Is Viola Davis Character In The Help Just The Stereotypical Black Mammy?
I cannot contain my anger and disappointment that Viola Davis decided to star in the new film The Help. Hollywood produces very myopic representations of black women. Black women are either whores like Halle Berry in Monster’s Ball or maids like Viola Davis in The Help. The social construction of black female sexuality is very limited. Black women are placed into the binary and not depicted in Hollywood movies as three dimensional people. The film roles available for black women tend to be two dimensional and not nuanced. Black women in North America are still presented as inferior to white women. The white woman is still placed on the pedestal as the true image of womanhood.
The Help was developed through a white lens about the civil rights movement. I am not suggesting that white people did not have a role in ending America’s apartheid regime. However, I do believe The Help was really made for white audiences and not black people. First, the star of The Help is the young white actress Emma Stone. Stone’s character is at the center while Viola Davis character is in a secondary role.
I noticed a couple of things while watching the trailer for The Help. First, the white women are presented as the stereotypical pristine, upper class, and feminine. However, the black women in The Help speak in a Southern dialect, and constructed as inferior to the white women. The black domestics in The Help are overweight, unattractive, speak in Southern dialect, and presented as asexual.
Of course, the white woman saves the day since the purpose of The Help is to promote the narrative that black people we cannot save ourselves.
The genesis of The Help is, in order for white people to be interested in movies about black people a white person must always be the protagonist.
The Help is just another form of the classic white saviour movies. Usually in a white saviour movie the white protagonist has an epiphany and decides to help the
black people that are constructed as victims.
I am so tired of the racist white saviour narrative that black people need to be saved by whites.
Another problem, I have with The Help is the film promotes the racist narrative that black women have no agency. The only purpose black people have is to serve white folks. Black womanhood is constructed as just to be loving and nurturing. The Help does not present Viola Davis or Octavia Spencer’s characters as three dimensional women. Hollywood consistently promotes the discourse that a black woman’s purpose in life is to exist in an anterior time. I cringed when I heard the line in the trailer “we love them and they love us.”
Yes, black women love working in the domestic sphere and serve rich white women. Of course, The Help ignores the fact in America, black women were blocked from higher educational opportunities for decades. Black women worked in the domestic sphere because this was the only work to make a living in America prior to the civil rights movement. Of course, there were black women such as Zora Neale Hurston that became a writer. However, the majority of black women had to work in domestic work because that’s the only form of work they were offered!
Two years ago, Sandra Bullock racist film The Blind Side also promoted this abhorrent narrative disavowing black agency.
The Blind Side also made over $200 million dollars at the North American box office. Hollywood will continue to make racist movies such as The Help because
the public supports this bigotry. Would the general public really want to see an honest movie about black female domestics that were raped by white men?
Would white people like to see movies where they are presented in a negative light during the civil rights era?
I understand Viola is a black actress, and she needs to work. However, time really has not changed for black women in Hollywood.
I wish Viola Davis had more pride and decided NOT to take the role in The Help!
In the year 1940, Hattie McDaniel won an Academy Award for her role as mammy in the film Gone With The Wind. The black mammy stereotype of black womanhood is so pervasive in racist Hollywood!
McDaniel did not have a choice because in the year 1940 there were a paucity of good roles for black women in Hollywood.
I remember McDaniel made a famous quote that she would rather be paid “$700 dollars a week to be a maid in a film than $7 dollars a week” in real life.
McDaniel was actually a civil rights activist during her era and she definitely fought for black women rights.
I understand Viola Davis needs a pay cheque but taking on the role of a maid is demeaning in The Help because of the history in the Jim Crow south.
It seems being a maid is the best role Hollywood has to offer the very talented Viola Davis.
The trailer for The Help is so racist and sexist against black women. I just feel so sick watching this racist garbage!
It is so sad that the best role Viola Davis can get since her Academy Award nomination for Doubt is just being the black mammy! It is so so deleterious and abhorrent that Viola would take this disgusting role as a maid to a white woman!
The Help engenders the discourse that a black woman purpose is to be subservient to white folks. I also find the racist narrative of the white saviour in The Help problematic. In the 1960s, civil rights movement my black elders helped themselves they did not sit and wait for white folks to gain freedom!

I believe you missed the point.
The Help is a racist piece of garbage. I can’t believe how a white author can think she can write a book portraying black hardships in the 1950’s.
I think you need to read the book. It’s about humanity and shows up the roles played because of racism and economics in the 50’s (and still in our great country!).
Authors black, white, yellow, green, write about their own experiences and the experiences of the other in fiction. That’s what authors do.
Yes but she inserted herself into the story as well as stole the story of someone else.
Would you be paying her mortgage while she sits around so other Blacks can feel better about themselves?
GayBlackCanadianMan, I love you! YES! Hands down, “The Help” is racist TRASH, produced only to give insecure racists a feel good movie about “the good old days” because they’re mad that Michelle Obama (and also Barack Obama) are in the White House, running things. Racist, racist, and utterly pathetic proof that some people will never face the truth of what is before them.
Hands down, the book AND the movie, in particular, are racist. Period. It’s a feel-good movie for white women, and white people in general.
This is one of the best critiques I’ve read about “The Help” and “White Savior” films. Where’s the film on Rosa Parks? Where’s the film on countless other black women who fought in the 60s and before for freedom and basic human decency? When are we going to see the film version with a black heroine like “Buffy” or “Wonder Woman”? We won’t because no one has the courage to protest and boycott anymore. That would get Hollywood to change!
How about a movie called “Today’s Society”
Outatanding review, another Uncle Tom sellout bullshit whitebpwople feel good about ourselves movie that shows that the pervasive attitude of white domination still exists and thrives in the whitewash of society of America. Oh, and by the way, i myslef am a high ranking black official that has been working at the Supreme Court of The United States for 24years. YES, we are going backwards, which is a damn shame since there are some such as Tyler Perry who have NOT lost touch and have the power and financial resources to show Black people of all shades of colors in a positive light and in not just some demeaning caricuture of life. PEACE.
Honestly, I do not care what the book reads. This is about the movie. Not only is it not original, but we have seen films like this before. Its just sad that Hollywood will never change because people keep buying the same stereotype. Ugh.
Thank you. As a functionally while woman I’ve been so uncomfortable with this whole thing. Even in interviews for the movie the actresses are using language about how the maids are “given a voice” in this movie. Given a voice?! By a 22 year old white girl?! the assumption that people can’t claim their own voice and need a spunky white heroine to tell them how to engage in the world (and take credit for their wins and collective power “I will empower you”) is so freaking offensive and a narrative that just refuses to die.
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You’ve made some really great points. I was a little perplexed as to why the trailer for the movie tried to make it seem as though it’s a feel-good chick- flick. I didn’t care for the book and I doubt I’ll go see the movie
I agree. In fact that’s basically how the NY Times described it.
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I totally agree with your article. As blacks we are constantly under scrutiny, I feel that she passed the stage for such role, she has proven her talent over an over again. At this stage of her career, she must be more selective. Very condescending & stereotypical
You can certainly see your expertise in the work you write. The world hopes for more passionate writers like you who are not afraid to say how they believe. Always follow your heart.
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A movie that portrays white people as inept bigots incapable of doing the most menial tasks in the absence of blacks, as racist pigs with no heart or soul, and blacks as numbingly afraid to talk about their own experiences even using pseudonyms for fear or retribution… And all you’re taking away from it is that Emma Stone had a leading role and Viola Davis talked with an “accent”?
It’s not the greatest film ever made, but any film that shows the hypocrisy and bigotry of white people in the south is a good reminder of where we were and in many ways still are. Viola Davis did an admirable job portraying the range of emotion her character would have had the opportunity to exhibit in such a setting.
I actually think you missed the point. As a black, lesbian, immigrant living in the USA today, I went to see this movie last night with quite some hesitation. I laughed and I cried at times. This movie is in my top five list now. I think the actors did an amazing job, especially Viola Davis. What did I see – I saw the disgusting life of blacks and whites in the 1960. I watched and realized where blacks were, were blacks are and where blacks need to be. I think the blacks still have a long way.
The movie portrays the cruelty that white women inflict on black women in the truest sense. It shows how the black maid was essentially a slave. The white woman are ruthless and lack empathy, more concerned with their presentation and class rather than their humanity. Bryce Dallas Howard is the most menacing character of all the white women and decides to create washrooms in the backyard for the black maids to use. Emma Stone is not the martyr. If you watch closely, it is the maids, specifically Viola Davis’ Character. They are the voice in the book. They are the authors. Emma Stone splits the earnings of the book to them. Emma Stone is really the secondary character who is a journalist concerned with the politics of that time. The author is “anonoymous” only because VIola Davis and the other maids dont want to get in trouble, but they are the voice of this movie. Viola Davis gets to tell Howard to her face “you are a godless woman”. She leaves and says in the narration that she will be an author one day. I think the movie depicts the truth about the 1960’s and the horrible circumstances that were put on black people. I think Viola Davis should win the oscar too. And by the way, I am a gayasiancanadianman.