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Of course non-Jews can play Jews, but they shouldn't have fake noses

Bradley Cooper's fake schnoz to play Leonard Bernstein has divided the Jewish community

August 18, 2023 07:30
Screenshot 2023-08-18 at 08.29.12
3 min read

I love Bradley Cooper. There I’ve said it. He’s a brilliant actor, writer, director, and producer, loved and respected by audiences, peers, and critics alike.

He hasn’t put a foot wrong in a notoriously fickle industry. Let’s face it, who doesn’t love him? But this week the trailer for his latest film, Maestro “a love letter to the life and art” of Jewish composer Leonard Bernstein, was released and has garnered headlines and commentary of a more critical nature.

Cooper has donned a prosthetic nose for the duration of the film to portray Bernstein. And the burning question is- why? Why did Bradley Cooper with a healthy-shaped nose himself, feel that it was necessary to don a large prosthetic proboscis to play the great man when the nose he dons is larger and more prominent (as far as the trailer and production stills show) than the one that Leonard Bernstein had in real life.

When one thinks of Lenny Bernstein, the first thing that comes to mind is not the size of his nose. It was not his defining feature and to my understanding neither commented on by others nor part of his self-identity. Bradley Cooper is not Jewish. He played the Elephant Man on stage without a single prosthetic to acclaim.

Surely he would have been able to embody Lenny Bernstein with all his skills as an actor, from the inside out. To have dug deep to find what made the Maestro tick. and to approach his Jewishness from the inside, find ways to embody the Jewish essence of the man without the need to stick on a large nose. It’s triggering.

Many non-Jewish friends and acquaintances have completely understood it. Images of anti-Jewish Nazis propaganda films and cartoons, Jew Suss type of malevolent males, and black and white pictures of Nazi guards measuring nose sizes of Jewish people to determine non-Aryan looks on the way to concentration camps, and the prototypes of English medieval drawings of ugly Jewish men with large hook noses, holding bags of money surrounded by virtuous Christians.

Noses are sensitive to Jews. It’s a racial trope that has been thrown at us for hundreds of years. I am currently playing a female Shylock in the Merchant of Venice. My research has painfully thrown up the hook noses that actors have worn since the 16th century to make a quick semiotic image of an “evil, slippery” Jew.

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