Celebs Are Outraged at Will Smith Slapping Chris Rock
by EG
Celebs who are normally outraged at verbal bullying when it comes from the likes of Donald Trump were quick to defend Chris Rock's "edgy" insult of Will Smith's wife after Smith slapped Rock during Sunday's Oscars telecast. When Rock mocked Jada Pinkett Smith over her alopecia-induced hair loss, Smith's husband violently jumped to her defense, sparking condemnation from celebs including Rob Reiner and Mia Farrow, who insisted that Rock's insult was "just a joke," and a "mild" one at that. Read on for details.
Actors, producers and Academy representatives reacted to The Slap Seen Around the World after Sunday night’s 2022 Oscars was disrupted by an angry Will Smith striking presenter Chris Rock on stage on Hollywood’s biggest night.
Smith had stormed onstage to strike Rock after the comic made a G.I. Jane joke about Smith’s wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, who has shaved her head (the actress has alopecia).
Actress Mia Farrow declared the incident (video below) “Oscar’s ugliest moment,” and then added, “It was just a joke. Jokes are what Chris Rock does. Always has been edgy. This was a mild joke for him. And I love GI Jane.”
Comedian and director Judd Apatow wrote in a since-deleted tweet: “Seems like Will Smith’s plan to get comedians and the world to not make jokes about him is not going to pan out,” he wrote. “The Williams family must be furious. Pure narcissism … He could have killed him. That’s pure out of control rage and violence. They’ve heard a million jokes about them in the last three decades. They are not freshman in the world of Hollywood and comedy. He lost his mind.”
Director Rob Reiner wrote that there was “no excuse” for Smiths’ actions and slammed the actor’s Oscar acceptance speech that attempted to justify his behavior as protecting his family. “Will Smith owes Chris Rock a huge apology. There is no excuse for what he did. He’s lucky Chris is not filing assault charges. The excuses he made tonight were bullshit.”
Actress and director Sophia Bush wrote: “Violence isn’t ok. Assault is never the answer.” Yet she also criticized Rock’s joke, adding: “This is the second time that Chris has made fun of Jada on the Oscars stage, and tonight he went after her alopecia. Punching down at someone’s auto-immune disease is wrong. Doing so on purpose is cruel. They both need a breather.”
Comedian Kathy Griffin, who received death threats over her infamous joke about Donald Trump, suggested Smith’s actions could put other comedians at risk: “Let me tell you something, it’s a very bad practice to walk up on stage and physically assault a Comedian. Now we all have to worry about who wants to be the next Will Smith in comedy clubs and theaters.”
Journalist Maria Shriver wrote: “#WillSmith says he wants to be a vessel for love. Love is not violent. Love is not what was displayed on a global stage tonight. We should never get to a place where we sit and watch a movie star hit someone on global television then, moments later, get a standing ovation while talking about love.”
Roger Ross Williams, a Black member of the Academy’s board of governors, told The Hollywood Reporter’s Scott Feinberg after the show that he was in tears after watching the confrontation. “It reinforces stereotypes about Black people and it just hurts me to my core,” he said. “Work it out someplace else; not on the stage.”
Janai Nelson, president and director-counsel of the NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund, wrote: “I know we’re all still processing, but the way casual violence was normalized tonight by a collective national audience will have consequences that we can’t even fathom in the moment.”
That said, not every celebrity reaction was negative. Pinkett Smith’s Girls Trip co-star Tiffany Haddish told People: “When I saw a Black man stand up for his wife. That meant so much to me. As a woman, who has been unprotected, for someone to say, ‘Keep my wife’s name out your mouth, leave my wife alone,’ that’s what your husband is supposed to do, right? Protect you” … And maybe the world might not like how it went down, but for me, it was the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen because it made me believe that there are still men out there that love and care about their women.”
Get the rest of the story at The Hollywood Reporter.