Jack Shaheen dies; scholar persuaded Disney to alter 'Aladdin' as he fought Hollywood's racial stereotypes
Jack Shaheen, a prominent writer, scholar and activist who persistently â" though diplomatically â" challenged negative stereotypes of Arabs in film and television, has died at age 81.
Shaheen, who died Sunday in South Carolina after battling cancer, took on studio executives, offered counsel to actors and directors and lectured around in the world in his relentless quest to persuade Hollywood to move beyond the cinematic image of Arabs as just âbillionaires, bombers and belly dancers.â
âThere is no escaping the Arab stereotype,â Shaheen wrote in the preface to his 2001 book âReel Bad Arabs: How Hollywood Vilifies a People,â before digging into what he said was the unrelenting portrayal of Arabs and Muslims as barbaric, uncultured, wealthy and unspeakably violent.
âThese notions are as false as the assertions that blacks are lazy, Hispanics are dirty, Jews are greedy and Italians are criminals,â he wrote in âThe TV Arab,â a painstaking study of hundred of television shows, from sitcoms to cartoons.
In 1993, his efforts helped persuade Disney to change the lyrics to the song âArabian Nightsâ in its animated musical âAladdin.â
When the film premiered, the lyrics seemed the stuff of racism to people like Shaheen:
Oh, I come from a land
From a faraway place
Where the camels roam
Where they cut off your ear
If they donât like your face
Itâs barbaric, but hey, itâs home.
In a opinion piece in the Los Angeles Times, Shaheen protested that Disney had managed to deliver a painful reminder to millions of Arab Americans that âthe abhorrent Arab stereotype is as ubiquitous as Aladdinâs lamp.â
Disney yielded and trimmed the ear-cutting lines from the video release of the film, but refused to erase the âitâs barbaricâ line, arguing it was a reference to the landscape, not the people who lived there.
It was emblematic of the small victories Shaheen would win. Never expecting seismic change in how the industry would portray Arabs, he was comfortable winning converts one by one, lecture by lecture, email by email, book by book.
âHe felt the greatest disservice would be to stand back and say nothing,â his daughter Michele Tasoff sa id.
Shaheen was born in Pittsburgh on Sept. 21, 1935, the son of Lebanese immigrants. He grew up in nearby Clairton, an ethnically diverse mill town whose bleakness was captured in the movie âThe Deer Hunter.â His mother â" who raised Shaheen â" wanted to be a school teacher, but settled for being a janitor at the schoolhouse instead in order to provide for her three children.
He became the first in his family to attend college, graduating from whatâs now Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh and earning a masterâs degree in theater arts from Penn State. He received a doctorate in communications from the University of Missouri before joining the faculty at Southern Illinois University, where he would teach for decades. He also was a visiting professor at New York University, where his archives â" papers, notes, scripts, childrenâs toys and thousands of films dating back to the silent movie era â" are housed at the Hagop Kevorkian Center.
His drive to find and â" if possible â" root out the unflattering and often ugly portrayals of Arabs in film arrived when his two children were wat ching a cartoon. When they ran into the living room and announced that there were âbad Arabsâ on TV, Shaheen came in for a look. He was aghast, and it dawned on him that is was quite possible his children would grow up without ever seeing a âhumane Arabâ on television.
He began collecting movies, television shows, other media that he believed offered clear and lasting evidence that Arabs and Muslims were rarely depicted as ordinary people. It was a painful and unpleasant task, his daughter said, but one he felt was necessary.
âHe was the one who would say âThis is not OK,ââ Tasoff said.
But he made inroads. George Clooney used Shaheen as a consultant on both âThree Kingsâ and âSyriana,â both set in the Middle East, and directors sought him out for advice. He recently consulted on Nickelodeonâs âShimmer and Shine,â an animated childrenâs series about a pair of in-training genies. Shaheen and his wife, Bernice, who worked as his consul tant, established a scholarship for Arab American mass communication students.
âThe community lost one of its best,â said American-Arab Anti-Discrimination Committee Chairman Safa Rifka. âHis work started a conversation about the representation of Arabs in Hollywood and the need for more nuanced depictions of the community. Dr. Shaheen will be greatly missed.â
Tasoff said her father was optimistic, yet pragmatic. Forward momentum may have been slowed with 9/11 and a wave of new television shows like HBOâs âHomeland.â President Trumpâs proposed travel ban offered further discouragement.
âBut he always remained hopeful,â she said.
He is survived by his wife, his daughter, a son Michael and four granddaughters.
Twitter: @stephenmarble
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