Bayo Gbadamosi: Difference between revisions

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| birth date    =  
| birth date    =  
| role          = [[Vincey]]
| role          = [[Vincey]]
| job title      =  
| job title      =Actor
| story          = ''[[Empress of Mars (TV story)|Empress of Mars]]''
| story          = ''[[Empress of Mars (TV story)|Empress of Mars]]''
| time          =  
| time          =2017
| non dwu        = ''Casualty'', ''Mad About the Boy'', ''The Swarm'', ''Gloria'', ''I See You'', ''Little Revolution''
| non dwu        = ''Casualty'', ''Mad About the Boy'', ''The Swarm'', ''Gloria'', ''I See You'', ''Little Revolution''
| imdb          = 4802683
| imdb          = 4802683

Revision as of 18:58, 2 October 2021

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Bayo Gbadamosi played Vincey in the Doctor Who television story Empress of Mars. Vincey is a member of the British Army in 1881.

Mark Gatiss' objections

Writer Mark Gatiss protested against Gbadamosi's casting, as he believed that "there weren't any black soldiers in Victoria's army". He put historical accuracy over ethnic representation, and "mak[ing] everything less homogeneously white", as he put the BBC's general mission. He claimed an email he wrote to a colleague on the matter was "very difficult". Gatiss eventually backed down when he discovered, on doing some research, that there was one African soldier in the army at the time: Jimmy Durham.

"I got kind of obsessed with this great story," Gatiss recounted. "This boy, when he was 18 years old, was rescued [from the Nile] by the Durham Light Infantry. And they made him their mascot - they called him Jimmy Durham. And he became what was called a listed officer, by special dispensation of Queen Victoria. He retired to the North East, married a white girl, and his descendants still live there. It's an amazing story."[1]

External links

Footnotes

  1. Camilla Turner, Tony Diver (11 June 2017). Exclusive: Doctor Who writer protested against 'problematic' casting of black actor as Victorian soldier. The Telegraph. Retrieved on 13 June 2017.