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Is it right for a human actor to play a racoon?

Non-Jews taking Jewish roles isn’t a problem, so long as there’s equality of opportunity

June 20, 2022 08:34
Berna
2 min read

Photos were released last week from the set of the new Bradley Cooper-helmed biopic Maestro where, having failed to bag his Oscar with either A Star Is Born or as Rocket Racoon in Guardians Of The Galaxy, Cooper will portray classical music’s most charismatic conductor, Leonard Bernstein.

Lennie was Jewish. Very Jewish. So Jewish that he wrote musicals for Broadway, championed the music of Gustav Mahler (a converso Jew who nevertheless filled his symphonies with Jewish angst and klezmer tunes) and threw himself into musical causes in Israel. Extremely Jewish.

Bradley Cooper, who also directs and co-wrote the Bernstein biopic, is not.
In a now-familiar refrain, my social media feeds lit up with Jewish friends saying it was “not OK” and throwing around the comedian Sarah Silverman’s now-notorious term, “Jewface”.
As it happens, Silverman is in this film, so presumably she hasn’t got so much of a problem with her leading man’s ethnicity. Or maybe she’s decided that having at least some of the Jewish characters played by Jews is better than none. To Silverman, “Jewface”, the casting of non-Jewish actors in Jewish roles, is the Jewish equivalent of blackface. When white actors “black up” to play black characters, society now considers it wrong. When non-Jewish actors, er, “Jew up” to play a Jew — the pictures reveal Cooper wearing a prosthetic nose — it should be similarly unacceptable. I disagree, in principle, with both.

What is this about? Respect, being seen, and equality. So if Jewish actors were not being given equal casting opportunities in general, you could argue that they should to be given priority for roles like Shylock and Bernstein and Amazon Prime’s Mrs Maisel (who was played by non-Jewish Rachel Brosnahan).