News, Reviews & Commentary on Lesbian and Bisexual women in Entertainment and the Media

Zoë Saldana's world

Last year, globalgrrl called the perfection that is casting Zoë Saldana as Uhura in the new Star Trek movie.

This year, Saldana spoke with blackfilm.com about the role, as well as her indie film, Blackout, which is released on DVD today. I'd heard a little bit about that project, and the IMDb.com synopsis promises as much drama and tragedy as the day the lights went out in Brooklyn back in 2003: “It examines the nature of man to take advantage of his own fellow man outside of normal conditions, in times of weakness and vulnerability.” You can catch clips from the film here, but here's a taste.

I'm only a casual fan of the Star Trek beast, but I found it interesting to hear from Saldana about stepping into a role practically trademarked by another actor, and her career to come.

She does confess that she never was a fan of the original series:

    I was not a fan until now, and I have so much admiration for what they did, and how much the series continues to grow after 45 years. I had the honor of meeting Nichelle Nichols and working with Leonard Nimoy, and it was fantastic.

But she has an appreciation for Nichols and the ground she broke in taking the role of Uhura, who happened to be one of the first major African-American characters on network TV:

    I was able to sit down with her, and she told me the whole story of how Uhura came to be and where they were going with her character. It all fell into place the moment she walked into the door and auditioned for the part. She named the character herself ... and she felt as an artist, she was going to make the part big.

So big, in fact, that now it's a part that needs more than one actress. About trying on the uniform for the first time, she says:

    It was very interesting. The moment everything came together from the hair, the costume, being on the set, and then you start to feel, 'OK, this is real. This is amazing and fun'.

About her career, Saldana says that she looks for roles that are more than just “the chick in the flick,” but actually look like the strong, hard-working women she knows:

    It's almost an insult when you read scripts and you see that the guy is the hero. Women are becoming filmmakers, directors, and writers, and writing things how they see themselves. Star Trek was no different and neither was Avatar. Look at Uhura. She's a lieutenant on the Enterprise, where she's an equal with everyone. She's not just a woman. She's in command just like everyone else is, with power and strength. I felt a mass appeal when I read the script and when J.J. Abrams told me he wanted me to do it.

The only note that rang a little sour for me was when Saldana prefaced the above statement by saying “I'm not a feminist.” I tend to subscribe to the school of feminist thought that says “Feminism is the radical notion that women are people,” so it's a little hard for me to reconcile her strong-female aesthetic with that. But whatever. Labels are so second wave. Call it what you like; what's important is that she's interested in bringing strong female characters to her audiences. That's a world I want to see explored.

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  • lurker_above's picture

    now if there were more of 'em....

    Speaking as a big fan of the original Trek, I'm delighted to see that Uhura is being replaced by another equality activist (even if she won't call herself a feminist) capable of making my higher brain functions shut down through sheer OHMYGODSOGORGEOUS. I hope this isn't just hype and that Saldana is in fact playing a strong Uhura, one capable of kicking the amount of butt the original one kicked.

    Speaking as a big fan of the original Trek's message, I confess myself still skeptical that this will be more than another fun movie. Back then, it was a huge deal to have an African-American (the character is actually from Africa, but Nichelle Nichols trumps) woman in a major role. It was a huge deal that they had Sulu, and Spock (aliens are apparently too demonic) and they actually kept Spock in exchange for losing a strong female character who would've been the second-in-command otherwise. The thing is, doing the same thing now isn't nearly as progressive. I sort of wish they'd let the franchise die and replace it with a modern-day equivalent. Say, something where there wasn't a white male majority. Hey, I can dream, right?

    --

    No boom today. Boom tomorrow. There's always boom tomorrow.
    --Susan Ivanova tells it like it is

    VicksGotSeoul's picture

    Why is 'feminist' a bad word?

    I know this is a discussion that has been and will be talked to death, but I seriously am a little shocked by how the word 'feminist' has come to be a bad word. In my college's 'Women and Media' class, save for about two women, every other woman said that they preferred not to be labelled as such. And these were all intelligent, confident individuals.

    I guess since we're in the 'third wave' or whatnot, labels such as those don't jive with our post-modern aesthetics. Frankly, I can't wait until we can reclaim the word 'feminist', as other, even more derogatory words have been reclaimed.

    Oh, and yeah, Zoe Saldano is for the win.

    Ediana's picture

    Why a bad word?

    Because conservatives have spent the last 40 years turning words such as feminist and liberal into horror terms.  Ask a woman in the US if she believes she should have the same rights as a man you will find very few that say no.  However, ask that same woman if they are a feminist and most are all heck no.  It's pitiful.  If a woman does not feel she is a feminist (based on what feminist means) then she is basically saying she is a subservient, mindless peon who should be treated poorly, be degraded and have no self respect.  Zoe is clearly just another young person (and there are tons like her) that never bothered to think about terms and how they are distorted.  I think if she was asked if she wants to be subservient to men she would probably say no, if asked if men should have rights that women don't she would say no, if asked if women should be paid the same as a man at a job she's say yes, and asked if sexual harrasment is okay she'd say no.  Before one denies they are something it's best they know what the word actually means.

    On a trivial note:  Is Aftersex with Zoe Saldana as a young lesbian ever coming out?  The trailer looks intriguing.     


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