White Lotus star, Aimee Lou Wood, called a sketch of Saturday Night Live (SNL) which used it using exaggerated prosthetic teeth “Mean and Farmnny”.
The British actress said that the American comedy program “struck” her and suggested that the sketch was misogynist.
In a series of Instagram messages, Wood wrote that she was happy to make fun of “when it is intelligent and in good humor” but that it “must be a more intelligent, more nuanced and cheaper way”.
Wood, 31, said that she had received “SNL apologies” after sharing her criticism. The BBC contacted the NBC diffuser for an answer.
The role of the original actress in Manchester in the Third series of white lotus, Who follows a group of guests in a station, has aroused significant media attention surrounding what she calls her “big gap”.
The SNL sketch, which was broadcast this week, imagined that US President Donald Trump and his best team spend time at the fictitious hotel.
The character of Wood Chelsea was represented by Sarah Sherman, a member of the distribution, using a pronounced accent and false teeth.
At one point, in a reference to the actress’s teeth, she asks: “Fluoride? What is it?”
Wood, who broke out on Netflix sex education screens, said that she was “not slim” and understood that SNL was a “caricature”.
“But all the joke was about fluoride,” she wrote on Sunday.
“I have large gap teeth and not bad teeth.”
“The rest of the sketch struck,” added Wood, “and I / Chelsea was the only one to strike”.
She said she doesn’t “hate” Sarah Sherman, but “hates the concept”.
Wood also shared a comment from an anonymous user describing the sketch as “sharp and funny” before taking “a shouting turn in misogyny from the 1970s”.
“It sums up my point of view,” added the actress.
She also criticized Sherman’s accent, writing: “I respect precision even if it’s mean.”
Wood wrote that she had received “thousands of messages” agree with her since her sharing her messages, and that she was happy that she “said something”.
Speaking to GQ magazine last week, Wood said That the conversation surrounding his teeth made it “a little sad because I am not talking about my work”.
“It really makes me happy that it symbolizes rebellion and freedom, but there is a limit,” she said.
Wood added: “I don’t know if he was a man will we talk about it so much? It always happens about the appearance of a woman.”