![]() ![]() I think it makes my character too unlikable.’ Olly pulled back from nothing.” All four laugh. Newson says, “TJ and I have worked on a lot of shows he’ll tell you, it’s not uncommon for an actor to say, ‘I feel uncomfortable saying this line. Sholotan is so good at being bad to Will, he gets blasted by fans. Sholotan cites the anxiety that eats at the character, which manifests as a substance-abuse problem and bitter hostility toward easygoing Will. It’s also not as simple as that we address the fact that Blackness is not monolithic. “And Will coming into his life shows him all the things he’s sacrificed. “What happens when a Black kid sacrifices his identity to become the ‘It’ guy? How does he pay for that later on? “In the original series, they definitely address Carlton’s otherness from other Black people, but something I don’t think they quite get into is his otherness within his white cohort,” says Sholotan, 24. ![]() He recently appeared in the 2020 Venice International Film Festival selection, 'Run Hide Fight' for Voltage opposite Thomas Jane, Radha Mitchell and Isabel May for writer/director Kyle Rankin. Taking the characters seriously means Will isn’t the only fish out of water on the show. He can be seen starring in Peacock's hit series BEL AIR as Carlton Banks. “Eighty percent of the people watching this show probably came with their arms crossed. “It’s different than a role you’re just creating yourself,” 23-year-old Banks says of reimagining the beloved sitcom that bowed in 1990. enclaves to live with wealthy relatives - among them, cousin Carlton, who is extremely assimilated into the overwhelmingly white, privileged social environs. “Bel-Air” sprang from filmmaker Morgan Cooper‘s trailer for something that didn’t exist: a dramatic take on the ’90s sitcom “ The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.” That comedy, of course, launched the Hollywood career of then-rapper Will Smith as a character named “Will Smith.” In both versions, a fight on a Philadelphia basketball court leads to street-smart Will relocating to the toniest of L.A. “We’re re-creating these iconic characters there’s no impersonation, people would see right through that. It felt really pure, the relationship Olly and I formed offscreen,” says Banks. for, like, 11 hours we did not stop talking.” “I remember sitting across from you in the table read and thinking, ‘Yo, I really like this dude,’ ” says Olly Sholotan (Carlton) to Jabari Banks (Will) in a video conference call joined by showrunners Rasheed Newson and T.J. Surprise, “Bel-Air” fans: Will and Carlton like each other IRL. ![]()
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