The last Oscar ceremony was marked by the famous slap inflicted by Will Smith on Chris Rock after an inappropriate joke concerning his wife Jada Pinkett Smith. After resigning from the academy and being banned from ceremonies for ten years, the actor was torn because of the many fallouts.
Criticized for her reaction, Jada Pinkett Smith waited several months before speaking publicly about it on her show Red Table Talk. “My deepest hope is that these two smart men have the opportunity to heal, talk about it and reconcile. In the world we live in, we need them. And we all need each other other people. In the meantime, Will and I are continuing to do what we’ve been doing for 28 years. And that’s understanding life together. Given what I’ve been through medically, and what happened at the Oscars, thousands of people contacted me. I want to take this moment to offer people who suffer from alopecia like me an opportunity to express themselves, and to tell what it is like to live with this disease. To educate people about what alopecia really is“sorry the mother of the family.
In an interview with the site Three colours,Isabelle Adjanialso had the opportunity to comment on this gesture when she was asked about the departure of Adèle Haenel from the Césars ceremony in 2020 following the awarding of a prize to Roman Polanski. The one who suffered from notoriety initially said: “I took it for what it was, an unadorned moment. It’s not going to be politically correct to say that, but it’s like Will Smith’s gesture. I don’t take it badly either. This gesture of Adèle Haenel, I did not experience it as an exclusion of Polanski, a killing of his artistic being.
Before continuing: “I find it incredible this way of puritanizing absolutely any action a little on the margins, a little punk. Because he slaps the other, are we going to strike him out of everything? It’s over, are we downgrading it for good? What a nightmare ! Maybe he should have had a Xanax before going, that’s for sure. But OK. It’s suddenly life that arises and fucks the mess in all this ceremony. Me, this gesture touches me. I prefer that to good behavior. And Adèle, it’s the same thing, it was like an electrocution linked to her post-trauma.”
That is what is said!
GZ
See also: Isabelle Adjani muse L’oréal