which you may see a white lady in these jobs.”
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On the subject of Nya, Miranda’s professor-turned-friend on “And Simply Like That…,” it was vital to Pittman — and creator Michael Patrick King — that she put on her hair in braids. As she places it, “I feel it is very important replicate, particularly on that platform, what it’s to have an African American lady who fully accepts her naturalness, who is not making an attempt to alter or look totally different, who’s embodying this assemble of Blackness fully, and has determined that she’s going to reside in a spot of affection and training — and to share that intelligence on the present.” Pittman additionally understands that Nya’s friendship with Miranda permits the chance to indicate viewers what it seems to be like for a lady of coloration to construct a relationship with a white lady who could not know every other WOC. That is particularly impactful in a collection with a lot fanfare and generational reputation.
However whereas she’s capable of begin conversations about her characters in some methods, she additionally acknowledges the challenges that include being a Black lady within the appearing world. In her dialog with Smith-Cameron, Pittman make clear Hollywood’s cultural reckoning in response to George Floyd’s homicide by police in 2020. Whereas there was an preliminary shift within the business, she believes it is since reverted again to the established order.
“My white colleagues do not should have these conversations.”
“Individuals are forgetful,” she tells POPSUGAR. “Individuals neglect, and as an actor, you do not need to at all times have your finger on the heartbeat of tradition making an attempt to show them or remind them, ‘Hey, we have to pump some life into this.’ My white colleagues do not should have these conversations.”
As with girls of coloration in any subject, she’d wish to solely concentrate on the job at hand: appearing. “I might love to enter an expertise the place the one factor that I am known as to do is to convey the complete breadth of my craft and never should concern myself with the rest,” she says. However, as she reminds us, that is the truth for any othered particular person in our society.
As Pittman underscored in her dialog with Smith-Cameron, “the system is damaged,” and she or he is aware of it’s going to take time for the business to progress. However what she will be able to do is collaborate with allies to advocate for the tales and characters they really feel are vital. “I need to be a human that builds coalition, that retains frequent floor,” she tells POPSUGAR. “One of many causes I really like portraying these characters is as a result of they’ve their hand out for connection; they’re reflecting again to the tradition. There may be area for all of us. Definitely in my profession, as a mom, as a human being, that’s the approach I’m on the earth.”
She’s additionally eager for change. “When you’re an actor or in case you’re an artist, you’re an optimist and an activist,” she says. “And in case you’re an activist or an optimist, you consider that humanity can do one thing totally different.”
Yerin Kim is the options editor at POPSUGAR, the place she helps form the imaginative and prescient for particular options and packages throughout the community. A graduate of Syracuse College’s Newhouse College, she has over 5 years of expertise within the popular culture and ladies’s life-style areas. She’s keen about spreading cultural sensitivity by means of the lenses of life-style, leisure, and magnificence.