The portrayal of blackface鈥搘hen people darken their skin with shoe polish, greasepaint or burnt cork and paint on enlarged lips and other exaggerated features鈥攊s steeped in centuries of racism. It peaked in popularity during an era in the United States when demands for civil rights by recently emancipated slaves triggered racial hostility. And today, because of blackface鈥檚 historic use to denigrate people of African descent, its continued use is still considered racist.
鈥淚t鈥檚 an assertion of power and control,鈥 says , a professor of comparative ethnic studies and American studies at Washington State University. 鈥淚t allows a society to routinely and historically imagine African Americans as not fully human. It serves to rationalize violence and Jim Crow 蝉别驳谤别驳补迟颈辞苍.鈥
Although the exact moment when blackface originated isn鈥檛 known, its roots date back to centuries-old European theatrical productions, most famously, Shakespeare鈥檚 Othello. The practice then began in the United States in the 18th century, when European immigrants brought the genre over and performed in seaports along the Northeast, says , a professor of African American studies and theater studies at Yale University.
鈥淏ut the most famous sort of era to think of as being the birth of the form itself is the Antebellum era of the early 19th century,鈥 Brooks says.
Thomas Dartmouth Rice , an actor born in New York, is considered the 鈥淔ather of Minstrelsy.鈥 After reportedly traveling to the South and observing slaves, Rice developed a Black stage character called 鈥淛im Crow鈥 in 1830.
With quick dance moves, an exaggerated African American vernacular and buffoonish behavior, Rice founded a new genre of racialized song and dance鈥攂lackface minstrel shows鈥攚hich became central to American entertainment in the North and South.
White performers in blackface played characters that perpetuated a range of negative stereotypes about African Americans including being lazy, ignorant, superstitious, hypersexual, criminal or cowardly.
Several characters in minstrel shows became archetypes, as described in the University of Florida鈥檚 , 鈥淗istory of Minstrels: From 鈥楯ump Jim Crow鈥 to 鈥楾he Jazz Singer.鈥欌 Some of the most famous ones were Rice鈥檚 鈥淛im Crow,鈥 a rural dancing fool in tattered clothing; the 鈥淢ammy,鈥 an overweight and loud mother figure; and 鈥淶ip Coon,鈥 a flamboyant-dressed man who used sophisticated words incorrectly.
Most of the minstrel show actors were working-class Irishmen from the Northeast, who performed in blackface to distance themselves from their own lower social, political and economic status in the United States, says Leonard.
鈥淭hey did it to authenticate their whiteness,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t was the same as saying 鈥榃e can become the other and mock the other and assert our superiority by dehumanizing the other.鈥欌
Blackface minstrel shows soared in popularity, in particular, during the period after the Civil War and into the start of the 20th century, as documented in the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture鈥檚 official blackface . The widespread demeaning portrayals of African Americans paralleled a period when southern state legislatures were passing 鈥Black Codes鈥 to restrict the behavior of former slaves and other African Americans. In fact, the codes were also called 鈥Jim Crow鈥 laws, after the blackface stage character.
As society modernized, so did the ways in which blackface was portrayed. Not only was blackface in theaters, but it moved to the film industry. In the blockbuster movie The Birth of a Nation, blackface characters were seen as unscrupulous and rapists. The stereotypes were so powerful they became a recruiting tool for the Ku Klux Klan. African Americans protested the film鈥檚 portrayals and its distorted take on the post-Civil War era, yet it continued to be popular among white audiences.
鈥淭here are different ways in which blackface becomes weaponized as a form of white supremacist propaganda,鈥 says Brooks.
African Americans also performed in blackface given it was the only way to be in the entertainment industry. But their performances countered some of the primitive representations that were popularized. Black artists infused political commentary with their comedic minstrel routines, offering a more intelligent representation of African Americans.
But blackface minstrelsy remained a genre heavily dominated by white actors. Al Jolson, a Lithuanian Jewish immigrant who came to New York as a child, became one of the most influential blackface stars of the 20th century, including his 1927 hit film The Jazz Singer.
The appeal of blackface declined after the 1930s and into the civil rights movement. However, the negative stereotypes of African Americans and mocking of dark skin have persisted in recent decades. For example, blackface appeared in the , on , and wearing blackface to dress up as famous African Americans remains an ongoing issue.
More recently, outrage ensued when Virginia Governor Ralph Northam and the state attorney general Mark Herring both admitted in February 2019 to wearing blackface costumes as young men.
As Leonard says, 鈥淏lackface is part of the toxic culture of racism.鈥