Babaamaajimowinan (Telling of news in different places)
In 1973, Marlon Brando turned down an Oscar, and the whole world turned on him, calling him an ingrate, a dilettante, a publicity hound, a traitor. But for Brando—as William J. Mann writes in his biography, The Contender: The Story of Marlon Brando (HarperCollins)—the country under Richard Nixon was in a constitutional crisis, and systemic racism was undercutting the American dream.
Under these conditions, he believed, business as usual would be complicit with the problem. Forty-six years later, can we understand his reasons better?
https://www.thedailybeast.com/how-marlon-brando-made-hollywood-face-its-racism-at-the-oscars
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