Vanessa Bell Calloway believes her skin tone affected ‘Coming to America’ casting

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Vanessa Bell Calloway believes her skin tone affected ‘Coming to America’ casting

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Vanessa Bell Calloway isn’t living in the past — just shedding more light on it.

Calloway — who played the role of Imani Izzi in 1988’s “Coming to America,” the beautiful woman originally meant to marry Eddie Murphy’s Prince Akeem — says she originally auditioned for the lead female role of Lisa, played by Shari Headley, and believes her complexion played a role in not getting the part.

“When you have white people hiring black people in movies, sometimes a certain look is wanted,” Calloway, 67, tells Page Six. Calloway got the impression that the film’s team “wanted a light-skinned girl. I just wasn’t light enough, even though Eddie had the final say on who played Lisa.”

She continued, “That’s something that we’ve always dealt with within our race: A lot of men were indoctrinated by having a white woman or light-skinned woman on their arm.”

Calloway, who’s also been seen in Showtime’s “Shameless” recently, adds, “I didn’t want the part of Imani, I wanted to be Lisa — I had read the script and I wanted the bigger role.”

The production then allegedly said she would be great for the role of Imani and asked her to read for the part.

“At that point, I knew I was not going to get Lisa. So I went outside in the hallway, looked over the part with five minutes of preparation, went back in, and did the best I could.”

Calloway says that despite her experience, the opportunity outweighed her misgivings.

“The real deal is, when you’re in a situation like that, you wanna be a part of an Eddie Murphy movie. I wasn’t gonna say no! I would’ve loved to have had the lead part, but I was very happy to be in the movie. I can’t lie about that. I said, ‘I’ll make the best out of this and I’ll be the best.’ It was a smaller role but it was a glamorous part to play. And Shari did a great job.”

Calloway will appear in a cameo in the film’s sequel, “Coming 2 America,” which will premiere on March 5 on Amazon Prime. She currently stars in “Saints & Sinners: Judgment Day” on the Bounce network.

Page Six has reached out to “Coming to America” director John Landis for comment.

 
Dark skin is in. She’s trippin . Look how all you hate lights skinned niggas and call us soft and call light women non Black.
 
Yep. What's the joke?

Because I assumed only a light skinned person would say what you said. Just as if someone said "racism is nothing but inner black turmoil" I would assume they are white. Both self serving statements. Colorism exists just as much as racism. Vanessa being a 20+ year vet in Hollywood, (which is probably the longest lasting most racist and colorist institution in America) shouldn't be so easily dismissed.
 
Because I assumed only a light skinned person would say what you said. Just as if someone said "racism is nothing but inner black turmoil" I would assume they are white. Both self serving statements. Colorism exists just as much as racism. Vanessa being a 20+ year vet in Hollywood, (which is probably the longest lasting most racist and colorist institution in America) shouldn't be so easily dismissed.

Why is being light skinned a qualifier for such a statement being made? Even in your own reply you admit colorism does exist. I am just trying to see the joke? Are there receipts of only/strictly light skin people saying this?
 
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Very odd responses.

Alot of posters on BGOL are light skinned and or biracial. Colorism is a taboo subject up here bruh. We can say white people racist but cant acknowledge the paper bag theory and colorism.

I just read your boy Prodigy of Mobb Deep's book and he talks about his mom being a very light skinned women with irish ancestry. She was an R&B singer in the 50s and 60s. And he talks about how she would perform in Black clubs up north where if you was darker than a paper bag, unless you was performing you couldn't get in. There would be cacs at these joints too. Colorism is real.
 
It probably did because I love my people but we are some of the most pettiest smallminded just mean to each other and 9 times out of 10 I'mma get into with another black person before I would a white person;That mentality of "I'll kill a nigga","I wish a nigga would","I won't be their victim..." just comes up so quick without even thinking about it.

She's always looked good,her and that female from Moesha show the mother....
 
If you really think about it, it wasn't a miscast at all. She's thinking about it from the perspective of an actor. She's thinking that she would have had more lines, which translates into more money. Is she a better actress? Of course.
Storywise, she fit well. She was raised to be the perfect wife for Prince Akeem. She was beautiful and obeyed his every command. Technically, she was perfect. Her beauty was not in question. Also, she was a chosen mate. Of course, his African king father would pick a beautiful black woman.
Lisa was a standard of American beauty, not African beauty. Even so, she was not the "best of the best" in all of America. Akeem liked her because she was HIS choice, not because she was the BEST choice.

This applies to real life as well. Not all of you kniggas are rollin' with dimes at home. I myself will take a loyal bitch over a fine bitch any day. Lisa was "hot enough" for Akeem. She was almost literally the first chick he was attracted to. He just put a massive effort in trying to snag her.
Now you can analyze the amount colorism played in black society at the time and measure that against how it affected casting and you might have some merit, but Vanessa represented a kind of beauty (like his bath girls, the flower/rose girls Garcelle B., etc.). There were some dope ass chicks dancing during her intro scene, too.
Can't be mad at that.
 
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Word. The lightskin chick was ok in the role, but from what I've seen of Vanessa Calloway, she would've killed it.

I also believe at the time Eddie was color struck himself, but who knows.

Well, we know what his wives and baby mamas have looked like.

Alot of posters on BGOL are light skinned and or biracial. Colorism is a taboo subject up here bruh. We can say white people racist but cant acknowledge the paper bag theory and colorism.

I just read your boy Prodigy of Mobb Deep's book and he talks about his mom being a very light skinned women with irish ancestry. She was an R&B singer in the 50s and 60s. And he talks about how she would perform in Black clubs up north where if you was darker than a paper bag, unless you was performing you couldn't get in. There would be cacs at these joints too. Colorism is real.

Very real, especially in the entertainment industry. I don't see how people can deny it. There are too many examples to point to - and I'd say moreso these days than back in the day.

If you really think about it, it wasn't a miscast at all. She's thinking about it from the perspective of an actor. She's thinking that she would have had more lines, which translates into more money. Is she a better actress? Of course.
Storywise, she fit well. She was raised to be the perfect wife for Prince Hakeem. She was beautiful and obeyed his every command. Technically, she was perfect. Her beauty was not in question. Also, she was a chosen mate. Of course, his African king father would pick a beautiful black woman.
Lisa was a standard of American beauty, not African beauty. Even so, she was not the "best of the best" in all of America. Hakeem liked her because she was HIS choice, not because she was the BEST choice.

This applies to real life as well. Not all of you kniggas are rollin' with dimes at home. I myself will take a loyal bitch over a fine bitch any day. Lisa was "hot enough" for Hakeem. She was almost literally the first chick he was attracted to. He just put a massive effort in trying to snag her.
Now you can analyze the amount colorism played in black society at the time and measure that against how it affected casting and you might have some merit, but Vanessa represented a kind of beauty (like his bath girls, the flower/rose girls Garcelle B., etc.). There were some dope ass chicks dancing during her intro scene, too.
Can't be mad at that.

Lisa was still the leading character. Notice how her dark-skinned sister in the movie was "sassy" with an attitude and thot-like tendencies while Lisa was the "good" desirable one with the qualities of a queen.

I still love and respect CTA and I think it advanced Black filmmaking, but the colorism is undeniable.
 
Well, we know what his wives and baby mamas have looked like.



Very real, especially in the entertainment industry. I don't see how people can deny it. There are too many examples to point to - and I'd say moreso these days than back in the day.



Lisa was still the leading character. Notice how her dark-skinned sister in the movie was "sassy" with an attitude and thot-like tendencies while Lisa was the "good" desirable one with the qualities of a queen.

I still love and respect CTA and I think it advanced Black filmmaking, but the colorism is undeniable.
That was why I said, if you look at it from a cultural lens, will you find colorism? Yes. The time period and the stereotypical norms represented on television and in movies will play a factor. I personally thought Patrice was "the funny one". Her sister represented a VERY REAL type of sista that would have been missed if she wasn't there. We all know this type of sista. Don't front, now. Arsenio was her counterpart. He represented what a lot of brothas would do in his position. They could just as easily have cast Paula Jai Parker as the sister or someone like her. If you flipped the roles of the sisters, I don't think Shari Headly could have pulled off funny like that, or even sassy.
 
Dark skin is in NOW......but back in 1988 I could see her getting passed up for roles cause she wasn't light skinned.

The only problem is the media is controlling the narratives about black people. We have to stop letting outsiders determine our aesthetics only for the purpose of consumption. We have to take control of our selves and set our own reality.
 
The only problem is the media is controlling the narratives about black people. We have to stop letting outsiders determine our aesthetics only for the purpose of consumption. We have to take control of our selves and set our own reality.


Agreed. I've said that on here a million times but too many actually internalize negative shit they're told about their own people and reinforce it.
 
Not in for women. All these young new black actresses and female rappers are straight-up biracial.

There's one literally named Mulatto that is biracial. To prove her "blackness" she acts super ratchet and ghetto as fuck. Colorism is real.
 
There's one literally named Mulatto that is biracial. To prove her "blackness" she acts super ratchet and ghetto as fuck. Colorism is real.

But at one time she said she didn't identify as black, now she says she does, so go figure. And look at Saweetie, Doja Cat, and Ceraadi, amongst others.

 
Well, we know what his wives and baby mamas have looked like.



Very real, especially in the entertainment industry. I don't see how people can deny it. There are too many examples to point to - and I'd say moreso these days than back in the day.



Lisa was still the leading character. Notice how her dark-skinned sister in the movie was "sassy" with an attitude and thot-like tendencies while Lisa was the "good" desirable one with the qualities of a queen.

I still love and respect CTA and I think it advanced Black filmmaking, but the colorism is undeniable.

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Still happens today but even lightskin isn't good enough. The female love interest is usually biracial.
 
I thought that was the point. The Queen(Imani) they wanted Akeem to marry was super beautiful, but he just wanted a regular ol chick(Lisa).

That's what I said in my post. It wasn't that Lisa was "regular" insomuch as Akeem wanted to choose his own woman. Vanessa represented the "best" in his country. He just wanted a chick that didn't want him because he was the Prince. Lisa didn't know he was royalty. Imani was only an option because he was royalty.
Some of the dudes in this thread are trying to conflate general colorism with this movie's casting choices.
While I definitely agree that they existed and that there is a lot of colorism, (Spike's School Daze covered this very topic), I don't think that Coming To America was atypical of that casting trope. I think they were more aware than a lot of other movies.
 
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Dark skin is in. She’s trippin . Look how all you hate lights skinned niggas and call us soft and call light women non Black.
I mean that part is true though, but I digress.

Back in the 80’s when this was casted you couldn’t tell a light skin nigga nothing. Y’all be looking muthafuckas dead in the eye like, “..Past the wine cooler, you big black ha ha ha...”
 
The only problem is the media is controlling the narratives about black people. We have to stop letting outsiders determine our aesthetics only for the purpose of consumption. We have to take control of our selves and set our own reality.
I guess you don't remember the controversy back the lat 90's/ 00's when dark skin women were complaining about rappers specifically asking casting agents not to hire dark skinned women for their videos.

White supremacy may have been the root cause, but black folk took that mantle and ran with it.
 
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