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Jessica Haight-Angelo; Grand Canyon University


Fat Studies: Pedagogically and Creatively Fat


Midwest Pop Culture Conference 2010; Minneapolis, MN


1 October 2010


                        ―They‘re Always Gonna Need a Fat Best Friend‖:


               The Subjugation of Fat Actors & Actresses in Romantic Comedies


                                              Abstract


        On his second full-length comedy album, "Werewolves and Lollipops," comedian Patton

Oswalt describes his experience at the premiere of the movie, "The Dark Knight," wherein the

portly funny-man recalls feeling out of place amongst all of the beautiful, skinny actors and

actresses who are simultaneously miserable-looking because, Oswalt claims, none of them are

eating, even though food is abundant. Oswalt then describes a chance meeting with Brian

Dennehy, who remarks, "Character actors: Who gives a fuck if we're fat?" Adding his own two

cents, Oswalt offers that, "They're always gonna need a fat best friend; that's never gonna go out

of style."


        Oswalt's words ring true: Hollywood's romantic leading men (and ladies) are nominally

skinny and White. If a fat character does exist in the genre, they are almost always regulated to

the 'best friend' role, their own romantic aspirations rarely taken seriously or affixed with any

emotional depth. Arguably, the 'fat friend' is merely an archetype that plays into Hollywood's

semi-successful formula for light-hearted romantic cinema; that is, it isn't meant to be taken

seriously. At the same time, such archetypes are indicative of Hollywood's ever-increasing fat
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phobia. Thus, this paper will explore the role that fat plays in the modern, American romantic

comedy, as it pertains to the limits of infatuation versus commitment; also, the sidekick roles that

race, gender, and sexuality play in keeping fat movie actors and actresses regulated to the

sidelines.




                          The Skinny: The Romantic Comedy Formula


        The romantic comedy has a history nearly as lengthy as that of the motion picture

industry itself, both gaining momentum in the early 1920s. As Branwen66, a contributor on

Associated Content notes, the alternative title for Charlie Chaplin's 1931 movie, "City Lights,"

aka "City Lights: A Comedy Romance in Pantomine" offers up "the earliest technological

acknowledgment" of the rom-com genre. From there, several comedies released in 1934 featured

"strong and sensuous romantic conflict," wherein the love story "cease[d] to be ancillary to the

comedy and bec[ame] itself the central plot that is enhanced by comedy." During the 1930s and

1940s, the romantic comedy "hit ... its stride," with "Archetypical characters and functions that

we enjoy over and over again" becoming solidified (Branwen66). The modern romantic comedy

era began in the early ‗80s. Since then, dozens of rom-coms have been released into theatres and,

later, onto VHS and DVD for private consumption, enjoying considerable financial success in all

venues. As the user Megavitamin from Hub Pages explains, Romantic comedies neither earn as

much nor do they cost as much to make as "summer blockbusters ... but with the right

combination of bright-toothed movie stars and the right marketing strategy - like opening on

Valentine's weekend - some of these movies have banked serious green." According to Slate.com

contributor, Lisa Levy, "2001's top-grossing romantic comedies were 'The Wedding Planner,'
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'Someone Like You,' 'Serendipity,' 'Bridget Jones' Diary,' and 'What Women Want' (released in

late 2000)." The U.S. gross for "The Wedding Planner" was $80,245,725, a figure that has been

far surpassed in more recent years by its romantic comedy successors. For example, "My Big Fat

Greek Wedding" took home $241,438,208, its initial budget only $5,000,000 (The Numbers). In

addition, as Levy notes, "Some of the most beloved directors in American cinema made their

reputations on [romantic comedies]: Preston Sturges, Howard Hawks, Woody Allen, Cameron

Crowe," in early romantic comedies such as "The Lady Eve" (1941), "Annie Hall" (1977), and

"Tootsie" (1982). It is clear that the romantic comedy is a well-affixed blotch in the realm of pop

culture, in spite of its potential flaws.


        The term ―romantic comedy,‖ or ―rom-com,‖ is a hybrid of two separate movie genres,

the romance and the comedy. The aforementioned Branwen66 explains: "In the simplest terms, a

romantic comedy is a comedy that explores a love story ... The most memorable examples of the

genre thrive on creative combinations of these three elements: romantic, comedic, exploratory ...

Take the romance out or fail to infuse the story with laughter, and you end up with a different

genre altogether." While comedy enjoys a wide range of classifications, from slapstick to dark or

black humor, the romantic movie, and its romantic comedy counterpart both follow a fairly

dogmatic formula. The Cracked.com Web site takes a stab at the former, focusing on the

particularly formulaic romance movies based on Nicholas Sparks novels: "Start with two pretty

white people ('A Walk to Remember'; 'The Notebook; Dear John')"; "Include an obstacle that

makes love between them seem impossible (social status, her parents, 9/11)"; "They fall in love

anyway"; "Throw in a completely-out-of-left-field, exploitative, awful disaster that only serves to

jerk tears and turn an otherwise forgettable romance into a tragedy (leukemia, Alzheimer's

cancer)"; "Go to the only poster designer you knew"; "Count your money" (Newz is Newz n.p.).
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       The Web site Uproxx expresses a similar sentiment in its article, "How to Write a

Hollywood Rom-Com in Ten Easy Steps." Having two pretty people on the movie poster and a

recognizable title are both important, Uproxx says. Branwen66 also chimes in with good humor:

The male lead in a rom-com must be "smolderingly sexy," "endearingly vulnerable," "self-

deprecatingly funny," and "an SOB but redeemable." In the same vein, the female lead must also

be sexy and vulnerable, as well as "gutsy and feisty," the perfect counterpart to the funny and

exasperating man with whom she is destined (or doomed) to fall in love in an hour-and-a-half. In

the same vein, there should be few surprises as to the plot of the movie:


               Here's what happens in every rom-com: two people meet. Then they screw.

               Unfortunately, you're going to have to fill another 90 minutes. Therefore, your

               leads have to start hating each other. Maybe he calculates risk for an insurance

               company, and she's a free spirit who loves Ethiopian food. Maybe she's an uptight

               career woman and he's a Matthew McConaughey. She's a feminist, he's a

               chauvinist. Point is, opposites attract and you find love where you least expect it -

               Hallmark clichés are your guiding principles. (Uproxx n.p.)


       As with a pure romance, in a romantic comedy, the two leads must fall in love, fall out of

love, and then get back together again, often due to the guy doing "something crazy to prove his

love," a la John Cusack in ‗Say Anything,‘ "standing outside his special lady's window playing

'In Your Eyes' on his boombox" (Uproxx). Along the way, however, they must be guided to

realize the errors of their respective ways; that is where the "kooky friends" come in. Since the

audience might otherwise be overtly annoyed by the archetypical male and female leads in a

rom-com due to their shallow dullness, the typical rom-com includes supporting characters

"whose extreme examples of male and female stereotypes ... will give your leads the illusion of
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depth. Often, this will be a talented but underutilized comedian or character actor slumming in

your crappy rom-com because they need the paycheck," Uproxx offers blithely.


       More considerately, Branwenn66 describes the Best Friend (also known as "mates, allies,

pals") as "a dependable supportive force. It is the sounding board for the protagonists' concerns,

the sympathetic ear for when they need to vent, the friendly hand that passes the Kleenex." Also,

like the antagonist, another supplemental character, Best Friends "are not characters per se, but

character functions that concretize the deeper problems that need to be faced for love to triumph

... Best Friends are always there. Literally. In a genre that needs to continuously slalom its way

around static expository situations, Best Friends elicit background information, explore

motivations, and move the story forward" (Branwen66). Similarly, Branwen66 notes, "Best

Friends usually have next to no character arcs. When they do, their transformation exists

primarily to highlight some important aspect of the protagonists' characterization, predicament,

or breakthrough, as well as underscore the thematic infrastructure of the story." Once the hero

has "matured enough to take charge of his life," the Best Friend "provides little more than

comedic interval" once again (Branwen66).


       Often, this slim chance for screen-time in a depthless romantic comedy is where the 'fat

best friend' is shoehorned. Teddy Wayne‘s monologue, ―Your Best Friend in a Romantic

Comedy is Always There For You,‖ pinpoints several aspects of the dependable best friend

archetype, including the difference between the kooky friend and the romantic lead in terms of

body-type: ―"C'mon, Louise, whenever you have guy problems, you always watch classic movies

and pig out on Ben & Jerry's, even though your willowy frame suggests that you subsist on

celery and laxatives. It's one of your charming quirks that distinguish you from the other

successful, attractive women in their 30s I'm friends with who inexplicably can't hold on to a
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man. That, and your career-woman-but-glamorous hairstyle that should take an hour to prepare

but looks perfect straight out of bed." In addition, the best friend's "nonthreatening 'ethnic' blend"

gives her the opportunity to utter "all these trailer-worthy one-liners," implying the importance of

the best friend to the rom-com's success, even in spite of his/her lack of significance to the

romantic leads whom s/he nonetheless loyally patronizes and flatters. Even the slim potential for

the best friend to find love is correlated strongly with her prettier, thinner pal, according to

Wayne: "Hey, what if the [male romantic lead's "vaguely Italian‖] best friend and I began a

relationship that thematically informed your and Jake's?" the best friend asks. "Like, what if we

got together and then broke up, it might make you rethink your long-term commitment to Jake.

Or, if we got married, it might make you rethink your lack of a long-term commitment to Jake.

Either way, our relationship will make you contemplate yourself and Jake" (Wayne n.p.).


       Comically, Wayne manages to pinpoint several oppressive clichés of the best friend

archetype, including weight, race, and gender. In each case, the further from the White, straight,

conclusively ‗all-American‘ norm – which is always represented by the romantic lead - in a rom-

com that the best friend is shown to be, the more pigeonholed and despondent the character is.

Arguably, the fat best friend is the most 'othered' version of the kooky friend, his or her body

type a physical representation of everything that the romantic lead wishes to avoid being. As

Lynne Murray, a novelist who specializes in writing about "self-accepting fat" characters (Lynne

Murray Web site, "About Lynne") explains, "We see very few fat people in film and television

because the implicit assumption is that we are suffering from a willful, self-imposed sickness, as

evidenced by our very appearance. Fat is seen as a visible manifestation of an abnormal state

(and our Puritanical roots tend to suggest to us that we must have gotten to this awful condition

through gluttony, sloth or some other horrendous sin).‖ In other words, fat people are abnormal,
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something to be ashamed of, and thus do not deserve equal media representation as their slimmer

counterparts, a "Crippling belief" held by both the media and the masses who indulge in it, fat

and thin (Murray). In the same vein, Murray says, "To be invisible because of race or ethnicity is

not quite the same thing as being invisible because of size." While being ‗exotic-looking,‘ or

female, or Black, or gay can be quirky complications, they will not absolutely keep a character

from finding love in a romantic comedy, or at least a niche in which to cocoon him or herself. In

contrast, the overweight character must accept his/her potential physical oddity as an additional

barrier to happiness, one reaching even beyond gender, race, or sexuality. Jake‘s best friend

won‘t necessarily want to date Louise‘s chunky best friend just because he‘s Italian; as Wayne's

analysis of the fat best friend concludes, "I've got a feeling everything will work out just fine for

you, you effortlessly thin blonde. Well, I'm going back to my apartment now to cry myself to

sleep. Coffee tomorrow?" While race and body type occasionally intersect, fat discrimination

runs (or jogs sluggishly) rampant and unchecked across all demographics. In essence, when it

comes to romantic comedies, being overweight disallows the fat best friend from being

recognized as fully human, more so than any other singular factor.




                             (Not) The Norm: Gender, Race, Sexuality


       In the same vein, when a fat character in a romantic comedy is also ethnic, female (or

anything other than a cisgendered male), and/or gay, the bisection of such ‗othered‘ factors is

worth considering. Perhaps the most obvious additional minority portrayal is that of a fat female

character. The context surrounding a fat male character appears on a much different level than

that surrounding a fat female character. This discrepancy exists beyond the realm of the romantic
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comedy, however, intersecting with the general malaise of sexism that seems to have settled over

mainstream American culture. As Michael Cieply points out in 2009 article for the New York

Times, several male Hollywood stars have "packed on the pounds" for various leading man film

roles. While Cieply refers to "Holly's pool of leading men" as "getting larger - and not

necessarily in a good way," however, he also concedes that recently-bulked-up stars such as

Russell Crowe, John Travolta, and Denzel Washington still achieve prestigious film roles. In

contrast, Cieply notes, "Kathleen Turner, 54 and the onetime seductress of 'Body Heat,' last

December put in a rare film performance as Ms. Kornblut, the plus-size dog trainer in 'Marley &

Me.'" Here, Cieply's remark that fat women in Hollywood are not as noticeable "because

actresses who expand do not often get roles to showcase their growth" is notable: A fat woman in

Hollywood is practically invisible. Similarly, when an actress is fat in a movie, it becomes the

entire focus of her role. Consider Renee Zellweger in "Bridget Jones' Diary" and its sequel. In

the original novels, Bridget Jones weighed around 170 pounds; yet her silver-screen counterpart,

in spite of Zellweger being lauded for her bravery in packing on 20 pounds to her slender frame,

was significantly skinnier than this. Still, the entire focus of her character was to be the token fat

girl, something the audience was rarely, if ever, allowed to forget.


       In a similar vein, Wendy, a contributor at the Web site Pound offers up the term

"imaginary fat people," and hints at a more widespread issue than simply placing fat people into

stereotypical roles: "Imaginary fat people['s] actions are stereotypical, certainly, but they come

off quite differently than those of an overweight actor who performs fat-person clichés ...

Imaginary fat people can be fat without the distractions of 'character.' Fat is the character and

imaginary fat people breathe themselves into life. They have nobody to blame but themselves."
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Wendy uses the movie "America's Sweethearts" as an example of imaginary fat, wherein

traditionally rail-thin actress, Julia Roberts stuffs herself into a fat suit to give off the illusion of a

180-pound woman, Hollywood's version of morbidly obese. As she notes, at first, "she was just

the Julia Roberts character with a fuller face and belly. She acted the same way and she dressed

pretty much the same way. (Though when you're the size she's at in that scene, you don't tuck

your top in. You just don't.)" Later in the movie, however, Roberts' character is shown "stuffing

her face": "She was on a movie set and lingering by the craft services table with her cheeks full

of food, with one hand feeding herself and another hand reaching for more food." At this point,

Wendy confirms, Julia Roberts' performance became all about the fat suit. Her character had

become an "imaginary fat person." Similarly, whereas the audience where Wendy saw the film

laughed tentatively, even nervously during early scenes with Roberts' character in them, "during

the food scenes, the audience burst out laughing abruptly but wholeheartedly, relieved, as if they

understood something at last. Or as if someone who had made them uncomfortable had left the

room"; that is, because someone had: The fat person whom the movie made a show of

humanizing before giving in to not only stereotypes, but well-preserved societal condemnation of

fat people.


        At the same time, in a show of self-hatred, Wendy admits to laughing when a now-skinny

Julia Roberts character "ordered three plates of food at once and ate from them voraciously,"

while simultaneously recognizing that "I would never do that - eat like the way she was eating,

alone, in public. Everyone I know who is fat has a problem with eating in front of strangers. You

worry what people will think about you, what they'll imagine." Such a statement implies that

Roberts' usually slender physique allows her the ability to eat heartily without the judgment her

180-pound counterpart would have received, simply due to her size. Wendy finishes her diatribe
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with a saddened summation of this kind of thinking: "[I]maginary fat seems to be the only kind

of fat the popular media can deal with at all ... The only fat we're allowed to consider is the fat on

someone like Charlize Theron. The only acceptable fat is practically invisible" (Wendy).


       Even in the fat best friend role in romantic comedies, men are much more likely to be

cast. As a disgusted reviewer notes of the film, "Date Movie," a parody of the traditional rom-

com featuring a rail-thin Alyson Hannigan in a fat suit, wherein she is 'worked on' like a car to be

made into a more socially acceptable, and thin, 'hot babe' who can choose suitors a la "The

Bachelorette," the role of the fat woman in film is much more disparaging and hateful than that

of the fat male. "Fat men are funny," the reviewer says. "Fat women are to be pitied. For

example, in 'Hitch,' Kevin James' character - an everyman, i.e.: slightly overweight - eventually

wins the heart of a socialite (supermodel Amber Valletta)." That the reviewer can consider an

overweight male to be an everyman in the first place is notable; the same cannot be said for the

overweight female, whose extra pounds are always an issue. A fat woman in a movie is never

happy or well-adjusted. Inevitably, she either overcompensates for her body type with an equally

over-the-top personality, or simply sinks into the background, asexual and useless. There is an

additional meanness to the disparaging remarks made unto such a character, an acridity that

seems to slide more easily off of the fat male characters' pudgy backs. They may, in fact, be

bothered by such ribbing, but the roles written for them do not encourage them to showcase such

emotions; thus, the audience feels less guilty laughing at overweight men than it does fat women.

Fat men are a safe target.


       In part, this disparity between genders seems to exist because, as the adage goes, comedy

is a man's game. In recent years, the romantic comedy has been fine-tuned with the addition of

more slapstick and raunchy material; traditional comedic elements designed to draw in more
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male viewers. Director Judd Apatow‘s hearty comedies, including ―The 40-Year-Old Virgin,‖

―Knocked Up,‖ ―Superbad,‖ etc. are a case-in-point. Such films have been lauded by both male

and female viewers, and the appeal of such fare to men has redefined the rom-com as a ―dick

flick,‖ a ―bromance,‖ or a ―brom-com.‖ Fores offers similar praise to "Failure to Launch" for

being "A mixture of romantic comedy and overblown slapstick," thus making it "a lady-tailored

movie written, produced, and directed by men," and subsequently made so that guys dragged

along to the theatre by female dates can get some cheap laughs in. "[T]he flick doesn't entirely

dwell in the realms of sentimentality," Fores offers, apparently relieved that the "chick flick"

genre is being reclaimed by dudes by way of referring to the trend as "the grandest sense of

social equality." While arguably, romantic comedies are an exception to an industry that has

always been geared towards males (thus, most movies are ―dick flicks,‖ with female viewers just

happening to occasionally, and invisibly, enjoy them, as well), in a practical sense, the bromance

simply continues to ensure a discrepancy between fat male and female characters in movies.

Though overweight male actors like Jonah Hill and Seth Rogen, staples of Judd Apatow‘s films

should absolutely be lauded for everything they bring to their respective roles, they are

nonetheless cast alongside thin female actresses, few who are on par with Hill or Rogen in terms

of sense of humor, and none who are ‗allowed‘ to also be fat.


       In the same vein, that Hill and Rogen often play second-string to the thinner, more

conventionally attractive Paul Rudd in Apatow‘s films showcases the limits of the pudgy body

type. This is even discussed in-film during Apatow‘s ―Funny People,‖ starring a cranky, middle-

aged Adam Sandler as a washed-up comedian. In addition, a notably slimmed-down Seth Rogen

plays Sandler‘s assistant, who rooms with other side characters who are responsible for most of

the movie‘s one-liners, including the still-corpulent Jonah Hill. In the film, Hill‘s character
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makes a referential barb at Rogan‘s slimmed physique: "'There's nothing funny about a

physically fit man ... No one wants to see Lance Armstrong do comedy." Though a zinger, the

comment offers considerable insight into the role of the fat and skinny man in the comedy world;

there is, after all, a reason that Paul Rudd plays the anal-retentive leading man almost every time

he is cast in something. In the same vein, in an interview with Rolling Stone, wherein Hill reports

that he's "making [losing weight] a priority in my life," he adds that "Seth did it. I was really

proud of him." In addition, he hotly contests his "Funny People" character's barb, though his

criticism seems borne equally of embarrassment at the attention focused on his weight, and of a

sense that his character may have been right about the stereotypical nature of comedic role-

casting: "'If you're really skinny or if you're really big, it doesn't make you funnier or less funnier

- it's ridiculous, man, it's totally ridiculous ... Why does that joke in a movie have anything to do

with me personally? It's not me, it's a guy in a movie" (53). Why, indeed.


       Though Hill protests, since "Funny People," Seth Rogen has gone on to be cast in the

upcoming "Green Hornet" movie, wherein he is even more noticeably physically fit. While his

friend, Jonah Hill might praise this move - now, Rogen can play the straight, thin man a la Paul

Rudd - a sampling of comments in response to some early shots of Rogen in costume on the A.V.

Club Web site epitomizes the notion that the fixation on his weight will never go away, no matter

how thin he gets. In addition, many fans are bitter at the comedy world's alleged loss of talent:

"Put the weight back on, you fuck," one user spits. "No one wants to resemble Steve Guttenberg

anymore." In this, it is clear that comedic roles in movies are most appropriately and thus,

commonly played by fat men who do not seem to mind being reminded that they are fat, as long

as people think they are also funny. In the realm of overweight thespians, then, the fat male holds

considerable sway over his chubby female counterpart.
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        In addition to gender disparities, race also plays a role in keeping the fat best friend

relegated to the sidelines in romantic comedy movies. The aforementioned Murray likens seeing

a fat actor on television [and by extension, in a movie] to hearing a Black actress in a

documentary discuss how, "in the 1950s and 60s when a black person appeared on television

someone in the family would say, 'Come look!' and they would gather round to observe this

rarity - actual recognition of their existence on network television." Imagine the double-rarity of

a (positive) portrayal of a character who is both overweight and a racial minority.


        As one might already expect, the fat, Black male is more casually regarded than the fat,

Black female, whose overweight body must inevitably be a shtick enhanced by her flamboyant

personality. Eddie Murphy's portrayal of Rasputia, the overweight character he plays in the

movie "Norbit" is a stockpile of every negative stereotype of fat, Black women. As Tracy Rose

writes, "Rasputia is a dominating, manly, opinionated, loud, obnoxious, annoying, shrill and

poorly-dressed obese woman. In the story, Rasputia saves Norbit [also played by Eddie Murphy]

from playground bullies and makes him her boyfriend. Years later she is still dominating him.

They are married, but when she is caught cheating on him, she tells him it never happened and

threatens him. She is a controlling hypocrite."


        It is also a Fat Black Woman trope in Hollywood movies that said FBW tends to appear

very self-confident and seemingly unaware of the quantifiable levels of shame that other fat

people, usually fat, non-Black people feel. Rasputia also hits this mark in "Norbit." At one point

in the film, Rose writes, "She wears loud patterns, tight clothes, 'sexy' outfits, and - worst of all -

a two-piece swimsuit. When going through the gate to a water park, she is questioned whether

she is even wearing bottoms. She has to hoist up her stomach for [the employee] to see that her

own body has completely covered them. She proceeds to break the front entrance due to her size,
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rip on [another] woman for being too skinny and fly through a wooden gate after ignoring the

weight limit on the waterslide and zooming down [it] at lightning speed." Rasputia is fat for the

sheer purpose of enticing audiences to laugh at her fatness. Her apparent self-confidence gives

viewers an easy out of feeling guilty for being amused by her antics. Thus, not only does

"Norbit" "elicit ... laughter at the expense of obese people" (Rose), it also contains an

uncomfortable racial component, one that Murphy himself seems to ignore. Tellingly, at the end

of the movie, Murphy's title character hooks up with the token "skinny, pretty girl" (Rose). His

character may learn to stand up for himself, but it is at the cost of subjugating Fat Black Women

by - literally - dismissing them as worthless.


       In the same vein, shock-jock radio personality, Howard Stern, recently came under fire

for his disparaging remarks about Gabourey Sidibe, the overweight, young Black woman playing

the title character in "Precious," for which she received an Academy Award nomination. Stern's

comments speak boldly for themselves: "There's the most enormous, fat black chick I've ever

seen. She is enormous. Everyone's pretending she's a part of show business and she's never going

to be in another movie. She should have gotten the best actress award because she's never goin to

have another shot. What movie is she gonna be in?" In spite of Sidibe already having achieved

post-"Precious" work on Showtime in the new series, "The C Word," as well as in an

independent film called "Yelling to the Sky," Stern's remarks have a ring of truth to them.

Sidibe's size and race make her something of a commodity. While she has not been cast in any

romantic comedies, wherein the only role available for her would potentially be that of an

asexual, Black best friend, her size hardly makes her mainstream. Though cruel, Stern's

sentiment is that of much of America.
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       Naturally, race and weight do not only bisect in the realms of Black and White. Still, like

a fat woman in general, other minority characters being overweight are rom-com anomalies –

trying to think of specific ones on the spot is near-impossible. At best, other minority characters

tend to be cast in similarly archetypical roles alongside other better-known Hollywood tropes.

Case in point, Latoya Peterson, a contributor for the blog Racialicious describes a trailer for the

rom-com, "He's Just Not That Into You," based on a self-help book written by a straight, White,

male comedian. In the short TV spot, Peterson details a montage of all of the main, mostly-

female leads in the film, all thin and White: Jennifer Aniston, Drew Barrymore, Scarlett

Johansson, Kevin Connolly, and Ginnifer Goodwin. Later, Peterson writes, "two heavyset black

women" are shown "sitting on a bench," wherein one comments to the other, "'Girl, you better

get yourself some ribs and some ice cream because you've been dumped!'" Not only are the

women examples of the worn Fat Black Woman stereotype, but they are also token minority

characters in a movie otherwise populated by thin, White characters. Peterson confirms this by

noting that the film contains PoC (Persons of Color) with such credits as "Tokyo Girl #1 and #2,

African Woman #1, 2, and 3, and Hot Girl." Presumably, "Hot Girl" is thin and exotic-looking,

unlike the Black women on the bench, at(/with) whom the audience is merely meant to laugh.

Arguably, casting someone based on her 'good' physical characteristics poses similar problems to

casting someone for the purpose of de-humanizing them based on their size. At the same time,

the line could have been said by a thin, Black woman while still adhering to the race-based

stereotype of eating ribs and the gender stereotype of consuming ice cream after a break-up. That

the casting director of the film chose to use a fat, Black woman in the role is adding another layer

to act of gorging oneself on food. Similarly, neither of the oversized Black women would ever

have had a chance at being cast as a "Hot Girl." That right is reserved only to a thin person. Was
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the hot, Asian girl not skinny, she would have been completely invisible in the movie, i.e.: Not

cast at all. Such blind spots continue to keep not only overweight actors and actresses, but also

ethnic ones relegated to stereotypical bit roles.


        In the same vein, the likelihood of seeing an overweight character in a movie that is also

gay is rare. The gay character presents an unsettling parallel to the otherwise heterosexual world

of the rom-com, wherein the entire purpose of the (straight) male and female leads is to come

together romantically. When considered alongside gender, the gay best friend must work to be

funny and sexually non-threatening. When paired with an overweight frame, the character is

almost certainly the polar opposite of the romantic leads. The movie ―Saving Silverman,‖

starring the conventionally cute Jason Alexander showcases Jack Black as a gay, overweight,

Neil Diamond-worshipping best friend, though his homosexuality is consistently a joke or cause

of concern in the film. Still, it is remarkable that such a hybrid character exists at all; not only

that, but at the end of the movie, Black‘s character ends up marrying his high school football

coach, twice his age and rather conventional-looking (i.e.: thin and ‗straight-acting‘). Though

their wedding is something of a gag at the end of the film, that Black‘s character finds happiness

with a fellow gay man at all is an anomaly.


        In contrast, the movie ―Mean Girls‖ is progressive in many ways, including casting a

somewhat-overweight young man as Damian, who is colloquially considered ―too gay to

function‖ by his best (female) friend at school, and who routinely hangs out in the girls‘

bathroom and performs a Christina Aguilera song at the school‘s Christmas assembly. Still, at

the end of the film, his best friend goes on to begin dating the president of the Mathletes, a nerdy,

Indian fellow who is nonetheless skinny and something of poon-hound, whereas Damian‘s

sexuality politely fades into the background. The adolescent setting of ―Mean Girls‖ may have
Haight-Angelo        17


something to do with Damian‘s lack of romantic partners; after all, it is not necessarily typical

for teenagers to be openly-gay in high school. At the same time, the message that Damian‘s

limitations send are notably oppressive.


       While overweight characters, in general, are routinely played for laughs, their struggles

and victories rarely given the consideration or emotional depth that their slender counterparts

have by default, when combined with factors such as race, gender, and sexuality, the fat

character becomes even rarer and even more likely to be shoved to the sidelines. S/he – usually

he – is potentially uncomfortable to the viewer and to the mainstream audience as a fully-

functional, flawed human being. Thus, the fat, Black, gay woman and her fellow overweight

counterparts must assure society that they are less than that.




                     Second Helpings: Exceptions, Parallels & Controversies


       Naturally, the best friend role in a rom-com is not the only realm in which fat actors and

actresses thrive, though it is by far the most common. Thus, exceptions, parallels, and related

controversies must also be considered. While Jack Black is no stranger to being the funny

wingman, for example, he occasionally is cast as a leading man, albeit with his weight still

lending cheap laughs to the script. In the movie ―Shallow Hal,‖ Black epitomizes an exception to

fat best friend casting when he plays an overweight man who must overcome the horror of

Gwyneth Paltrow in a fat suit to recognize that she is, in fact, human. Though the point of the

film is that Black‘s character eventually repents for his fat-phobia, at its core, Gwyneth Paltrow

in a fat suit poses the same problem for the fat-conscious viewer as Julia Roberts‘ fat suit-

donning does in the aforementioned ―America‘s Sweethearts.‖ That is, the focus is still on how
Haight-Angelo       18


she is different, ‗othered,‘ alien, abnormal, and how Jack Black‘s character must learn to love her

in spite of that. ―I‘m sure that made a lot of women feel great about themselves,‖ Eric Jost,

correspondent for the blog, Amplify says derisively. Specifically, of course, he should refer to fat

women, whose silver-screen portrayal is routinely lackluster, at best.


       In addition, movies are not the only realm wherein fat actors and actresses attempt to get

work. Fat-phobia is rampant across all aspects of American media, a fact enhanced by the

aforementioned Wendy-of-Pound‘s recollection of ―fat Monica‖ jokes on the ‗90s sitcom,

―Friends‖: "For a while it was enough to make verbal references to Monica‘s past life as a fat

person, sort of an inside joke. Skinny Monica would respond with little more than an exasperated

look — oh, you guys! - whenever Ross and Rachel and Chandler made jabs at her phantom fat.

The jokes were on nobody. But at some point it seemed everyone wanted to see the nobody, so

the show‘s writers put Monica in the fat suit, they wrote flashback sequences and alternate-

reality episodes in which she would appear. They made the joke bigger and brought us all inside

of it." That Monica is skinny in her present incarnation gives the audience leeway to laugh at her

sordidly fat past. Once again, like Julia Roberts' "America's Sweethearts" character, she is a safe

target because she is in on the joke, no longer (visibly) scarred by it.


       In terms of controversy, the notion of the fat best friend as outdated is considerable. If it

is no longer appropriate to laugh at fat people, it follows that they will either be written more

conscientiously and respectfully into movie and TV roles, or they will be removed from the face

of media altogether. Unfortunately, the latter is an easier solution, one which already seems to be

in occurrence. Murray once again chimes in on this matter: "Although the statistics are that over

51% of Americans are over the insurance companies' suggested weights for their height, if you

were to look at television, motion pictures, and magazines you would conclude that most of us
Haight-Angelo       19


are either lean or outright skinny with only an occasional slightly heavyset person." Once again,

fat has become an invisible epidemic in the media.


       In recent years, perhaps beginning in the early 2000s, the role of the kooky friend has

increasingly been given to a skinny actor or actress; one whose personality is off-putting or over-

the-top enough to be able to sustain his/her role as a wise-cracking supporter of the romantic

leads in the movie. Nonetheless, s/he is as skinny (and often, shorter) than the lead actor/actress.

The "funny best friend" roles in "Failure to Launch" are all played by thin actors and actresses.

Tiny actress Zooey Deschanel plays Sarah Jessica Parker's "eccentric and moody roommate,"

whereas the similarly thin Justin Bartha and Bradley cooper play Matthew McConaguey's

character's pals. Though Fores lauds all three for being a strong supporting cast and generally

keeping the movie afloat, the only role that overweight thespians have been able to attain for

themselves consistently is being undermined by trimmer actors and actresses who can be funny

without the fat.


       In the same vein, Roger Moore of the Arizona Daily Star describes the romantic comedy

formula as akin to "a cell-phone app any studio exec could access," and describes the rom-com

"When in Rome" as, in his opinion, a particularly tired example of the genre. "Cute couple?

Check. Romantic location? Check. "'Obstacles' to romance? Check. 'Wacky,' witty friends of

each young lover? Check and check," Moore writes. Of said wacky friends, Moore criticizes

Kate Micucci for being "funny looking" rather than funny, and bemoaning that the former is not

a substitute for the latter. At the same time, he fails to mention that Micucci is a pint-sized

actress filling the role traditionally played by an overweight actor or actress. In addition, he

leaves out a physical description of the tubby Danny DeVito, who nonetheless plays a "sausage

magnate" whose attempts to woo lead actress Kristen Bell's character - who is herself the
Haight-Angelo      20


Hollywood ideal, thin and White - are even more pathetic, due to his size and age than those of

any of her other would-be suitors, all of whom are played by thinner, male actors: Will Arnett,

Jon Heder, and Dax Shepard. Similarly, Bell's character's "Mr. Right," as Moore puts it, played

by Josh Duhamel, fits all of the rom-com stereotypes provided by Branwen66 of Associated

Content, including his appearance. Though sensitive to the worn stereotypes of the genre, Moore

keeps his remarks about size to a minimum; he does not see size, in essence, because it does not

exist in the universe of the movie.


       The decrease of fat actors and actresses being cast in previously-accepted roles is, once

again, not limited to the rom-com. In a featurette called "Casting Buffy," included on the fifth

season DVD set of the TV show "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," creator Joss Whedon and company

describe what they were looking for regarding each character in the hit series. Notably, the half-

hour pilot of the show starred Riff Regan as Willow, Buffy's red-headed, bookish best friend,

"but it was eventually left unaired and network executives requested that Regan be replaced.

Willow's character demanded that she be shy and unsure of herself, and the casting department

encountered some difficulty finding actors who could portray this effectively and still be

likeable" (Wikipedia), the featurette offers. What it does not outline is that Riff Regan is

overweight; thus, that Willow is eventually cast as Alyson Hannigan, the aforementioned star of

"Date Movie" wherein she is yet another extremely slender actress wearing a fat suit for laughs is

considerable. Coupled with numerous controversies during its broadcast run regarding the

increasing pressure throughout the seasons for the nominally-female cast to slim down even

more than they already were, "Buffy" proved to have some nasty weight-related skeletons in its

closet, ones which the otherwise progressive-seeming Joss Whedon has never substantiated.
Haight-Angelo       21


       Similarly, a decade after "Buffy's" heyday, TV shows such as the new version of "90210"

are frequently taken to task in the media for their "skeletalization of women": "There is no

denying that Stroup and Grimes [who play Silver and Annie in the show, respectively] look more

than a little frightening - you have to wonder whether ... the show's producers tried to save

money by casting by the pound," an LA Times article quips about the girls' rail-thin frames. Like

"Buffy," the aforementioned skeletalization of the mostly-female cast of any show "'infects' the

rest of the cast until by, say, Season 3, all of the women are shopping for negative sizes." In

short, weight controversies are nothing new; media hounds are fascinated by how thin already-

slender actors and actresses can possibly get. That sites such as Celeb Height and Weight exist,

wherein one can search an exhaustive database of stars for estimates of their weight – ―Buffy‘s‖

Sarah Michelle Gellar, for example, is apparently sitting skinny between 98 and 108.03 pounds –

proves that this matters to people, possibly too much. In this sense, fat-phobia is so pervasive

that even non-fat persons are not remiss from its effects.


       On a more positive note, though fat folks are an increasingly rare bird in the realm of

media, occasional exceptions do make themselves known. The previously-mentioned Jonah Hill,

though apparently working to follow in the now-slender Seth Rogen‘s footsteps and lose some of

his own bulk, continues to work with Judd Apatow in fat funny-man roles. Recently, however,

Apatow cast him as the lead in ―Get Him to the Greek‖ opposite Russell Brand, a sequel to the

film ―Forgetting Sarah Marshall,‖ in which Hill has a bit role as a fat super-fan of Brand‘s

raunchy British pop star. In ―Greek,‖ Hill‘s new character is responsible for getting Brand‘s

character to, naturally, the Greek, a concert hall in Los Angeles, so that he can perform at a sold-

out event to revitalize his stagnant career. Notably, Hill retains the charm that earned him

recurring bit roles in other Apatow flicks, with the addition of his character being in a romantic
Haight-Angelo        22


relationship. Though the couple has its issues, and though Hill‘s opposite is a thin,

conventionally pretty young lady, the relationship is portrayed as stable, the focus rarely, if ever,

on Hill‘s corpulence. At the movie‘s climax, Brand‘s character tries to initiate a three-way with

Hill‘s character and his girlfriend, owing to tension between them all. Still, Brand‘s barbs at Hill

are never size-oriented. In the end, Hill is just another dude trying to do his job. Though he is

still noticeably fat in a leading role, the visual automatically making him ‗different,‘ the movie

does not focus solely on this.


       In the same vein, while adhering to many similarly-worn stereotypes about gay men, ―I

Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry‖ showcases the previously-mentioned Kevin James as a

fat firefighter living in New York City, who must adhere to a sham gay marriage with his fellow

fireman, played by Adam Sandler, in order to keep an insurance policy for his children. Both

James‘ and Sandler‘s characters are stereotypically straight and masculine, owing to a rude

awakening when their co-workers begin to believe their shtick and treat them accordingly. The

movie provides a couple of vague lessons about confronting stereotypes; moreover, James‘

character‘s ability to be a firefighter while simultaneously being overweight is not called into

question. He simply exists. It is a heartening notion, though casting directors still have a long

way to go in order to re-master the romantic comedy with a truly progressive and fresh outlook,

one which showcases that they have considered some of the weightier issues of casting

decisions, and have worked through their own prejudices regarding fat actors and actresses, and

whichever other minority roles they happen to fill, on the silver-screen and everywhere else.
Haight-Angelo        23


                                             Conclusion


       At his September 18, 2010 comedy show at the Pantages Theatre in Minneapolis, MN,

the aforementioned Patton Oswalt describes being contacted about playing a gay best friend in an

upcoming romantic comedy. Having previously riffed himself for his weighty frame during the

same show, Oswalt describes the genre as a whole as ―tired,‖ the dull romantic leads going

through a well-worn song-and-dance all for the sake of ―Trying to Fuck,‖ which he says should

simply be the title of all rom-coms. Furthermore, Oswalt claims that the only way he would even

consider such a stereotypical role is if his fat, gay best friend could offer horrible, nonsensical

advice, thus not furthering the plot or the relationship between the skinny romantic leads at all.

While it does not speak for all of the issues within the romantic comedy genre, Oswalt‘s point is

well-taken: Few characters in a romantic comedy are more than shallow archetypes, with

particular umbrage to be taken at the supporting cast. While all characters deserve better, the fat

actors and actresses who continue to hold onto the ever-slimming margin of best friend roles are

particularly due for more flattering characterization, one overhauling the worn stereotype of the

fat supporting character as an asexual blob living vicariously through his/her skinny friend. In

short, the role of the fat best friend in romantic comedies direly needs to be fleshed out.
Haight-Angelo        24


                                         Works Cited


"Actresses Show a Lot of Skinny." Show Tracker. LA Times. Internet. 17 September 2008. 1


       October 2010 <ttp://latimesblogs.latimes.com/showtracker/2008/09/actresses-


       show.html>.


"Alyson Hannigan - 'Date Movie' - Hollywood's Fat Jokes No Longer Funny." Whedon Info.


       Internet. 8 January 2006. 1 October 2010 <http://www.whedon.info/Alyson-Hannigan-


       Date-Movie,13359.html>.


"Box Office History for Romantic Comedy Movies." The Numbers. Internet. 2010. 9 August


       2010 <http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/series/RomanticComedy.php>.


Branwen66. "Romantic Comedy: Traditional Roles and Expectations." Associated Content.


       Internet. 20 March 2007. 9 August 2010


       <http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/175342/romantic_comedy_traditional_roles_a


       nd.html?cat=38>.


Cieply, Michael. "What's the Skinny on the Heftier Stars?" New York Times. Internet. 17 April


       2009. 1 October 2010


       <http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/18/movies/18bulk.html?_r=4&ref=arts>.
Haight-Angelo     25


Cracked.com. "The Romantic Comedy Formula." Newz is Newz Web site. Internet. 7 April


       2010. 5 August 2010 <http://www.newzisnewz.com/2010/04/the-romantic-comedy-


       formula/>.


Fores, Noralil. "Slapstick Saves Romantic Comedy From Traditional Chick Flick Stereotype."


       The Daily Orange. Internet. 8 March 2006. 9 August 2010


       <http://www.dailyorange.com/2.8653/slapstick-saves-romantic-comedy-from-traditional-


       chick-flick-stereotype-1.1238015>.


Hiatt, Brian. "Jonah Hill Doesn't Get Mad, He Gets Even." Rolling Stone. Internet. 24 June 2010.


       1 October 2010 <http://www.rollingstone.com/allaccess/archive#/2/1159/53/P>.


Jost, Eric. "My Big Fat Boyfriend." Advocates for Youth. Internet. 2008. 1 October 2010


       <http://www.advocatesforyouth.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=137


       1&Itemid=736>.


Levy, Lisa. "Love Hurts: The Five Deadly Sins of Romantic Comedies." Slate. Internet. 27


       December 2001. 9 August 2010 <http://www.slate.com/id/2060143>.


Megavitamin. "Top 5 Money Making Romantic Comedies." Hub Pages. Internet. 2010. 9 August


       2010 <http://hubpages.com/hub/Top-5-Money-Making-Romantic-Comedies>.
Haight-Angelo     26


Moore, Roger. "Romantic-Comedy Formula Fails Badly for 'When in Rome.'" Arizona Daily


       Star. Internet. 31 January 2010. 9 August 2010


       <http://azstarnet.com/entertainment/movies/article_f87c4822-7d4d-5e5b-9e64-


       f77195086e71.html>.


Murray, Lynne. "Where Are All the Fat People?" Oooo Baby Baby Magazine. April 1999.


       Lynne Murray Official Web site. Internet. 5 August 2010


       <http://www.maadwomen.com/lynnemurray/index.html>.


O'Neal, Sean. "First Photos of Seth Rogen's 'The Green Hornet.'" The A.V. Club. Internet. 21


       June 2010. 1 October 2010 <http://www.avclub.com/articles/first-photos-of-seth-rogens-


       the-green-hornet,42366/>.


Peterson, Latoya. "Spotting the Stereotypes: 'He's Just Not That Into You.'" Racialicious. Blog.


       Internet. 27 January 2009. 9 August 2010


       <http://www.racialicious.com/2009/01/27/spotting-the-stereotypes-hes-just-not-that-into-


       you/>.


Rose, Tracy. "Norbit Offensive to Obese People: Eddie Murphy Offends Fat People in His


       Portrayal of Rasputia." Suite 101. Internet. 14 February 2007. 5 August 2010


       <http://weightloss.suite101.com/article.cfm/norbit_offensive_to_obese_people>.
Haight-Angelo     27


"Sarah Michelle Gellar's Height and Weight." Celeb Height and Weight. Internet. 1 October


       2010 <http://www.celeb-height-weight.psyphil.com/sarah-michelle-gellar-height-and-


       weight-how-tall/>.


Ventre, Michael. "Will Sidibe's Size Weigh Down Her Acting Career?" MSNBC. Internet. 19


       April 2010. 1 October 2010 <http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/36136266>.


Vince. "How to Write a Hollywood Rom-Com in 10 Easy Steps." Uproxx. Internet. 8 March


       2010. 1 October 2010 <http://www.uproxx.com/feature/2010/03/how-to-write-a-


       hollywood-rom-com-in-10-easy-steps/>.


Wayne, Teddy. "Your Best Friend in a Romantic Comedy is Always There For You."


       McSweeney's Internet Tendency. Internet. December 2008. 1 October 2010


       <http://www.mcsweeneys.net/2008/12/4wayne.html>.


Wendy. "Imaginary Fat People." Pound. Internet. 29 July 2001. 5 August 2010


       <http://poundy.com/popcult/imaginary_fat_people.php>.

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The Subjugation of Fat Actors & Actresses in Romantic Comedies

  • 1. Haight-Angelo 1 Jessica Haight-Angelo; Grand Canyon University Fat Studies: Pedagogically and Creatively Fat Midwest Pop Culture Conference 2010; Minneapolis, MN 1 October 2010 ―They‘re Always Gonna Need a Fat Best Friend‖: The Subjugation of Fat Actors & Actresses in Romantic Comedies Abstract On his second full-length comedy album, "Werewolves and Lollipops," comedian Patton Oswalt describes his experience at the premiere of the movie, "The Dark Knight," wherein the portly funny-man recalls feeling out of place amongst all of the beautiful, skinny actors and actresses who are simultaneously miserable-looking because, Oswalt claims, none of them are eating, even though food is abundant. Oswalt then describes a chance meeting with Brian Dennehy, who remarks, "Character actors: Who gives a fuck if we're fat?" Adding his own two cents, Oswalt offers that, "They're always gonna need a fat best friend; that's never gonna go out of style." Oswalt's words ring true: Hollywood's romantic leading men (and ladies) are nominally skinny and White. If a fat character does exist in the genre, they are almost always regulated to the 'best friend' role, their own romantic aspirations rarely taken seriously or affixed with any emotional depth. Arguably, the 'fat friend' is merely an archetype that plays into Hollywood's semi-successful formula for light-hearted romantic cinema; that is, it isn't meant to be taken seriously. At the same time, such archetypes are indicative of Hollywood's ever-increasing fat
  • 2. Haight-Angelo 2 phobia. Thus, this paper will explore the role that fat plays in the modern, American romantic comedy, as it pertains to the limits of infatuation versus commitment; also, the sidekick roles that race, gender, and sexuality play in keeping fat movie actors and actresses regulated to the sidelines. The Skinny: The Romantic Comedy Formula The romantic comedy has a history nearly as lengthy as that of the motion picture industry itself, both gaining momentum in the early 1920s. As Branwen66, a contributor on Associated Content notes, the alternative title for Charlie Chaplin's 1931 movie, "City Lights," aka "City Lights: A Comedy Romance in Pantomine" offers up "the earliest technological acknowledgment" of the rom-com genre. From there, several comedies released in 1934 featured "strong and sensuous romantic conflict," wherein the love story "cease[d] to be ancillary to the comedy and bec[ame] itself the central plot that is enhanced by comedy." During the 1930s and 1940s, the romantic comedy "hit ... its stride," with "Archetypical characters and functions that we enjoy over and over again" becoming solidified (Branwen66). The modern romantic comedy era began in the early ‗80s. Since then, dozens of rom-coms have been released into theatres and, later, onto VHS and DVD for private consumption, enjoying considerable financial success in all venues. As the user Megavitamin from Hub Pages explains, Romantic comedies neither earn as much nor do they cost as much to make as "summer blockbusters ... but with the right combination of bright-toothed movie stars and the right marketing strategy - like opening on Valentine's weekend - some of these movies have banked serious green." According to Slate.com contributor, Lisa Levy, "2001's top-grossing romantic comedies were 'The Wedding Planner,'
  • 3. Haight-Angelo 3 'Someone Like You,' 'Serendipity,' 'Bridget Jones' Diary,' and 'What Women Want' (released in late 2000)." The U.S. gross for "The Wedding Planner" was $80,245,725, a figure that has been far surpassed in more recent years by its romantic comedy successors. For example, "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" took home $241,438,208, its initial budget only $5,000,000 (The Numbers). In addition, as Levy notes, "Some of the most beloved directors in American cinema made their reputations on [romantic comedies]: Preston Sturges, Howard Hawks, Woody Allen, Cameron Crowe," in early romantic comedies such as "The Lady Eve" (1941), "Annie Hall" (1977), and "Tootsie" (1982). It is clear that the romantic comedy is a well-affixed blotch in the realm of pop culture, in spite of its potential flaws. The term ―romantic comedy,‖ or ―rom-com,‖ is a hybrid of two separate movie genres, the romance and the comedy. The aforementioned Branwen66 explains: "In the simplest terms, a romantic comedy is a comedy that explores a love story ... The most memorable examples of the genre thrive on creative combinations of these three elements: romantic, comedic, exploratory ... Take the romance out or fail to infuse the story with laughter, and you end up with a different genre altogether." While comedy enjoys a wide range of classifications, from slapstick to dark or black humor, the romantic movie, and its romantic comedy counterpart both follow a fairly dogmatic formula. The Cracked.com Web site takes a stab at the former, focusing on the particularly formulaic romance movies based on Nicholas Sparks novels: "Start with two pretty white people ('A Walk to Remember'; 'The Notebook; Dear John')"; "Include an obstacle that makes love between them seem impossible (social status, her parents, 9/11)"; "They fall in love anyway"; "Throw in a completely-out-of-left-field, exploitative, awful disaster that only serves to jerk tears and turn an otherwise forgettable romance into a tragedy (leukemia, Alzheimer's cancer)"; "Go to the only poster designer you knew"; "Count your money" (Newz is Newz n.p.).
  • 4. Haight-Angelo 4 The Web site Uproxx expresses a similar sentiment in its article, "How to Write a Hollywood Rom-Com in Ten Easy Steps." Having two pretty people on the movie poster and a recognizable title are both important, Uproxx says. Branwen66 also chimes in with good humor: The male lead in a rom-com must be "smolderingly sexy," "endearingly vulnerable," "self- deprecatingly funny," and "an SOB but redeemable." In the same vein, the female lead must also be sexy and vulnerable, as well as "gutsy and feisty," the perfect counterpart to the funny and exasperating man with whom she is destined (or doomed) to fall in love in an hour-and-a-half. In the same vein, there should be few surprises as to the plot of the movie: Here's what happens in every rom-com: two people meet. Then they screw. Unfortunately, you're going to have to fill another 90 minutes. Therefore, your leads have to start hating each other. Maybe he calculates risk for an insurance company, and she's a free spirit who loves Ethiopian food. Maybe she's an uptight career woman and he's a Matthew McConaughey. She's a feminist, he's a chauvinist. Point is, opposites attract and you find love where you least expect it - Hallmark clichés are your guiding principles. (Uproxx n.p.) As with a pure romance, in a romantic comedy, the two leads must fall in love, fall out of love, and then get back together again, often due to the guy doing "something crazy to prove his love," a la John Cusack in ‗Say Anything,‘ "standing outside his special lady's window playing 'In Your Eyes' on his boombox" (Uproxx). Along the way, however, they must be guided to realize the errors of their respective ways; that is where the "kooky friends" come in. Since the audience might otherwise be overtly annoyed by the archetypical male and female leads in a rom-com due to their shallow dullness, the typical rom-com includes supporting characters "whose extreme examples of male and female stereotypes ... will give your leads the illusion of
  • 5. Haight-Angelo 5 depth. Often, this will be a talented but underutilized comedian or character actor slumming in your crappy rom-com because they need the paycheck," Uproxx offers blithely. More considerately, Branwenn66 describes the Best Friend (also known as "mates, allies, pals") as "a dependable supportive force. It is the sounding board for the protagonists' concerns, the sympathetic ear for when they need to vent, the friendly hand that passes the Kleenex." Also, like the antagonist, another supplemental character, Best Friends "are not characters per se, but character functions that concretize the deeper problems that need to be faced for love to triumph ... Best Friends are always there. Literally. In a genre that needs to continuously slalom its way around static expository situations, Best Friends elicit background information, explore motivations, and move the story forward" (Branwen66). Similarly, Branwen66 notes, "Best Friends usually have next to no character arcs. When they do, their transformation exists primarily to highlight some important aspect of the protagonists' characterization, predicament, or breakthrough, as well as underscore the thematic infrastructure of the story." Once the hero has "matured enough to take charge of his life," the Best Friend "provides little more than comedic interval" once again (Branwen66). Often, this slim chance for screen-time in a depthless romantic comedy is where the 'fat best friend' is shoehorned. Teddy Wayne‘s monologue, ―Your Best Friend in a Romantic Comedy is Always There For You,‖ pinpoints several aspects of the dependable best friend archetype, including the difference between the kooky friend and the romantic lead in terms of body-type: ―"C'mon, Louise, whenever you have guy problems, you always watch classic movies and pig out on Ben & Jerry's, even though your willowy frame suggests that you subsist on celery and laxatives. It's one of your charming quirks that distinguish you from the other successful, attractive women in their 30s I'm friends with who inexplicably can't hold on to a
  • 6. Haight-Angelo 6 man. That, and your career-woman-but-glamorous hairstyle that should take an hour to prepare but looks perfect straight out of bed." In addition, the best friend's "nonthreatening 'ethnic' blend" gives her the opportunity to utter "all these trailer-worthy one-liners," implying the importance of the best friend to the rom-com's success, even in spite of his/her lack of significance to the romantic leads whom s/he nonetheless loyally patronizes and flatters. Even the slim potential for the best friend to find love is correlated strongly with her prettier, thinner pal, according to Wayne: "Hey, what if the [male romantic lead's "vaguely Italian‖] best friend and I began a relationship that thematically informed your and Jake's?" the best friend asks. "Like, what if we got together and then broke up, it might make you rethink your long-term commitment to Jake. Or, if we got married, it might make you rethink your lack of a long-term commitment to Jake. Either way, our relationship will make you contemplate yourself and Jake" (Wayne n.p.). Comically, Wayne manages to pinpoint several oppressive clichés of the best friend archetype, including weight, race, and gender. In each case, the further from the White, straight, conclusively ‗all-American‘ norm – which is always represented by the romantic lead - in a rom- com that the best friend is shown to be, the more pigeonholed and despondent the character is. Arguably, the fat best friend is the most 'othered' version of the kooky friend, his or her body type a physical representation of everything that the romantic lead wishes to avoid being. As Lynne Murray, a novelist who specializes in writing about "self-accepting fat" characters (Lynne Murray Web site, "About Lynne") explains, "We see very few fat people in film and television because the implicit assumption is that we are suffering from a willful, self-imposed sickness, as evidenced by our very appearance. Fat is seen as a visible manifestation of an abnormal state (and our Puritanical roots tend to suggest to us that we must have gotten to this awful condition through gluttony, sloth or some other horrendous sin).‖ In other words, fat people are abnormal,
  • 7. Haight-Angelo 7 something to be ashamed of, and thus do not deserve equal media representation as their slimmer counterparts, a "Crippling belief" held by both the media and the masses who indulge in it, fat and thin (Murray). In the same vein, Murray says, "To be invisible because of race or ethnicity is not quite the same thing as being invisible because of size." While being ‗exotic-looking,‘ or female, or Black, or gay can be quirky complications, they will not absolutely keep a character from finding love in a romantic comedy, or at least a niche in which to cocoon him or herself. In contrast, the overweight character must accept his/her potential physical oddity as an additional barrier to happiness, one reaching even beyond gender, race, or sexuality. Jake‘s best friend won‘t necessarily want to date Louise‘s chunky best friend just because he‘s Italian; as Wayne's analysis of the fat best friend concludes, "I've got a feeling everything will work out just fine for you, you effortlessly thin blonde. Well, I'm going back to my apartment now to cry myself to sleep. Coffee tomorrow?" While race and body type occasionally intersect, fat discrimination runs (or jogs sluggishly) rampant and unchecked across all demographics. In essence, when it comes to romantic comedies, being overweight disallows the fat best friend from being recognized as fully human, more so than any other singular factor. (Not) The Norm: Gender, Race, Sexuality In the same vein, when a fat character in a romantic comedy is also ethnic, female (or anything other than a cisgendered male), and/or gay, the bisection of such ‗othered‘ factors is worth considering. Perhaps the most obvious additional minority portrayal is that of a fat female character. The context surrounding a fat male character appears on a much different level than that surrounding a fat female character. This discrepancy exists beyond the realm of the romantic
  • 8. Haight-Angelo 8 comedy, however, intersecting with the general malaise of sexism that seems to have settled over mainstream American culture. As Michael Cieply points out in 2009 article for the New York Times, several male Hollywood stars have "packed on the pounds" for various leading man film roles. While Cieply refers to "Holly's pool of leading men" as "getting larger - and not necessarily in a good way," however, he also concedes that recently-bulked-up stars such as Russell Crowe, John Travolta, and Denzel Washington still achieve prestigious film roles. In contrast, Cieply notes, "Kathleen Turner, 54 and the onetime seductress of 'Body Heat,' last December put in a rare film performance as Ms. Kornblut, the plus-size dog trainer in 'Marley & Me.'" Here, Cieply's remark that fat women in Hollywood are not as noticeable "because actresses who expand do not often get roles to showcase their growth" is notable: A fat woman in Hollywood is practically invisible. Similarly, when an actress is fat in a movie, it becomes the entire focus of her role. Consider Renee Zellweger in "Bridget Jones' Diary" and its sequel. In the original novels, Bridget Jones weighed around 170 pounds; yet her silver-screen counterpart, in spite of Zellweger being lauded for her bravery in packing on 20 pounds to her slender frame, was significantly skinnier than this. Still, the entire focus of her character was to be the token fat girl, something the audience was rarely, if ever, allowed to forget. In a similar vein, Wendy, a contributor at the Web site Pound offers up the term "imaginary fat people," and hints at a more widespread issue than simply placing fat people into stereotypical roles: "Imaginary fat people['s] actions are stereotypical, certainly, but they come off quite differently than those of an overweight actor who performs fat-person clichés ... Imaginary fat people can be fat without the distractions of 'character.' Fat is the character and imaginary fat people breathe themselves into life. They have nobody to blame but themselves."
  • 9. Haight-Angelo 9 Wendy uses the movie "America's Sweethearts" as an example of imaginary fat, wherein traditionally rail-thin actress, Julia Roberts stuffs herself into a fat suit to give off the illusion of a 180-pound woman, Hollywood's version of morbidly obese. As she notes, at first, "she was just the Julia Roberts character with a fuller face and belly. She acted the same way and she dressed pretty much the same way. (Though when you're the size she's at in that scene, you don't tuck your top in. You just don't.)" Later in the movie, however, Roberts' character is shown "stuffing her face": "She was on a movie set and lingering by the craft services table with her cheeks full of food, with one hand feeding herself and another hand reaching for more food." At this point, Wendy confirms, Julia Roberts' performance became all about the fat suit. Her character had become an "imaginary fat person." Similarly, whereas the audience where Wendy saw the film laughed tentatively, even nervously during early scenes with Roberts' character in them, "during the food scenes, the audience burst out laughing abruptly but wholeheartedly, relieved, as if they understood something at last. Or as if someone who had made them uncomfortable had left the room"; that is, because someone had: The fat person whom the movie made a show of humanizing before giving in to not only stereotypes, but well-preserved societal condemnation of fat people. At the same time, in a show of self-hatred, Wendy admits to laughing when a now-skinny Julia Roberts character "ordered three plates of food at once and ate from them voraciously," while simultaneously recognizing that "I would never do that - eat like the way she was eating, alone, in public. Everyone I know who is fat has a problem with eating in front of strangers. You worry what people will think about you, what they'll imagine." Such a statement implies that Roberts' usually slender physique allows her the ability to eat heartily without the judgment her 180-pound counterpart would have received, simply due to her size. Wendy finishes her diatribe
  • 10. Haight-Angelo 10 with a saddened summation of this kind of thinking: "[I]maginary fat seems to be the only kind of fat the popular media can deal with at all ... The only fat we're allowed to consider is the fat on someone like Charlize Theron. The only acceptable fat is practically invisible" (Wendy). Even in the fat best friend role in romantic comedies, men are much more likely to be cast. As a disgusted reviewer notes of the film, "Date Movie," a parody of the traditional rom- com featuring a rail-thin Alyson Hannigan in a fat suit, wherein she is 'worked on' like a car to be made into a more socially acceptable, and thin, 'hot babe' who can choose suitors a la "The Bachelorette," the role of the fat woman in film is much more disparaging and hateful than that of the fat male. "Fat men are funny," the reviewer says. "Fat women are to be pitied. For example, in 'Hitch,' Kevin James' character - an everyman, i.e.: slightly overweight - eventually wins the heart of a socialite (supermodel Amber Valletta)." That the reviewer can consider an overweight male to be an everyman in the first place is notable; the same cannot be said for the overweight female, whose extra pounds are always an issue. A fat woman in a movie is never happy or well-adjusted. Inevitably, she either overcompensates for her body type with an equally over-the-top personality, or simply sinks into the background, asexual and useless. There is an additional meanness to the disparaging remarks made unto such a character, an acridity that seems to slide more easily off of the fat male characters' pudgy backs. They may, in fact, be bothered by such ribbing, but the roles written for them do not encourage them to showcase such emotions; thus, the audience feels less guilty laughing at overweight men than it does fat women. Fat men are a safe target. In part, this disparity between genders seems to exist because, as the adage goes, comedy is a man's game. In recent years, the romantic comedy has been fine-tuned with the addition of more slapstick and raunchy material; traditional comedic elements designed to draw in more
  • 11. Haight-Angelo 11 male viewers. Director Judd Apatow‘s hearty comedies, including ―The 40-Year-Old Virgin,‖ ―Knocked Up,‖ ―Superbad,‖ etc. are a case-in-point. Such films have been lauded by both male and female viewers, and the appeal of such fare to men has redefined the rom-com as a ―dick flick,‖ a ―bromance,‖ or a ―brom-com.‖ Fores offers similar praise to "Failure to Launch" for being "A mixture of romantic comedy and overblown slapstick," thus making it "a lady-tailored movie written, produced, and directed by men," and subsequently made so that guys dragged along to the theatre by female dates can get some cheap laughs in. "[T]he flick doesn't entirely dwell in the realms of sentimentality," Fores offers, apparently relieved that the "chick flick" genre is being reclaimed by dudes by way of referring to the trend as "the grandest sense of social equality." While arguably, romantic comedies are an exception to an industry that has always been geared towards males (thus, most movies are ―dick flicks,‖ with female viewers just happening to occasionally, and invisibly, enjoy them, as well), in a practical sense, the bromance simply continues to ensure a discrepancy between fat male and female characters in movies. Though overweight male actors like Jonah Hill and Seth Rogen, staples of Judd Apatow‘s films should absolutely be lauded for everything they bring to their respective roles, they are nonetheless cast alongside thin female actresses, few who are on par with Hill or Rogen in terms of sense of humor, and none who are ‗allowed‘ to also be fat. In the same vein, that Hill and Rogen often play second-string to the thinner, more conventionally attractive Paul Rudd in Apatow‘s films showcases the limits of the pudgy body type. This is even discussed in-film during Apatow‘s ―Funny People,‖ starring a cranky, middle- aged Adam Sandler as a washed-up comedian. In addition, a notably slimmed-down Seth Rogen plays Sandler‘s assistant, who rooms with other side characters who are responsible for most of the movie‘s one-liners, including the still-corpulent Jonah Hill. In the film, Hill‘s character
  • 12. Haight-Angelo 12 makes a referential barb at Rogan‘s slimmed physique: "'There's nothing funny about a physically fit man ... No one wants to see Lance Armstrong do comedy." Though a zinger, the comment offers considerable insight into the role of the fat and skinny man in the comedy world; there is, after all, a reason that Paul Rudd plays the anal-retentive leading man almost every time he is cast in something. In the same vein, in an interview with Rolling Stone, wherein Hill reports that he's "making [losing weight] a priority in my life," he adds that "Seth did it. I was really proud of him." In addition, he hotly contests his "Funny People" character's barb, though his criticism seems borne equally of embarrassment at the attention focused on his weight, and of a sense that his character may have been right about the stereotypical nature of comedic role- casting: "'If you're really skinny or if you're really big, it doesn't make you funnier or less funnier - it's ridiculous, man, it's totally ridiculous ... Why does that joke in a movie have anything to do with me personally? It's not me, it's a guy in a movie" (53). Why, indeed. Though Hill protests, since "Funny People," Seth Rogen has gone on to be cast in the upcoming "Green Hornet" movie, wherein he is even more noticeably physically fit. While his friend, Jonah Hill might praise this move - now, Rogen can play the straight, thin man a la Paul Rudd - a sampling of comments in response to some early shots of Rogen in costume on the A.V. Club Web site epitomizes the notion that the fixation on his weight will never go away, no matter how thin he gets. In addition, many fans are bitter at the comedy world's alleged loss of talent: "Put the weight back on, you fuck," one user spits. "No one wants to resemble Steve Guttenberg anymore." In this, it is clear that comedic roles in movies are most appropriately and thus, commonly played by fat men who do not seem to mind being reminded that they are fat, as long as people think they are also funny. In the realm of overweight thespians, then, the fat male holds considerable sway over his chubby female counterpart.
  • 13. Haight-Angelo 13 In addition to gender disparities, race also plays a role in keeping the fat best friend relegated to the sidelines in romantic comedy movies. The aforementioned Murray likens seeing a fat actor on television [and by extension, in a movie] to hearing a Black actress in a documentary discuss how, "in the 1950s and 60s when a black person appeared on television someone in the family would say, 'Come look!' and they would gather round to observe this rarity - actual recognition of their existence on network television." Imagine the double-rarity of a (positive) portrayal of a character who is both overweight and a racial minority. As one might already expect, the fat, Black male is more casually regarded than the fat, Black female, whose overweight body must inevitably be a shtick enhanced by her flamboyant personality. Eddie Murphy's portrayal of Rasputia, the overweight character he plays in the movie "Norbit" is a stockpile of every negative stereotype of fat, Black women. As Tracy Rose writes, "Rasputia is a dominating, manly, opinionated, loud, obnoxious, annoying, shrill and poorly-dressed obese woman. In the story, Rasputia saves Norbit [also played by Eddie Murphy] from playground bullies and makes him her boyfriend. Years later she is still dominating him. They are married, but when she is caught cheating on him, she tells him it never happened and threatens him. She is a controlling hypocrite." It is also a Fat Black Woman trope in Hollywood movies that said FBW tends to appear very self-confident and seemingly unaware of the quantifiable levels of shame that other fat people, usually fat, non-Black people feel. Rasputia also hits this mark in "Norbit." At one point in the film, Rose writes, "She wears loud patterns, tight clothes, 'sexy' outfits, and - worst of all - a two-piece swimsuit. When going through the gate to a water park, she is questioned whether she is even wearing bottoms. She has to hoist up her stomach for [the employee] to see that her own body has completely covered them. She proceeds to break the front entrance due to her size,
  • 14. Haight-Angelo 14 rip on [another] woman for being too skinny and fly through a wooden gate after ignoring the weight limit on the waterslide and zooming down [it] at lightning speed." Rasputia is fat for the sheer purpose of enticing audiences to laugh at her fatness. Her apparent self-confidence gives viewers an easy out of feeling guilty for being amused by her antics. Thus, not only does "Norbit" "elicit ... laughter at the expense of obese people" (Rose), it also contains an uncomfortable racial component, one that Murphy himself seems to ignore. Tellingly, at the end of the movie, Murphy's title character hooks up with the token "skinny, pretty girl" (Rose). His character may learn to stand up for himself, but it is at the cost of subjugating Fat Black Women by - literally - dismissing them as worthless. In the same vein, shock-jock radio personality, Howard Stern, recently came under fire for his disparaging remarks about Gabourey Sidibe, the overweight, young Black woman playing the title character in "Precious," for which she received an Academy Award nomination. Stern's comments speak boldly for themselves: "There's the most enormous, fat black chick I've ever seen. She is enormous. Everyone's pretending she's a part of show business and she's never going to be in another movie. She should have gotten the best actress award because she's never goin to have another shot. What movie is she gonna be in?" In spite of Sidibe already having achieved post-"Precious" work on Showtime in the new series, "The C Word," as well as in an independent film called "Yelling to the Sky," Stern's remarks have a ring of truth to them. Sidibe's size and race make her something of a commodity. While she has not been cast in any romantic comedies, wherein the only role available for her would potentially be that of an asexual, Black best friend, her size hardly makes her mainstream. Though cruel, Stern's sentiment is that of much of America.
  • 15. Haight-Angelo 15 Naturally, race and weight do not only bisect in the realms of Black and White. Still, like a fat woman in general, other minority characters being overweight are rom-com anomalies – trying to think of specific ones on the spot is near-impossible. At best, other minority characters tend to be cast in similarly archetypical roles alongside other better-known Hollywood tropes. Case in point, Latoya Peterson, a contributor for the blog Racialicious describes a trailer for the rom-com, "He's Just Not That Into You," based on a self-help book written by a straight, White, male comedian. In the short TV spot, Peterson details a montage of all of the main, mostly- female leads in the film, all thin and White: Jennifer Aniston, Drew Barrymore, Scarlett Johansson, Kevin Connolly, and Ginnifer Goodwin. Later, Peterson writes, "two heavyset black women" are shown "sitting on a bench," wherein one comments to the other, "'Girl, you better get yourself some ribs and some ice cream because you've been dumped!'" Not only are the women examples of the worn Fat Black Woman stereotype, but they are also token minority characters in a movie otherwise populated by thin, White characters. Peterson confirms this by noting that the film contains PoC (Persons of Color) with such credits as "Tokyo Girl #1 and #2, African Woman #1, 2, and 3, and Hot Girl." Presumably, "Hot Girl" is thin and exotic-looking, unlike the Black women on the bench, at(/with) whom the audience is merely meant to laugh. Arguably, casting someone based on her 'good' physical characteristics poses similar problems to casting someone for the purpose of de-humanizing them based on their size. At the same time, the line could have been said by a thin, Black woman while still adhering to the race-based stereotype of eating ribs and the gender stereotype of consuming ice cream after a break-up. That the casting director of the film chose to use a fat, Black woman in the role is adding another layer to act of gorging oneself on food. Similarly, neither of the oversized Black women would ever have had a chance at being cast as a "Hot Girl." That right is reserved only to a thin person. Was
  • 16. Haight-Angelo 16 the hot, Asian girl not skinny, she would have been completely invisible in the movie, i.e.: Not cast at all. Such blind spots continue to keep not only overweight actors and actresses, but also ethnic ones relegated to stereotypical bit roles. In the same vein, the likelihood of seeing an overweight character in a movie that is also gay is rare. The gay character presents an unsettling parallel to the otherwise heterosexual world of the rom-com, wherein the entire purpose of the (straight) male and female leads is to come together romantically. When considered alongside gender, the gay best friend must work to be funny and sexually non-threatening. When paired with an overweight frame, the character is almost certainly the polar opposite of the romantic leads. The movie ―Saving Silverman,‖ starring the conventionally cute Jason Alexander showcases Jack Black as a gay, overweight, Neil Diamond-worshipping best friend, though his homosexuality is consistently a joke or cause of concern in the film. Still, it is remarkable that such a hybrid character exists at all; not only that, but at the end of the movie, Black‘s character ends up marrying his high school football coach, twice his age and rather conventional-looking (i.e.: thin and ‗straight-acting‘). Though their wedding is something of a gag at the end of the film, that Black‘s character finds happiness with a fellow gay man at all is an anomaly. In contrast, the movie ―Mean Girls‖ is progressive in many ways, including casting a somewhat-overweight young man as Damian, who is colloquially considered ―too gay to function‖ by his best (female) friend at school, and who routinely hangs out in the girls‘ bathroom and performs a Christina Aguilera song at the school‘s Christmas assembly. Still, at the end of the film, his best friend goes on to begin dating the president of the Mathletes, a nerdy, Indian fellow who is nonetheless skinny and something of poon-hound, whereas Damian‘s sexuality politely fades into the background. The adolescent setting of ―Mean Girls‖ may have
  • 17. Haight-Angelo 17 something to do with Damian‘s lack of romantic partners; after all, it is not necessarily typical for teenagers to be openly-gay in high school. At the same time, the message that Damian‘s limitations send are notably oppressive. While overweight characters, in general, are routinely played for laughs, their struggles and victories rarely given the consideration or emotional depth that their slender counterparts have by default, when combined with factors such as race, gender, and sexuality, the fat character becomes even rarer and even more likely to be shoved to the sidelines. S/he – usually he – is potentially uncomfortable to the viewer and to the mainstream audience as a fully- functional, flawed human being. Thus, the fat, Black, gay woman and her fellow overweight counterparts must assure society that they are less than that. Second Helpings: Exceptions, Parallels & Controversies Naturally, the best friend role in a rom-com is not the only realm in which fat actors and actresses thrive, though it is by far the most common. Thus, exceptions, parallels, and related controversies must also be considered. While Jack Black is no stranger to being the funny wingman, for example, he occasionally is cast as a leading man, albeit with his weight still lending cheap laughs to the script. In the movie ―Shallow Hal,‖ Black epitomizes an exception to fat best friend casting when he plays an overweight man who must overcome the horror of Gwyneth Paltrow in a fat suit to recognize that she is, in fact, human. Though the point of the film is that Black‘s character eventually repents for his fat-phobia, at its core, Gwyneth Paltrow in a fat suit poses the same problem for the fat-conscious viewer as Julia Roberts‘ fat suit- donning does in the aforementioned ―America‘s Sweethearts.‖ That is, the focus is still on how
  • 18. Haight-Angelo 18 she is different, ‗othered,‘ alien, abnormal, and how Jack Black‘s character must learn to love her in spite of that. ―I‘m sure that made a lot of women feel great about themselves,‖ Eric Jost, correspondent for the blog, Amplify says derisively. Specifically, of course, he should refer to fat women, whose silver-screen portrayal is routinely lackluster, at best. In addition, movies are not the only realm wherein fat actors and actresses attempt to get work. Fat-phobia is rampant across all aspects of American media, a fact enhanced by the aforementioned Wendy-of-Pound‘s recollection of ―fat Monica‖ jokes on the ‗90s sitcom, ―Friends‖: "For a while it was enough to make verbal references to Monica‘s past life as a fat person, sort of an inside joke. Skinny Monica would respond with little more than an exasperated look — oh, you guys! - whenever Ross and Rachel and Chandler made jabs at her phantom fat. The jokes were on nobody. But at some point it seemed everyone wanted to see the nobody, so the show‘s writers put Monica in the fat suit, they wrote flashback sequences and alternate- reality episodes in which she would appear. They made the joke bigger and brought us all inside of it." That Monica is skinny in her present incarnation gives the audience leeway to laugh at her sordidly fat past. Once again, like Julia Roberts' "America's Sweethearts" character, she is a safe target because she is in on the joke, no longer (visibly) scarred by it. In terms of controversy, the notion of the fat best friend as outdated is considerable. If it is no longer appropriate to laugh at fat people, it follows that they will either be written more conscientiously and respectfully into movie and TV roles, or they will be removed from the face of media altogether. Unfortunately, the latter is an easier solution, one which already seems to be in occurrence. Murray once again chimes in on this matter: "Although the statistics are that over 51% of Americans are over the insurance companies' suggested weights for their height, if you were to look at television, motion pictures, and magazines you would conclude that most of us
  • 19. Haight-Angelo 19 are either lean or outright skinny with only an occasional slightly heavyset person." Once again, fat has become an invisible epidemic in the media. In recent years, perhaps beginning in the early 2000s, the role of the kooky friend has increasingly been given to a skinny actor or actress; one whose personality is off-putting or over- the-top enough to be able to sustain his/her role as a wise-cracking supporter of the romantic leads in the movie. Nonetheless, s/he is as skinny (and often, shorter) than the lead actor/actress. The "funny best friend" roles in "Failure to Launch" are all played by thin actors and actresses. Tiny actress Zooey Deschanel plays Sarah Jessica Parker's "eccentric and moody roommate," whereas the similarly thin Justin Bartha and Bradley cooper play Matthew McConaguey's character's pals. Though Fores lauds all three for being a strong supporting cast and generally keeping the movie afloat, the only role that overweight thespians have been able to attain for themselves consistently is being undermined by trimmer actors and actresses who can be funny without the fat. In the same vein, Roger Moore of the Arizona Daily Star describes the romantic comedy formula as akin to "a cell-phone app any studio exec could access," and describes the rom-com "When in Rome" as, in his opinion, a particularly tired example of the genre. "Cute couple? Check. Romantic location? Check. "'Obstacles' to romance? Check. 'Wacky,' witty friends of each young lover? Check and check," Moore writes. Of said wacky friends, Moore criticizes Kate Micucci for being "funny looking" rather than funny, and bemoaning that the former is not a substitute for the latter. At the same time, he fails to mention that Micucci is a pint-sized actress filling the role traditionally played by an overweight actor or actress. In addition, he leaves out a physical description of the tubby Danny DeVito, who nonetheless plays a "sausage magnate" whose attempts to woo lead actress Kristen Bell's character - who is herself the
  • 20. Haight-Angelo 20 Hollywood ideal, thin and White - are even more pathetic, due to his size and age than those of any of her other would-be suitors, all of whom are played by thinner, male actors: Will Arnett, Jon Heder, and Dax Shepard. Similarly, Bell's character's "Mr. Right," as Moore puts it, played by Josh Duhamel, fits all of the rom-com stereotypes provided by Branwen66 of Associated Content, including his appearance. Though sensitive to the worn stereotypes of the genre, Moore keeps his remarks about size to a minimum; he does not see size, in essence, because it does not exist in the universe of the movie. The decrease of fat actors and actresses being cast in previously-accepted roles is, once again, not limited to the rom-com. In a featurette called "Casting Buffy," included on the fifth season DVD set of the TV show "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," creator Joss Whedon and company describe what they were looking for regarding each character in the hit series. Notably, the half- hour pilot of the show starred Riff Regan as Willow, Buffy's red-headed, bookish best friend, "but it was eventually left unaired and network executives requested that Regan be replaced. Willow's character demanded that she be shy and unsure of herself, and the casting department encountered some difficulty finding actors who could portray this effectively and still be likeable" (Wikipedia), the featurette offers. What it does not outline is that Riff Regan is overweight; thus, that Willow is eventually cast as Alyson Hannigan, the aforementioned star of "Date Movie" wherein she is yet another extremely slender actress wearing a fat suit for laughs is considerable. Coupled with numerous controversies during its broadcast run regarding the increasing pressure throughout the seasons for the nominally-female cast to slim down even more than they already were, "Buffy" proved to have some nasty weight-related skeletons in its closet, ones which the otherwise progressive-seeming Joss Whedon has never substantiated.
  • 21. Haight-Angelo 21 Similarly, a decade after "Buffy's" heyday, TV shows such as the new version of "90210" are frequently taken to task in the media for their "skeletalization of women": "There is no denying that Stroup and Grimes [who play Silver and Annie in the show, respectively] look more than a little frightening - you have to wonder whether ... the show's producers tried to save money by casting by the pound," an LA Times article quips about the girls' rail-thin frames. Like "Buffy," the aforementioned skeletalization of the mostly-female cast of any show "'infects' the rest of the cast until by, say, Season 3, all of the women are shopping for negative sizes." In short, weight controversies are nothing new; media hounds are fascinated by how thin already- slender actors and actresses can possibly get. That sites such as Celeb Height and Weight exist, wherein one can search an exhaustive database of stars for estimates of their weight – ―Buffy‘s‖ Sarah Michelle Gellar, for example, is apparently sitting skinny between 98 and 108.03 pounds – proves that this matters to people, possibly too much. In this sense, fat-phobia is so pervasive that even non-fat persons are not remiss from its effects. On a more positive note, though fat folks are an increasingly rare bird in the realm of media, occasional exceptions do make themselves known. The previously-mentioned Jonah Hill, though apparently working to follow in the now-slender Seth Rogen‘s footsteps and lose some of his own bulk, continues to work with Judd Apatow in fat funny-man roles. Recently, however, Apatow cast him as the lead in ―Get Him to the Greek‖ opposite Russell Brand, a sequel to the film ―Forgetting Sarah Marshall,‖ in which Hill has a bit role as a fat super-fan of Brand‘s raunchy British pop star. In ―Greek,‖ Hill‘s new character is responsible for getting Brand‘s character to, naturally, the Greek, a concert hall in Los Angeles, so that he can perform at a sold- out event to revitalize his stagnant career. Notably, Hill retains the charm that earned him recurring bit roles in other Apatow flicks, with the addition of his character being in a romantic
  • 22. Haight-Angelo 22 relationship. Though the couple has its issues, and though Hill‘s opposite is a thin, conventionally pretty young lady, the relationship is portrayed as stable, the focus rarely, if ever, on Hill‘s corpulence. At the movie‘s climax, Brand‘s character tries to initiate a three-way with Hill‘s character and his girlfriend, owing to tension between them all. Still, Brand‘s barbs at Hill are never size-oriented. In the end, Hill is just another dude trying to do his job. Though he is still noticeably fat in a leading role, the visual automatically making him ‗different,‘ the movie does not focus solely on this. In the same vein, while adhering to many similarly-worn stereotypes about gay men, ―I Now Pronounce You Chuck and Larry‖ showcases the previously-mentioned Kevin James as a fat firefighter living in New York City, who must adhere to a sham gay marriage with his fellow fireman, played by Adam Sandler, in order to keep an insurance policy for his children. Both James‘ and Sandler‘s characters are stereotypically straight and masculine, owing to a rude awakening when their co-workers begin to believe their shtick and treat them accordingly. The movie provides a couple of vague lessons about confronting stereotypes; moreover, James‘ character‘s ability to be a firefighter while simultaneously being overweight is not called into question. He simply exists. It is a heartening notion, though casting directors still have a long way to go in order to re-master the romantic comedy with a truly progressive and fresh outlook, one which showcases that they have considered some of the weightier issues of casting decisions, and have worked through their own prejudices regarding fat actors and actresses, and whichever other minority roles they happen to fill, on the silver-screen and everywhere else.
  • 23. Haight-Angelo 23 Conclusion At his September 18, 2010 comedy show at the Pantages Theatre in Minneapolis, MN, the aforementioned Patton Oswalt describes being contacted about playing a gay best friend in an upcoming romantic comedy. Having previously riffed himself for his weighty frame during the same show, Oswalt describes the genre as a whole as ―tired,‖ the dull romantic leads going through a well-worn song-and-dance all for the sake of ―Trying to Fuck,‖ which he says should simply be the title of all rom-coms. Furthermore, Oswalt claims that the only way he would even consider such a stereotypical role is if his fat, gay best friend could offer horrible, nonsensical advice, thus not furthering the plot or the relationship between the skinny romantic leads at all. While it does not speak for all of the issues within the romantic comedy genre, Oswalt‘s point is well-taken: Few characters in a romantic comedy are more than shallow archetypes, with particular umbrage to be taken at the supporting cast. While all characters deserve better, the fat actors and actresses who continue to hold onto the ever-slimming margin of best friend roles are particularly due for more flattering characterization, one overhauling the worn stereotype of the fat supporting character as an asexual blob living vicariously through his/her skinny friend. In short, the role of the fat best friend in romantic comedies direly needs to be fleshed out.
  • 24. Haight-Angelo 24 Works Cited "Actresses Show a Lot of Skinny." Show Tracker. LA Times. Internet. 17 September 2008. 1 October 2010 <ttp://latimesblogs.latimes.com/showtracker/2008/09/actresses- show.html>. "Alyson Hannigan - 'Date Movie' - Hollywood's Fat Jokes No Longer Funny." Whedon Info. Internet. 8 January 2006. 1 October 2010 <http://www.whedon.info/Alyson-Hannigan- Date-Movie,13359.html>. "Box Office History for Romantic Comedy Movies." The Numbers. Internet. 2010. 9 August 2010 <http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/series/RomanticComedy.php>. Branwen66. "Romantic Comedy: Traditional Roles and Expectations." Associated Content. Internet. 20 March 2007. 9 August 2010 <http://www.associatedcontent.com/article/175342/romantic_comedy_traditional_roles_a nd.html?cat=38>. Cieply, Michael. "What's the Skinny on the Heftier Stars?" New York Times. Internet. 17 April 2009. 1 October 2010 <http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/18/movies/18bulk.html?_r=4&ref=arts>.
  • 25. Haight-Angelo 25 Cracked.com. "The Romantic Comedy Formula." Newz is Newz Web site. Internet. 7 April 2010. 5 August 2010 <http://www.newzisnewz.com/2010/04/the-romantic-comedy- formula/>. Fores, Noralil. "Slapstick Saves Romantic Comedy From Traditional Chick Flick Stereotype." The Daily Orange. Internet. 8 March 2006. 9 August 2010 <http://www.dailyorange.com/2.8653/slapstick-saves-romantic-comedy-from-traditional- chick-flick-stereotype-1.1238015>. Hiatt, Brian. "Jonah Hill Doesn't Get Mad, He Gets Even." Rolling Stone. Internet. 24 June 2010. 1 October 2010 <http://www.rollingstone.com/allaccess/archive#/2/1159/53/P>. Jost, Eric. "My Big Fat Boyfriend." Advocates for Youth. Internet. 2008. 1 October 2010 <http://www.advocatesforyouth.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=137 1&Itemid=736>. Levy, Lisa. "Love Hurts: The Five Deadly Sins of Romantic Comedies." Slate. Internet. 27 December 2001. 9 August 2010 <http://www.slate.com/id/2060143>. Megavitamin. "Top 5 Money Making Romantic Comedies." Hub Pages. Internet. 2010. 9 August 2010 <http://hubpages.com/hub/Top-5-Money-Making-Romantic-Comedies>.
  • 26. Haight-Angelo 26 Moore, Roger. "Romantic-Comedy Formula Fails Badly for 'When in Rome.'" Arizona Daily Star. Internet. 31 January 2010. 9 August 2010 <http://azstarnet.com/entertainment/movies/article_f87c4822-7d4d-5e5b-9e64- f77195086e71.html>. Murray, Lynne. "Where Are All the Fat People?" Oooo Baby Baby Magazine. April 1999. Lynne Murray Official Web site. Internet. 5 August 2010 <http://www.maadwomen.com/lynnemurray/index.html>. O'Neal, Sean. "First Photos of Seth Rogen's 'The Green Hornet.'" The A.V. Club. Internet. 21 June 2010. 1 October 2010 <http://www.avclub.com/articles/first-photos-of-seth-rogens- the-green-hornet,42366/>. Peterson, Latoya. "Spotting the Stereotypes: 'He's Just Not That Into You.'" Racialicious. Blog. Internet. 27 January 2009. 9 August 2010 <http://www.racialicious.com/2009/01/27/spotting-the-stereotypes-hes-just-not-that-into- you/>. Rose, Tracy. "Norbit Offensive to Obese People: Eddie Murphy Offends Fat People in His Portrayal of Rasputia." Suite 101. Internet. 14 February 2007. 5 August 2010 <http://weightloss.suite101.com/article.cfm/norbit_offensive_to_obese_people>.
  • 27. Haight-Angelo 27 "Sarah Michelle Gellar's Height and Weight." Celeb Height and Weight. Internet. 1 October 2010 <http://www.celeb-height-weight.psyphil.com/sarah-michelle-gellar-height-and- weight-how-tall/>. Ventre, Michael. "Will Sidibe's Size Weigh Down Her Acting Career?" MSNBC. Internet. 19 April 2010. 1 October 2010 <http://today.msnbc.msn.com/id/36136266>. Vince. "How to Write a Hollywood Rom-Com in 10 Easy Steps." Uproxx. Internet. 8 March 2010. 1 October 2010 <http://www.uproxx.com/feature/2010/03/how-to-write-a- hollywood-rom-com-in-10-easy-steps/>. Wayne, Teddy. "Your Best Friend in a Romantic Comedy is Always There For You." McSweeney's Internet Tendency. Internet. December 2008. 1 October 2010 <http://www.mcsweeneys.net/2008/12/4wayne.html>. Wendy. "Imaginary Fat People." Pound. Internet. 29 July 2001. 5 August 2010 <http://poundy.com/popcult/imaginary_fat_people.php>.