theGrio

Back to the Top

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Home
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • The Dish
  • Health
    • Ask Dr. Ty
    • Black Men’s Health
    • Black Women and Breast Cancer
    • Back to School Health
  • Living
    • Travel and Leisure
    • Living Forward
    • Books
  • Politics
    • Perry on Politics
  • Sports
  • News
    • Good News
  • Opinion

Entertainment

Curly haired Muppet is role model for little black girls

by theGrio | October 20, 2010 at 4:42 PM
Comments
Print

Related Posts

  • Artist launches online fundraising campaign to create apparel for young black girls
  • Are researchers race-baiting black childhood obesity tests?
  • Montana Fishburne: I'm a role model
  • Tyra Banks to host 'Flawsome Ball' for girls club
  • Black doctors see hope in TV's 'Doc McStuffins'

CHICAGO (AP) — A plucky little muppet in a pretty pink dress, her brown hair a perky ‘fro, is helping little girls — and their moms — to accept themselves just the way they are by loving their hair.

The nameless muppet manages to trim away generations of yearning for long, silky locks with her song, “I Love My Hair” and has become an Internet sensation. Now her creator wants to give her a life beyond YouTube.

“I really want to sit down with the writers and figure out what we can do with her and give her a name, and really expand her out,” said Joey Mazzarino, head writer for “Sesame Street,” who co-wrote “I Love My Hair” with composer Chris Jackson. (Jackson played Simba in “The Lion King”; Chantylla ‘Chauncey’ Johnson, who sings the song, also appeared in the Broadway show as Nala.)

The video is being shared on Twitter, and posted on gossip sites and blogs. It is popping up on Facebook pages and discussed in the comments section on YouTube, where the original clip gets a steady stream of views. It was posted Oct. 12, and had more than 600,000 views on YouTube as of Wednesday, and tens of thousands more at other sites.

WATCH NBC NIGHTLY NEWS COVERAGE OF THE CURLY HAIRED MUPPET:

The tune is breezy and bouncy, the lyrics simple and filled with pride: “Don’t need a trip to the beauty shop, ‘cause I love what I got on top — it’s curly and it’s brown and it’s right up there. You know what I love? My hair!”

With fast cuts, the Muppet changes hair styles — braids, pouffy ponytail, curly top. And no matter what the style, “I want to make the world aware, I love my hair,” she sings with happy confidence.

“When I first did the song, it really touched me because I really love my hair,” said Johnson. “My hair is very curly. And the thing I like about the song is that it shows the different ways I can do my hair.” The 13-year-old recently read for a part in a new production about Josephine Baker.

“It struck a particular chord with African-American moms like me,” said author Denene Millner, a columnist for parenting.com and the creator of parenting blog MyBrownBaby. “I think that at some point, if you have a little girl, we all deal with the day your child comes home from school and says, ‘I don’t want my hair to look like this; I want it to look like Annie’s.’ And Annie’s hair is blond and long and not what she has.”

She says she is teaching her daughters Mari and Lila — ages 11 and 8 — to “love their hair as it grows out of their head.” Millner, like many African-American women, recalls the big plastic comb, thick grease and sizzling hot comb used on her hair when she was a little girl.

“It was horrible,” she said.

It was a similar discussion with his 5-year-old daughter Segi over tight, curly hair that inspired Mazzarino to craft the song and video. He and his wife, both white, adopted the little girl from Ethiopia, who told them that she “wanted her hair to be long or blond like Barbie or a princess.”

Mazzarino said this bothered him.

“I thought it was because she had two white parents that she was going through this. And I didn’t know about the larger sort of issues with African-American girls until Chris Rock’s movie came out,” he said, referring to Rock’s 2009 documentary “Good Hair,” which takes a serious, and sometimes lighthearted, look at the black hair care industry and the history behind concepts of so-called “good hair.”

The idea of “straight” or “white” hair has been an albatross for black American women and men, tied to slavery and racism, and a society that stripped them of pride by defining beauty in terms of only one ethnic standard.

The lengths some women and girls would take to “look white” was poignantly framed by Whoopi Goldberg in her 1984 one-woman show on Broadway. She played a 9-year-old who pours bleach over her brown body and wears a white slip on her head as pretend long blond hair. The child wants to be on “The Love Boat,” a cruise ship sit-com from the 1970s-’80s.

“I think there’s a larger part society can play. And I say this, being a dad of an African-American girl. … The images she sees and the Barbies she gets and the American Girl dolls she gets — even if they have brown skin, the hair’s not right. It’s all straight,” he said. “They do have a little curl but it looks like straight Caucasian hair that’s had a curling iron to it.”

The day the video was shot, Mazzarino said, everyone felt the power of the song. ”

“All the African-American women came down to (the set) to watch,” said Mazzarino, who has been with “Sesame Street” since 1990. “If there’s a celebrity, people will come down to watch. But really, it touched them. And I think I should have known that — that this is something that is deeper than just your kids.”

Mazzarino said he would like to do more self-esteem videos like “I Love My Hair” or even recreate older “Sesame Street” clips such as “Skin I’m In,” performed by 1970s-era Muppet Roosevelt Franklin.

“I’m looking at those — possibly redoing them, or coming up with new songs that would work for kids (on) issues like hair or skin color and things like that,” he said.

Meanwhile, a little Muppet girl in pretty pink dress says it all: “I love my hair … there’s nothing else that can compare, I love my hair.”

__

Copyright 2010 The Associated Press.

  • Next Story:

    Jackson doctor's legal bills issue in Texas court

  • Gabourey Sidibe hosted Saturday Night Live on April 24th and during rehearsal she spoke to Access Hollywood.Sidibe predicted months ago that she would host SNL. She said she was very nervous when she first got the call but has since given in to excitement. (AP Photo/Chris Pizzello)
    Previous Story:

    Sidibe to star opposite Eddie Murphy in new comedy

Filed in: Entertainment, News, Top Stories, Video | Related Topics: Beauty, Children, Hair, Natural Hair, Self Esteem, Sesame Street, The Muppets
  • Learn about our User Panel

    Read More
  • New Stories on theGrio

    • Black anti-abortion pastors, activists speak on ‘house of horrors’ trial Black anti-abortion pastors, activists speak on ‘house of horrors’ trial
    • Malcolm X’s triumphs still trump the tragedies Malcolm X’s triumphs still trump the tragedies
    • Payday loans: a debt trap in disguise Payday loans: a debt trap in disguise
    • Beck’s rant: NAACP, ‘white lynching’ Beck’s rant: NAACP, ‘white lynching’
    • Black pastor vs Obama at Morehouse
    • Mourners remember Malcolm X’s grandson
    • The big irony in the IRS ‘scandal’
    • Natalie Cole blasts Candice-JHud duet
  • What Your Friends Are Reading

  • More from theGrio

More Stories on theGrio

Top News

Politics

  • Non-profit groups often look for tax breaks

    Democratic, liberal groups got IRS scrutiny too

  • No, Obama is not Nixon

  • Eric Holder grilled by House committee

  • Where was the outrage over IRS' NAACP audit?

» Read More in Politics

Business

  • Eve

    A timeless classic: Top career lessons from ‘The Great Gatsby’

  • Boyz II Men appear in new Old Navy commercial

  • An open letter to PepsiCo on the Mountain Dew ad

  • Unemployment falls to 7.5 percent

» Read More in Business

Living

  • Natalie Clarice

    'Find Me My Man' star Natalie Clarice: Her tips for finding love

  • Zoe Saldana goes naked for Allure

  • 'Be My Slave' photo shoot causes controversy

  • Cory Booker raises thousands at UNCF Mayor's Masked Ball

» Read More in Living

Inspiration

  • Identical twins Kirstie and Kristie Bronner (Photo courtesy of Bronner family)

    Twins named Spelman valedictorians

  • DC Central Kitchen helps people struggling to join workforce

  • Man refuses to let disability hamper ability to teach

  • 'Supermom' dedicates her life to foster kids

» Read More in Inspiration

Entertainment

  • Kerry Washington 1

    ‘Scandal’ vs. ‘American Idol’: Who will top the ratings?

  • The top 5 rap lyrics of the week

  • Lauryn Hill's last show before prison?

  • BET awards nominations announced

» Read More in Entertainment

News

  • Floyd Mayweather Jr., right, poses for photos with his father, Floyd Mayeather Sr. after defeating Robert Guerrero by unanimous decision in a WBC welterweight title fight, Saturday, May 4, 2013, in Las Vegas. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer)

    Floyd Mayweather Jr. top-earning American athlete in 2013

  • Kindergartner helps save dad’s life by knowing his ABCs

  • 20 charges filed in Mother's Day shooting

  • New take on pregnancy prevention

» Read More in News

Main menu

Skip to primary content
Skip to secondary content
  • Politics
  • Living
  • Video
  • Inspire
  • Health
  • Entertainment
  • News
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Advertise with TheGrio
  • About
©2013 NBCUniversal
Powered by WordPress.com VIP