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THE COLOR BLACK

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If Keyes wishes to attack bigotry in Hollywood, she should choose a better example than “Pinky.”

She wrote: “Why, they wouldn’t even let a black girl play the role of a black girl in the film ‘Pinky,’ which was a story about . . . well, a black girl. They cast white Jeanne Crain instead--when Lena was right there, ready, willing and certainly able.”

“Pinky” is the story of a black girl who is able to pass for white. Lena Horne could never pass for white, not to mention the fact that she was under contract to another studio.

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Crain’s co-stars were the very black Ethel Waters and the very white Ethel Barrymore. The 1949 film, as I recall, was a serious attempt to improve race relations, although it wasn’t a very good movie. Crain and both Ethels, however, got rave reviews and were all nominated for Oscars.

Honoring a great black artist such as Waters doesn’t fall in the category of Hollywood’s most embarrassing moments, to my mind.

LARRY T. WRIGHT

San Gabriel

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