The White Lotus star, Aimee Lou Wood, has called a sketch from Saturday Night Live (SNL) that imposed it using “bad and fun” exaggerated prosthetic teeth.
British Acresa said the American comedy program “hit” and suggested that the sketch was misogynist.
In a series of Instagram publications, Wood wrote that he was happy to make fun of “when he is intelligent and in a good mood”, but that “there must be a more intelligent, more nuanced and less cheap way.”
Wood, 31, said he had received “SNL apologies” after sharing his criticism. The BBC has contacted the NBC station for an answer.
The role of the actress born in Manchester in the Third series of the white lotus, What follows a group of guests in a complex, caused significant attention in the media around what she calls her “big teeth.”
The SNL sketch, which was issued this week, imagined the president of the United States, Donald Trump, and his superior team spending time at the fictional hotel.
Wood’s character, Chelsea, was played by the member of the cast Sarah Sherman using a pronounced accent and false teeth.
In a moment, in a reference to the actress’s teeth, she asks: “Fluoride? What is that?”
Wood, who exploded on the screens in Netflix’s sex education, said “was not thin -skinned” and understood that SNL was “cartoon.”
“But the whole joke was about fluoride,” he wrote on Sunday.
“I have large gap teeth, not bad teeth.”
“The rest of the sketch was drilling,” Wood added, “and I/Chelsea was the only one beaten.”
She said she wasn’t “hating” Sarah Sherman, but “hating the concept.”
Wood also shared an unidentified user comment that describes the sketch as “sharp and fun” before making “a squeak in the misogyny of the seventies.”
“This summarizes my point of view,” added the actress.
He also criticized Sherman’s accent, writing: “I respect the precision even if it is bad.”
Wood wrote that he had received “thousands of messages” according to her since I shared her publications, and that she was slippery, she “said something.”
Talking to GQ magazine last week, Wood said That the conversation that surrounded her teeth made her “a little sad, you can’t talk about my work.”
“It makes me very happy that I am symbolizing rebellion and freedom, but there is a limit,” he said.
Wood added: “I don’t know if he was a man, would we be talking about this? It’s still happening about the appearance of a woman.”