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鈥楾he Lily Gladstone effect鈥: Will Native actors get boost at Oscars?

If Lily Gladstone wins an Academy Award for her performance in 鈥淜illers of the Flower Moon,鈥 she would be the first Native woman to receive an Oscar. Before her, there was a century of work that tended to go unrecognized.

By Stephen Humphries, Staff writer

Lily Gladstone鈥檚 high school yearbook named her 鈥淢ost likely to win an Oscar.鈥

But in 2020, the actor鈥檚 career was faltering. Four years earlier, film critics associations in Boston and Los Angeles voted her best supporting actress for the drama 鈥淐ertain Women.鈥 Yet Ms. Gladstone faced a similar challenge as other Native American actors 鈥 a dearth of roles. She questioned whether acting was a sustainable path.

鈥淚 had my credit card out, registering for a data analytics course,鈥 the actor told The Hollywood Reporter. At that moment, she received an invitation for a Zoom call with Martin Scorsese. He subsequently cast her in 鈥淜illers of the Flower Moon.鈥

On March 10, Ms. Gladstone鈥檚 performance could win an Academy Award for best actress. (If she does, there will be a stampede to see whom her yearbook picked as 鈥淢ost likely to become president.鈥) A victory would be historically significant: She would be the first Native woman to receive an Oscar.听

Indigenous actors don鈥檛 often appear at the podium at the Academy Awards. A recent study helps explain why. Stacy L. Smith, founder of the Annenberg Inclusion Initiative at the University of Southern California, discovered that less than a quarter of 1 percent of top-grossing movies released between 2007 and 2022 featured Native Americans in speaking roles. Just one movie starred a Native character in a lead role.

Native actors are often pigeonholed in Westerns, a genre that does not tend to reap statues during awards season. By contrast, television has started hosting more varied stories about Indigenous people. 鈥淭he Lily Gladstone effect鈥 鈥 to use the term coined by Dr. Smith 鈥 may be to lift up other Native talent. And bring belated recognition to forebears in the industry.

鈥淣ative American actors and filmmakers have impacted movies for more than a century, but until recently their presence has passed largely unrecognized,鈥 says Dr. Angela Aleiss, author of 鈥淗ollywood鈥檚 Native Americans: Stories of Identity and Resistance,鈥 in an email.听

Even many film buffs have never heard of Lillian St. Cyr. In 1914, Cecil B. DeMille cast her as听the first Native American woman to play the lead role in a feature film. At a time when Westerns were more prolific than today鈥檚 Marvel movies, Minnie Provost also made her mark. The silent-movie comedian memorably sparred with Fatty Arbuckle in 鈥淔atty and Minnie He-Haw.鈥澨

鈥淣ative characters have evolved in cycles over the past century,鈥 says Dr. Aleiss. 鈥淭he most negative cycle occurred during the late 1930s, where Natives were often portrayed as obstacles to frontier settlement (like in 鈥楾he Plainsman鈥 and 鈥楽tagecoach鈥). Before and after that period, many sympathetic 鈥 although not always accurate 鈥 images existed.鈥

Nanticoke tribe member James Young Deer, who briefly ran Path茅 studio in California, produced some of those films. In 1926, he directed 鈥淭ragedies of the Osage Hills.鈥 It highlighted the systemic murder of Osage tribe members almost a century before Mr. Scorsese鈥檚 鈥淜illers of the Flower Moon.鈥澨

Over subsequent decades, Native Americans seldom occupied positions of power in Hollywood.听Those who did lifted others up. Jim Thorpe, the Olympic gold medalist and extraordinary baseball, basketball, and football star, lobbied for equal wages for Native American movie extras. Actor Will Sampson (鈥淥ne Flew Over the Cuckoo鈥檚 Nest鈥) co-founded听the American Indian Registry for the Performing Arts in 1983. The nonprofit helped Kevin Costner鈥檚 best picture winner 鈥淒ances With Wolves鈥 find its Native American cast, with Oneida member Graham Greene earning a nomination for best supporting actor.

Demand for Native actors still tends to fluctuate.听Rick Mora often gets cast in what he calls 鈥渟kin and bones鈥 roles 鈥 half naked and wearing feathers. One such part was in 鈥淭wilight.鈥 The 2008 teen vampire movie accounted for 29% of speaking roles in Dr. Smith鈥檚 aforementioned study.听Even so, the blockbuster was criticized for casting Taylor Lautner in a major role as a Native character.

Hollywood is more mindful about casting Indigenous players today, says Mr. Mora, who鈥檚 grateful for the 鈥淭wilight鈥 career boost. There鈥檚 an audience hunger for authenticity.

鈥淓very culture is feeling the beauty of it,鈥 says Mr. Mora, whose heritage is Yaqui and Mescalero Apache. 鈥淭he African American culture is feeling the beauty of it. The Asiatic community is feeling the beauty of it. ... Now, our entire people are being sought after and viewed in a beautiful way.鈥澨

Television is leading the way. 鈥淵ellowstone,鈥 like 鈥淭wilight,鈥 features a mix of actors playing Native roles. Among them is Indigenous actor Q鈥檕rianka Kilcher, whose breakout role was Pocahontas in Terrence Malick鈥檚 鈥淭he New World.鈥澨齌ribe members behind the camera are expanding the scope of Native American stories. Jhane Myers produced Hulu鈥檚 鈥淧rey.鈥 The prequel to the sci-fi horror movie 鈥淧redator鈥 stars Amber Midthunder as a Comanche hero. Sierra Teller Ornelas co-created Peacock鈥檚 鈥淩utherford Falls,鈥 a comedy about the fictitious Minishonka Nation seeking cultural recognition in a small town. And in Sterlin Harjo鈥檚 鈥淩eservation Dogs,鈥 a gang of teenagers commits petty crimes trying to scrounge enough money to leave their Oklahoma reservation.听听

鈥淚 don鈥檛 know how many times I鈥檝e been in meetings throughout my career where people have said our Native stories don鈥檛 sell,鈥 says Mr. Harjo in a phone call.

The humor in his hit series challenged outsider views of reservations as depressing and poor. It also illuminated the importance of women in those communities. To that end, Mr. Harjo cast Geraldine Keams in a matriarchal role. The Navajo actor launched her career in 1976 as an empowered, gun-toting character alongside Clint Eastwood in 鈥淭he Outlaw Josey Wales.鈥澨

鈥淚 had known her work,鈥 says Mr. Harjo, who adds that Native Americans in Hollywood are a small community. 鈥淲e grew up on each other鈥檚 films and TV shows. ... Lily Gladstone probably wouldn鈥檛 be where she鈥檚 at right now without the people that came before us.鈥

Ms. Gladstone, who has a white mother and whose father is of Blackfeet and Nim铆ipuu heritage, spent her childhood on a reservation in Montana. She guest-starred in Seasons 2 and 3 of "Reservation Dogs" as Hokti, a character who is in prison.A non-Native writer might have envisioned Hokti as a male, says the showrunner. He wanted to reflect the reality that Oklahoma has a high number of incarcerated women, many of them Native. Mr. Harjo marveled at the depth Ms. Gladstone brought to the role.

鈥淚t鈥檚 not something that you can get from acting class,鈥 says the writer. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what I think is on display in 鈥楰illers of the Flower Moon,鈥 because she doesn鈥檛 talk a lot. She is this sort of moral center to the film. ... She鈥檚 representing all of us.鈥

Mr. Harjo and Ms. Gladstone recently reflected on the significance of her awards season. In February, she became the first Native actor to win a Screen Actors Guild Award.They agreed that those who open doors need to hold them open for others.

鈥淭his is going to be a celebrated time,鈥 says Mr. Harjo, who will be watching the Academy Awards at home. 鈥淏ut it鈥檚 only the first step in this bigger thing that鈥檚 happening.鈥