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Twenty-five years before Cynthia Erivo landed the role of Harriet Tubman in Gregory Allen Howard's film Harriet, a Hollywood studio executive had a different actor in mind to play the part of the iconic slave turned abolitionist: Julia Roberts.
In an early November interview with Focus Features—the studio behind the film—and an opinion piece published in the Los Angeles Times on Tuesday, Howard revealed when he first began pitching the script for Harriet, which released nationwide on November 1, he was advised to give the leading role to Roberts, despite the fact that the award-winning actress is a white woman and Tubman, a former black slave.

"I was told how one studio head said in a meeting, 'This script is fantastic. Let's get Julia Roberts to play Harriet Tubman,'" Howard recalled, noting that the "climate in Hollywood...was very different" back then.
"When someone pointed out that Roberts couldn't be Harriet, the executive responded, 'It was so long ago. No one is going to know the difference,'" Howard continued.
As history would have it, Harriet wouldn't go into production until two-and-a-half decades after Howard began working on it, and Roberts obviously was never cast in the film. However, the mere suggestion of it was still enough to rile up hundreds of people on social media.
Shortly after Howard's revelation became public on Tuesday, the internet exploded with outrage over the idea and a number of commenters shared their thoughts on Twitter. People were particularly curious as to how the studio executive best thought Roberts would transform into a black woman or if the intention was to simply white-wash Tubman.
"So... wait... was the exec expecting Julia Roberts to go full-on Blackface like Birth of a Nation OR just completely ignore the source material like Emma Stone in Aloha? I HAVE QUESTIONS!!!" comic W. Kamau Bell wrote on Twitter on Wednesday.
So... wait... was the exec expecting Julia Roberts to go full-on Blackface like Birth of a Nation OR just completely ignore the source material like Emma Stone in Aloha? I HAVE QUESTIONS!!! ? https://t.co/q6wvH0C41y
— W. Kamau Bell (@wkamaubell) November 20, 2019
Meanwhile, others weren't shocked at all by the suggestion considering Hollywood's history of casting white actors as people of color and the industry's widespread appropriation of non-white cultures on screen.
"Yes a producer pitching Julia Roberts as Harriet in the '90s is bad but wait til you hear about the white modern day media employee who pitched 'white people pick cotton' as a BHM video," another Twitter user wrote.
Yes a producer pitching Julia Roberts as Harriet in the ‘90s is bad but wait til you hear about the white modern day media employee who pitched “white people pick cotton” as a BHM video
— Alanna Bennett (@AlannaBennett) November 20, 2019
A number of actors of Caucasian descent have played roles belonging to figures of different races. It was only seven years ago when Ben Affleck was cast as the Mexican-American CIA operative Antonio J. Mendez in the 2012 Oscar-winning film Argo, and Angelina Jolie portrayed the Afro-Cuban journalist Mariane Pearl in 2007's A Mighty Heart. The main cast of the 2010 film The Last Airbender—based on the Nickelodeon cartoon full of characters from Asian and Native American tribes—was predominately white, while the villains in the movie were people of color.
ummmm... i’m guessing julia roberts would very much like to be excluded from this narrative. https://t.co/MnyF1N5bcW
— susie (@banikarim) November 20, 2019
Howard credited two particular films for helping shake up the industry's standards for representation and proving there was an audience for black films based on black figures and cast with black people.
"Two films really changed the climate in Hollywood to allow Harriet to be made. When 12 Years a Slave became a hit and did a couple hundred million dollars worldwide, I told my agent, 'You can't say this kind of story won't make money now.' Then Black Panther really blew the doors open."
See below for more reactions below.
Yes, it is entirely believable that a Hollywood exec, 25 years ago, would suggest Julia Roberts to play Harriet Tubman.
— Jay Caruso (@JayCaruso) November 20, 2019
These are the same people who were greenlighting Pauly Shore movies at the time.
If you’re chasing a Hollywood dream and feel doubtful you’ll ever make it, remember there are executives getting paid shit loads of money to suggest JULIA ROBERTS should play Harriet Tubman. A jar of cockroaches is more qualified than some of these people so DON’T GIVE UP.
— Jordan Crucchiola (@JorCru) November 20, 2019
Go ahead and lie and act like you wouldn’t watch Julia Roberts play Harriet Tubman. Sign me up! https://t.co/E0lzhfFwBg
— Kazeem Famuyide ? (@Kazeem) November 20, 2019
Julia Roberts couldn't do Harriet Tubman, but Harriet Tubman could do The Pelican Brief.
— Ira Madison III (@ira) November 20, 2019
I read this as “Julia Roberts was suggested by Harriet Tubman to play studio exec” and it made more sense https://t.co/ax7ynNUXvv
— Rembert Browne (@rembert) November 20, 2019
If Julia Roberts can play Harriet Tubman then damn it Scarlett Johansson can play...oh wait. Hollywood is wild, man. People of color, friends in the industry, stay sane and grounded as you deal with this madness. Laugh at the absurdity if possible.
— Wajahat "Wears a Mask Because of a Pandemic" Ali (@WajahatAli) November 20, 2019
Thing is, with this administration, a Julia Roberts $20 already would have been approved. https://t.co/5S51CMMwrl
— Jemele Hill (@jemelehill) November 20, 2019
Mood this morning hearing they wanted Julia Roberts to play Harriet Tubman. #kaaviajames pic.twitter.com/BPK9BR35uy
— Loni Love (@LoniLove) November 20, 2019
Gonna tell my kids this was Julia Roberts pic.twitter.com/StfNMqWjom
— jeffrey (@Jeff_Dwyer) November 20, 2019
Y’all shouldn’t make Julia Roberts trend like she asked to be considered to be casted to play Harriet Tubman. She’s always been an umptoblematic fave. Focus on the ineptitude of producers in Hollywood.
— Dénola Grey (@DenolaGrey) November 20, 2019
About the writer
Michigan native, Janice Williams is a graduate of Oakland University where she studied journalism and communication. Upon relocating to New ... Read more