Candace Owens has entered the debate over whether Jodie Turner-Smith was a good choice to portray Anne Boleyn in a new miniseries.
Jodie Truner portrayed England’s King Henry VIII’s wife on Tuesday (June 1) in the first of three episodes of Channel 5’s Anne Boleyn. The project follows her in the months leading up to her 1536 execution.
The conservative commentator Owens shared her take on Twitter. She compared a Black woman’s portrayal of a white woman to white people’s ability to act as the 44th President and his spouse.
Related Story: Candace Owens Says Schools Are Teaching Children ‘How To Hate White People’
“I’m actually totally fine with Jodie Turner playing the role of Anne Boleyn so long as the radical left promises to keep their mouth shut if in the future Henry Caville is selected to play Barack Obama and Rachel McAdams can play Michelle. Not double standards- K?” she wrote.
I’m actually totally fine with Jodie Turner playing the role of Anne Boleyn so long as the radical left promises to keep their mouth shut if in the future Henry Caville is selected to play Barack Obama and Rachel McAdams can play Michelle.
Not double standards- K? https://t.co/t1flg1az1w
— Candace Owens (@RealCandaceO) June 1, 2021
The tweet was in response to a post by a Twitter user who shared an image of Anne Boleyn and a caption, “On this day in 1533, Anne Boleyn was crowned Queen of England. For the benefit of Channel 5 researchers, this is what Anne Boleyn looked like.”
According to BET, In a recent interview with the Radio Times, Turner-Smith reflected on her historical casting, saying, “It’s much more approachable and appealing to a contemporary audience when you cast this way because we are distilling this down to a human experience. If you ask anyone to watch a film or to observe any art, you are asking them to suspend their beliefs.”
She added: “I am aware it’s going to be a stretch for some people because they will feel too distracted by that, but I think for a lot of other people who are finally ready to see the world in a different way, they’re going to see that this is a human story we are telling, and a fascinating one at that.”
We can stash this debate and commentary with the other comments Owens needs to keep to herself.