Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Imitation No More: Michael Fosberg Fought To Find Out About His Fath

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Imitation No More: Michael Fosberg Fought To Find Out About His Fath

    IMITATION NO MORE: MICHAEL FOSBERG FOUGHT TO FIND OUT ABOUT HIS FATHER AND, CONSEQUENTLY, HIMSELF

    Ebony Mag
    Vol. LXVI No. 7
    May 2011

    THE DECISION for a parent to hide their children's ethnic heritage
    is often driven by family shame and social status. Actor, playwright
    and author Michael Fosberg learned at the age of 32 that his Armenian
    mother chose to raise him as White after divorcing his Black father.

    "My mother came from a very strong Armenian immigrant family that
    was very close. But when my mother told her parents she was pregnant,
    that was one [of many] issues; she was 20, unmarried and pregnant. Of
    course, she was also pregnant by a Black man. And they disowned her
    basically. They didn't talk to her ... she got wiped off the map."

    His mother eventually married a White man (who Michael grew up knowing
    wasn't his biological father) and had two other children.

    "She had the choice: to raise me as Black in the Black community or
    raise me as White. And she felt [raising me as White] was the best
    choice for herself and her son." He added, "She was afraid because
    I was so light that I would have trouble fitting into the Black
    community."

    As time went by, the secret around his race remained buried underneath
    years of his mother's guilt for hiding the truth. It was only after
    locating his biological father following his mother and stepfather's
    divorce in 1992 that he discovered he was Black.

    "My whole life, I felt connected to African-American people. So when
    the secret came out in the open, it was like I had finally uncovered
    this missing piece."

    Today, Fosberg tours the country performing in his one-person show,
    Incognito, which, along with his recently released book of the same
    name, explores his family's tangled history and shares his experiences
    reuniting with his father and true race.

    "Part of the reason that I do what I do is to try and heighten the
    national dialogue.... Even though we have a biracial society, we still
    force people to choose one or the other. You're either Black or White."




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X