Viola Davis on her wig-wearing past: ‘It was a crutch, not an enhancement’

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Last week, I covered some excerpts from Viola Davis’s excellent New York Magazine interview, her first interview since that awful New York Times “angry black woman” piece was published. Viola’s quotes were amazing and we had a nice discussion. As it turns out, Viola had a lot more to say about, well, everything. This week, Vulture published a second article framed as “A 14 Step Guide to Happiness From Viola.” They included even more great quotes, and you can read the full piece here. Some highlights:

On the “angry black woman” NYT article: “We need to use the same adjectives as we use for any woman. Which could be dangerous, too, but I’ll accept that. Any day. Shonda Rimes is not an ‘angry black woman.’ There is a depth to Shonda that can’t be minimized by using just the word angry, and we use that too often to describe women of color because we don’t want to look any deeper. I see Shonda as quirky, I see her as intelligent, I see her as beautiful, I see her as feminine, I see her as a businesswoman in the juggernaut of television and a mother of three children, and a woman living in 2014. I wouldn’t reduce her to ‘angry black woman.’ Or her characters, for that matter.”

What she learned from Meryl Streep: “You could sense it was calculated, but still very organic. She would always say, ‘Is there something I could do to help you in this scene?’ If she sensed that maybe there was something I wanted to speak up about but maybe I didn’t have the clout to do it, she would do it for me. She had my back. She made it a point even in between scenes to make sure I sat with her and talked to her and shared a lot of chocolate. She eats a lot of chocolate. Dark German chocolate.” Now that Davis is in a lead role, “I always talk to all the crew. I always make it pleasant,” she says. “I always nurture a relationship that makes people feel like they’re important, like they’re a part of the collaboration. I feel that way about the young actors on set. I don’t talk to them like I’m the mentor; I talk to them like they’re my peers. And I learned that from Meryl Streep.”

Attending Julliard: “I didn’t know anyone and had to learn how to take the subway by myself. I never got care packages or money from my family. They didn’t have those resources. I had to adapt.”

When she was 28, she lost half her hair to alopecia areata: “I woke up one day and it looked like I had a Mohawk. Big splash of bald on the top of my head. I was like, What is this? Until I found out it was stress related. That’s how I internalized it. I don’t do that anymore. My favorite saying in the world is, ‘The privilege of a lifetime is being who you are.’ I am telling you, I have spent so much of my life not feeling comfortable in my skin. I am just so not there anymore.”

Wearing a wig everywhere: “I wore a wig in the Jacuzzi. I had a wig I wore around the house. I had a wig that I wore to events. I had a wig that I wore when I worked out. I never showed my natural hair. It was a crutch, not an enhancement … I was so desperate for people to think that I was beautiful. I had to be liberated from that [feeling] to a certain extent.” So at the 2012 Oscars, she exposed her “natural hair.” She still has her wigs; she wears them on Murder, she wears them to photo shoots, she wears them when she doesn’t have time to pick out her hair and get rid of her grays, but she no longer wears them in her everyday life. What matters, she says, is that “it’s an option … when it used to never be an option. I had something to hide.”

Failure: “Nobody tells you about failure. People always talk about winning, vision boards, getting what you want. People also don’t talk about fear. It’s always keeping fear at bay. Squelching it. Throwing it away. I’ve embraced fear and failure as a part of my success. I understand that it’s part of the grand continuum of life. I’ve been through it all. Breakups, heartache, and I’ve lost a parent already. So now I get it at this age, I get that that is it. That life literally is what you make it.”

[From Vulture]

In case you haven’t realized it by now, Viola Davis is everything. The way she talks about failure and fear of failure and how important FAILURE is for every person’s growth, well… they need to make t-shirts with Viola’s speech. And talking about her hair falling out and how she no longer feels the need to wear wigs everywhere? She’s just…God, I don’t even have the words for how much I love her.

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Photos courtesy of Fame/Flynet, WENN.

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45 Responses to “Viola Davis on her wig-wearing past: ‘It was a crutch, not an enhancement’”

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  1. redvixen says:

    Love this lady

    • MCraw says:

      I’m so happy to read about her and Shonda all in the same morning. She really is a breath of fresh air.

  2. Petrichor says:

    You’re right, Kaiser. Viola is everything: smart, beautiful, thoughtful, the list goes on. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again: it’s so refreshing to read an interview with a celebrity who is actually intelligent and articulate, emphasis on the latter, which seems to be increasingly rare in Hollywood.

    Oh, and I think her natural hair looks fantastic. Even better than the wig in the second picture.

  3. Kiddo says:

    She is smart, NICE, graceful, beautiful and a role model for all people. Or at least she should be, based on her interviews.

  4. Irishserra says:

    She is beautiful, inside and out. It makes me sad that it took her a while to realize this.

    • Kip says:

      I don’t know, I think it takes quite a lot from a person to realise what she has realised at all, and most people never do.

  5. GoodNamesAllTaken says:

    What a beautiful human being. I think accepting failure as part of living a full life is very important and very challenging.

    • Chris2 says:

      Yes indeed GNAT and she articulated her overcoming of great fears and insecurity in real human words, rather than the self-love stuff so many spout (and so come across as raving narcissists who haven’t felt a damn thing)). Accepting the existence of failure is an early lesson worth learning, though you get the impression the very suggestion of failure is now very infra dig, and self-esteem paramount….with predictable results.

    • Frida_K says:

      I totally agree with you. She is so wonderful, isn’t she?

      Wow. She is an amazing woman, yes she is.

    • Tiffany :) says:

      I agree Good Names. There is just something about her that really strikes a chord in me.

    • Pepsi Presents...Coke says:

      Very true.

      Especially the first part.
      Especially the second part. 😀

  6. jinni says:

    It is really sad that Viola felt she couldn’t directly speak up for herself because she was powerless and I really liked that Meryl used her clout to help her out. I could see that Viola is very careful with how she speaks on certain subjects. This was very evident during the Oscar roundtable when you could see that she wanted to talk about how the racist Hollywood system is the reason why she isn’t able to try for most female roles, but had to couch her words very carefully so as not to come off as an “Angry Black Woman” , thus making it even harder for her to get even the few roles she could be offered.
    The fact that unlike Clooney, Theron, Swinton (who didn’t get what she is saying but instead turned the conversation into something that had nothing to do with what she really meant) Streep was able to pick up on Viola’s predicament and use the privileges that she has to help Viola is commendable.

    • AM says:

      I’m glad to hear Viola say they have this kind of relationship, because one thing I have never liked about Meryl is that she cose to campaign for her third Oscar the year that Viola was her closest competition. Meryl is nominated virtually every or every other year at this point, whereas winning could have been career and life changing for Viola – who’s now on TV because the film roles just aren’t there for her and may never have another shot at Oscar.

      • delorb says:

        @AM.

        Viola isn’t on TV because she can’t get movie roles. She’s on TV because she got a killer role. She gets to be everything that Hollywood told her she’d never be. Love the show AND her. I also think she’s beautiful, fierce, soft, vulnerable, manipulative, smart, the list goes on and on and on.

        It also is a good thing she didn’t win an Oscar for playing a maid. A maid in the 21st century. A maid in a movie, based on a book written by a white woman.

      • jaye says:

        Have you seen that show? It’s BRILLIANT! The writing is amazing, the characters are complex and the storyline(s)? I die! This show was not something she took because she couldn’t get movie roles. She took it because it was a fantastic way to show off her acting chops. And boy does she have them.

      • Pepsi Presents...Coke says:

        @delorb:

        I think Octavia Spencer won Best Supporting for her role as a maid, didn’t she?

      • AM says:

        And Octavia is also on television now. It’s complicated. I don’t dismiss her role in Murder, but Viola herself has spoken about the dearth of movie roles.

      • delorb says:

        @Pepsi,

        Yep. And your point?

    • Virgilia Coriolanus says:

      I remember that roundtable. The only person who was actually interested in what she had to say was Michael Fassbender. The others just kinda talked over her.

      • jinni says:

        So true about Fassbender which is why I didn’t lump him in with the others. He actually tried to get the subject back on topic by asking her questions that relate to what she was trying to say after Clooney finished rambling on for a good while about his struggles.

    • Hola says:

      Maybe Annie Lennox needs to take a lesson from `Meryl Streep.

      More action less pontification

  7. Dani2 says:

    She’s an amazing person that I really look up to and she’s gorgeous both with wigs and natural hair. And I totally agree with her about wigs being merely an option and that once you feel like you need to hide behind it then that’s not a healthy mindset to have. Her interviews are always great to read.

  8. truthSF says:

    Speak the truth Viola. And the sooner black women stops hiding behind straight hair, be it by relaxing it or wearing weaves/extentions, the sooner our next generation of little girls will love wearing their hair natural without wanting to hide/destroy it.

    I’m not saying don’t wear/have straight hair, we shouldn’t don’t do it because we’re’re ashamed of being seen with our natural (not nappy) hair.

    • Artemis says:

      I was about to step on my soapbox re: weaves until you clarified 🙂 I agree. I used to wear weaves during my teens after years of being bullied for my natural hair. And my best (black) friend said it does make you look prettier because ‘hair is everything’.

      Now I embrace my natural hair BUT I like to switch my look once in a while so I will wear weaves. It’s very good to protect your hair and for growth but it’s annoying when you’re active and not good at maintaining weave (I’m not). My favourite style is yarn twists!
      Relaxing and straightening made my hair look burnt to a crisp, I don’t know why I thought that was a good look, yikes.

      Viola is queen, she’s one of the few ones I follow because she’s an amazing human being, not for the gossip. Her wisdom and life are inspirational.

    • Tiffany27 says:

      Yes to the hair. I recently went natural and I love my hair. I wish I had the self esteem years ago to see how truly beautiful my hair is instead of torturing it with Relaxers. I’m not knocking people who do get them, but for me it was a bigger step toward loving myself.
      Viola is wonderful. I can only hope to have that much wisdom and intelligence when I become older.

    • delorb says:

      For me I think we look beautiful no matter which style we choose. Be it natural or full on weave. WE need to stop hating on each other for those choices (to say nothing of how others view us). WE need to understand and embrace ALL the different ways we can wear our hair and stop trying to make people feel less than, because they want straight hair/weave. White women are made to feel less than sexy based on hair color and length, etc, but only WE as black women are told that we are less than black if we did this or that. Its time for that nonsense to stop, IMO.

  9. Chris says:

    And there’s the square up for Meryl Streep after yesterday’s Jessica Chastain article.

  10. Lucy2 says:

    She always seems extra radiant when she has her natural hair. I was hoping she would do that for the show, but I do like the style she is sporting on it.
    Can we make her spend her hiatus going around and talking to young people? Her words are so true, I feel like everyone should hear them, especially those just starting to make their way in the world.

  11. serena says:

    I love reading her interviews and I’m even watching How to get away with Murder.. and it’s awesome, she’s awesome!

  12. Madrid says:

    Very touching

  13. Ciria says:

    Love her new show How to Get Away with Murder. She gives a great interview and it’s true that the older we get, the more we feel comfortable with ourselves. It’s lovely.

  14. some bitch says:

    Love her. Very well-spoken lady.

    Fabulous arms, too. She looks great!

  15. Pri says:

    In regards to alopecia, my cousin wears wigs. I mean, ideally, if no one cared about hair, she wouldn’t have to. But humans are obsessed with hair.

    I think people need to get over seeing wigs or extensions as an oddity.

  16. Morgan says:

    I think she’s great, but I’m surprised so many people like HTGAWM. I’m done after 2 episodes. I don’t find her character at all compelling and I don’t like whatever the law versions of interns are either. Plus, I don’t buy the premise of her as a teacher and her students doing all her law practice work.

  17. maria1981 says:

    such a mature person. a full grown woman/human.

  18. Lv says:

    True beauty!

  19. I Choose Me says:

    Love her more and more and I like and respect Meryl more now too for getting it and for being so supportive.

  20. Ziglavsky says:

    This is a woman to look up to. She’s lived a life, made success from difficult beginnings and has the grace and the intelligence to reflect on the humanity of her situation and the specific human experience.
    This is feminism. This is success. This is grace.
    Ms Davis, I bow down.

  21. MAC says:

    I watched Help last night. Love her