Letters to the Editor

Letters posted here are associated with the following article:
The new Amos 'n' Andy? Critics hate Tyler Perry's outrageous comedies, but his black fans love them. Is Perry a stereotype-spouting minstrel -- or a smart writer and actor who knows how to connect with his audience?
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  • THE BROCKBACK PART

    Odd that you didn't address the conversation in the gay community regarding not only Perry's questionable sexuality but also how he's stolen much of his act from a well-known Atlanta drag queen.

    What would be the church's response if they thought Perry was gay? Would his message carry the same relevance or weight?

  • Tyler Perry

    On Oprah he implied he was straight. But he did that very artfully, and didn't actually address the sexuality issue, which was clearly on the audience's mind. All of them wondered, "is he or isn't he" and when he said he was "lookin to get married", the entire audience breathed a sigh of relief, swooned--and then got a little giddy. As if this was all just too good to be true---good looking guy who GETS Black women!

    My suspicion is that Tyler Perry KNOWS that to keep his Christian Black female audience coming in droves, he has got to keep that fantasy going. When the jig is finally up, though, will Oprah call him om the carpet like she did James Frey?

    THAT I would pay to see....

  • I Love Medea

    Tyler Perry is a genius! I have watched his plays on dvd about a million times and each time it's just as funny. My family, friends, and other black coworkers all know about Medea but not many white people do....but hey, I have only recently watched one episode of Friends and I just don't understand the humor...but unlike that really harsh critic from Boston, I won't trash what so many clearly love and enjoy (Friends is popular, right? lol).

    Nice article!

  • Hollywood Shuffle

    Kind of said to see that state of "black cinema" nowadays. Shrill black women, the same dry stereotypes, the below par flimmaking. Nevermind Racist Stereotypes, just bad all the way around.

    To read Tyler Perry and see his "success" makes you long for the days of John Singleton and "Do the Right Thing Era" Spike Lee, or hell even the days of "Badasssss" and "SHAFT".

  • Shrill?

    Shrill Black women? Have you seen "Diary of a Mad Black Woman," or just the trailer? The main character is the exact opposite of shrill, and the message of the story is the complete opposite of giving in to revenge or anger. Medea is simply comic relief, and appears in only a few scenes.

    For those who haven't seen the movie, here's a brief synopsis, which I hope captures the essence and the message...then judge for yourself. To the best of my recollection, the main character's rich lawyer husband kicks her out in favor of another woman. She slinks home to Mama (I believe Medea is the grandmother...someone please correct me if I'm wrong.) Her mother is sedate and religious. There is another female character in the extended family, who is broken down by drug abuse, and her tween-age daughter, who wants to sing in the choir. Her broken mom doesn't want her daughter to see her like that. None of these female characters is in the least bit shrill.

    While slowly trying to rebuild her life, the main character meets another man, a nice factory worker. But she puts off sleeping with him because she's still married. In one scene I believe it is her mother who counsels, "Don't be opening that door before you close the other one," or something like that. In this scene, I believe Medea is present, carrying on, but Medea is in the background and the mother's words prevail. The main character acknowledges she isn't going to start a relationship with the new man until her divorce is final. The religion is taken as a matter-of-fact part of life in this movie, not compartmentalized and not danced around on tiptoe. I don't know how to explain this. Medea may be in the background making fun, but her attitude doesn't prevail as the movie unfolds.

    Meanwhile, the rich lawyer/errant husband is paralyzed by a gunshot from a dope dealer he refused to defend (or something like that.) His new girlfriend takes off now that he's in a wheelchair. The main character tells her new boyfriend that she's got to go take care of her paralyzed estranged husband because they're still married. She shows up and there he is in a wheelchair in his big mansion, helpless. For several days she is mightily tempted to take revenge, and gives him a piece of her mind but not in a shrill way. But she stays and takes care of him, gritting her teeth all the way, until he is rehabilitated.

    Finally the now-repentant, rich, rehabilitated husband asks her to take him back, but--not really a martyr though she did perform acts of sacrifice--she smiles sweetly and quietly hands him the final divorce papers and goes to the factory to ask if the hardworking factory guy will make a future with her now that she's free. Somewhere in there, the broken drug addict pulls her life together and shows up to see her daughter sing in the choir.

    I hate people who think plot summaries are "conversation" but I think the plot here speaks for itself. Medea and her lecherous (is it a husband or son-in-law? I forget) only provide some comic relief in a movie that otherwise, although sappy in places, has a message about self-sacrifice (though not martyrdom) and it isn't unrealistic from watching the religious Black women that I know.

    I had not stepped foot inside a church for nearly 20 years and this movie really moved me spiritually...not the Medea part, but the parts where the characters made hard decisions whether to stay angry or help someone who needed help WHILE angry. That's 90 percent of the movie.

    Anyway, no one in the movie that I can remember struck me as "shrill."

  • Tyler Perry

    I enjoyed "Diary of a Mad Black Woman." I am a 35-year old Black woman and I almost didn't see it because, I have seen a few Tyler Perry DVDs and hated the way the actors seemed to scream at each other. I thouroughly enjoyed the film. It was not at all shrill. It was heartwarming, funny and touching. I am always happy to see a quality film with Black faces. Every "Black" film does not have to have an "important message." I would like to see more representation of the diversity of ideas and opinions of all Black folks in film. Hollywood take notice - Black people like comedies and dramas, lighthearted and serious films. We like variety and we go to the movies ALOT!

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