Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Jodie Turner-Smith Says Having Biracial Daughter Helped 'Heal' Her Own Colorism Trauma

Jodie Turner-Smith and Joshua Jackson
Michael TRAN / AFP) (Photo by MICHAEL TRAN/AFP via Getty Images

The dark-skinned actor opened up about her reluctance to have a baby with husband Joshua Jackson, who is White.

British actress and model Jodie-Turner Smith said raising a biracial daughter helped her overcome her personal trauma with colorism in a Elle magazine discussion with Netflix's Sex Education star, Ncuti Gatwa.

Turner-Smith–who was born and raised in England to Jamaican parents–made her feature film debut in 2016's The Neon Demon and became the first Black actor to play the ill-fated mid-16th century Queen of England, Anne Boleyn, in the 2021 self-titled Channel 5 series.


She married Fringe and Dawson's Creek actor Joshua Jackson–who is White–in December 2019.

They welcomed their daughter, Janie, in April 2020.

When Gatwa lauded Turner-Smith for doing "more than the best job" raising her daughter, she responded:

"It’s a big job to prepare children for the world."
"The best thing that we can do is let them touch the earth and be grounded and real–as real as one can be when you have the level of privilege that obviously my child has."

The actress then opened up about how having a biracial child made her confront her personal issues with discrimination based on skin color from within the same ethnic group–otherwise referred to as colorism.

"Now that I’ve got this little, tiny, light-skinned boss, I feel like it’s the universe teaching me lessons," she said.

"I’ve been given a daughter who looks this way to heal my own conversations around colorism."

She also embraced the term, nepo baby, which refers to a child born into privilege with celebrity parents who follow similar career paths.

"I’m not acting like she’s not a nepo baby. But I worked damn hard to have a nepo baby!"

As a darker-skinned woman, Turner-Smith acknowledged that her daughter's life as a girl with fairer skin will not be the same.

"We were poor, but I never really had a sense of it," she said of her childhood, adding:

"I certainly wasn’t as poor as my mother when she was growing up, but when you come from not having anything, you want to grasp life with both arms."
"She is going to have a completely different experience in the world than I did, because I have given birth to a mixed-race girl."

She gave an example of a back-handed compliment she often received about her skin tone.

"For a long time, people would even say to me, 'You're so pretty...for a dark-skinned girl."

Turner-Smith admitted she was initially apprehensive about having a child and explained how her view of motherhood inevitably changed when she met Jackson.

"Throughout my life, I always said if I were to have children, I wanted to have Black, Black babies so that I could affirm them as children with the love that I felt I needed to have been affirmed with by the outside world."
"Then I fell in love with my husband and we talked about having kids."
"To decide not to have a child with somebody you love, just because they’re white, was insane to me."

However, despite her self-confident persona in public, she revealed she had been internally struggling with the idea of becoming a mother due to feeling vulnerable about her skin color.

"But, at the same time, I did have this mini pause, where I was like, ‘She’s going to be walking through the world not only having an experience that I did not have, but looking like people that, in a way, I’d always felt a little bit tormented by.’ "
"Anyone who has known me throughout my life would say, 'Oh, Jodie has very high self-esteem.' But it affected me, I just faked it till I made it."
"It wasn't until adulthood that I began to come into myself."

More from Entertainment/tv-and-movies

Donald Trump; a street in Stockholm, Sweden
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Pradeep Dambarage/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Stockholm Floored After Trump Administration Sends Letter Demanding They End DEI Programs

Swedish authorities in the capital of Stockholm criticized the Trump administration for sending a "bizarre" letter ordering that the city end its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs.

The letter marked the latest step in President Donald Trump’s broader push to dismantle federal programs focused on diversity and inclusion—part of what he pledged in his inaugural address would be a campaign to stop attempts to “socially engineer race and gender into every aspect of public and private life.”

Keep Reading Show less
person using laptop computer and green stethoscope nearby
National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

Doctors Divulge The Medical Questions They Wish Their Friends Hadn't Asked Them

Some professions seem to inspire people to ask for advice or insight. Medicine is high—if not at the top—on that list.

Once people find out a person is a medical professional, they often ask for an impromptu diagnosis or treatment recommendations.

Keep Reading Show less
Chris Pratt
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Chris Pratt Sparks Heated Debate Once Again With His Mother's Day Tribute On Instagram

In what has become a Mother's Day tradition, actor Chris Pratt thanked his wife Katherine Schwarzenegger for being mother to his four children. But the mother of his eldest child—son Jack, age 12—was noticeably absent from his annual Instagram post.

Again.

Keep Reading Show less
Roger Stone; Mark Kelly
Joe Raedle/Getty Images; Jacek Boczarski/Anadolu via Getty Images

Roger Stone Slammed After Suggesting Dem Senator Should Be 'Executed' For Criticizing Trump

President Donald Trump's ally is facing heavy criticism after declaring that Arizona Democratic Senator Mark Kelly should be charged with "treason" and "executed" for his dealings with a Chinese company that makes surveillance balloons.

Stone's remarks followed Kelly's comments on Trump's crypto coin scheme outlined in a now-rejected bill that aimed to establish a regulatory framework for stablecoins, a type of digital asset designed to maintain a fixed $1 value, making it better suited for everyday transactions. Democrats said the legislation did not contain adequate standards to safeguard against corruption.

Keep Reading Show less
Famous animal conservationist and zookeeper Robert Irwin
Ethan Miller/Getty Images

Robert Irwin's Underwear Shoot Jokes

Animal rights activist and conservationist Robert Irwin discovered that the flirty DMs from fans of his sexy underwear campaign are “a dangerous place” to explore.

The son of the late Steve Irwin is all grown up, and the 21-year-old zookeeper recently modeled semi-nude for an Australian underwear company called Bonds, while wearing venomous snakes, lizards, spiders, alligators, comfy undies… and nothing else. Crikey!

Keep Reading Show less