In ‘Ten Notes on Oscar Weekend’, Zadie Smith explores the “inverse relation” between
societal expectations of Hollywood and what Hollywood actors and actresses are
actually like (213). In the beginning paragraph, Smith introduces the notion
over-the-top fantasies of Hollywood by describing it as “La La Land! Red carpets;
semisacred actors in an exclusive Valhalla” (212). There are differing notions,
even within these exaggerated descriptions: “La La Land” connotes a fantasy
world that, though pleasant, only exists in people’s minds (212). However,
relating Hollywood to “Valhalla”, a place in Norse mythology that existed for
warriors who had died, implies that being an actor or actress is equivalent to
dying. Smith also states that “[t]he nominees are, by now, battle-scarred
companions” (215). The notion that being
a Hollywood actor or actress is similar to being dead indicates that they are
enslaved by their image to other people; the dead have no ability to change the
minds of the living, and must instead be subject to the way in which the living
choose to envision them.
A few times throughout the text,
Smith refers to Hollywood stars as “human beings”, simultaneously reducing them
and elevating them (217). To a person who isn’t in the movie industry, calling
Hollywood stars “human beings” takes them from their pedestal of being an icon.
Conversely, there is a section in which Smith describes the actors in a way
that implies normalcy that is only interrupted by the public’s desire to hold
them to their fantasies: “The actors, caught midway through conversations about
their families, their dogs, a book they’ve read, a good restaurant in New York,
now have to put their game face back on and become whoever it is the waiter
thinks they are” (216). The actors are imprisoned by their own fame and the
public’s expectations, and yet, as implied by their conversation, which
includes everyday, normal people topics, they are actually just “human beings”
who are interested in and wish to hold ‘normal’ lives (217). The “inverse
relation” is that the bigger of a Hollywood star one is, the farther he/she is
from being the person that the public believes them to be. Sections three and four, the first of which
describes the Mondrian Hotel and the “hot girls” that occupy it and the latter
of which describes a private party for the Oscar nominees, are facing each
other, expressing the conflicting yet intrinsic relationship between public
expectations and the reality of what Hollywood really is.
Great blog Laura. I really like the section where you break down "Valhalla" and how Smith equates celebrity with dying in some way. I hadn't thought of it before but it makes total sense. When a person becomes a celebrity the "normal" person in some sense has to die to a degree in the face of the persona.
ReplyDeleteI agree with Amanda. I appreciate you r analysis, but particularly the illustration of the inverse thinking or "changing my mind?" It's interesting through a writer who isn't associated to have such a cool approach to the subject.
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