The new film Mary Queen of Scots employs black and Asian actors and actresses to play white roles, while missing an opportunity to show England’s historic 16th Century diversity.
Written by Beau Willimon, directed by Josie Rourke, and based on the book Queen of Scots: The True Life of Mary Stuart by John Guy, Mary Queen of Scots recounts the struggle between Mary I of Scotland and Queen Elizabeth I over the throne of England, which they both claimed. The film takes place between Mary’s return to Scotland in 1561 and her execution (sorry, spoiler) in 1587.
From what I can tell, the film is largely historically accurate, depending on the source. However, several black actors and one actress of Chinese decent appear in prominent roles, particularly Mary Seton (Izuka Hoyle), Lord Randolph (Adrian Lester), Bess of Hardwick (Gemma Chan), Andrew Ker of Fawdonside (Nathan East), and the English Ambassador to Scotland, George Dalgleish (Adrian Derrick-Palmer). Being either English or Scottish in the 1500s, of course, all of these people were pasty white.
Director Josie Rourke declared she wasn’t going to make another “all-white period film,” but did she have to throw historic accuracy out the window to do so? Not at all. Elizabethan England was quite diverse (relatively speaking).
There are records of African musicians in the courts of England and Scotland as far back as the late 15th Century. During the reign of Queen Elizabeth I, a small community of African traders, musicians, entertainers, and domestic servants grew up in London. Elizabeth herself was said to have employed a black servant, musician, and dancer.

In 1578, Elizabeth sent an ambassador to the Ottoman Empire and signed a commerce treaty two years later. Elizabeth and Sultan Murad III exchanged envoys and correspondence. The Queen also sought relations with Morocco and the Barbary States (where trade had previously been established), accepting Ambassador Abd el-Ouahed ben Messaoud to her court in 1600.
Most interestingly, men from the New World visited Elizabethan England as well. There is a record of a Native American child who was baptized in 1588 and died in the royal court a year later. In 1584, Sir Walter Raleigh brought two Algonquian Indians, Wanchese and Manteo, to London.
Early Modern England wasn’t a beacon of tolerance, necessarily. Jews were still banned from the kingdom under Elizabeth I, and in the 1590s she sought the removal of “blackmoors brought into this realm, of which kind of people there are already here too many… Her majesty’s pleasure therefore is that those kind of people should be sent forth of the land.”
Director Josie Rourke’s explanation for why she chose nonwhite actors to play historically white roles is ridiculous. “Rourke told TheWrap that colorblind casting a period drama was important to her, because of the many years black and other people of color were left out of such portrayals and films.” Huh? It doesn’t take a conspiracy theory to explain why white actors would be cast to play people who were, well, white in historical dramas about England.
Rourke had an opportunity to both include actors and actresses of color and be historically accurate, by showing the roles Africans and Middle Easterners actually played in Elizabethan England. Film can be a great window into the past. A chance for people to look back in time at our best estimation of how our ancestors lived. It is, unfortunately, how most people are exposed to history. When we artificially impose our contemporary values onto the past, we perpetuate falsehoods and historical ignorance that can remain in popular culture for decades.
16 replies on “How Diverse was Queen Elizabeth’s Court?”
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Always loved historical dramas, however there is far to much pc going on, in them now. Make them accurate or don’t bother making them. It gives it the appearance of pure propaganda.
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I don’t think anyone has said anything you mention in your comment.
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The way you and the righties are more ~*angered*~ by POC being oh so bold to play white actors than the directors and actors telling their struggles in the industry and doing this to make a statement. You guys read living human beings sharing their worries and concern and choose to say “but this one movie ruins my life this is madness” because you respect the dead royals more. Do you lose your marbles at school plays and big fat quiz reenactment too?
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I empathize with the director’s struggle to create an “updated” and artsy but ultimately crappy reboot of a story no one really cares about today.
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Selective anger on your side, the director’s reasoning isn’t ridiculous it makes sense and genuinely would not care about old royalty stories that has been told over and over again for bajillion times to be retold in dramatic ways. Not their problem you can’t empathize with the struggles of others
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Ruined a good historical tale of royal rivalry. Why if wanted then show what the diverse people of the time did as entertainers and court workers. As with many of our historical tales it’s diversity and political correctness gone mad again.
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Indeed. The life and times of Elizabeth I is the dead horse whose corpse dust is now being beaten into the ground. However, if one chooses to continue the drubbing, it should be the same as all others have done. Got it.
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She also could have not made a period piece about Elizabethan England…
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While I understand you point, to be fair, if the director wanted actors of color to play roles other than the usual servant or background/extra/walk through character, this was the way to go. Yes, she could have been historically accurate and had people of color floating through the background. But there’s already plenty of that.
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[…] how much Seth MacFarlane cared about that movie. I wish filmmakers behind the ridiculous Mary Queen of Scots, Vice, and Lizzie had cared a little more about getting their facts right. I’ll never […]
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[…] backstory about how the two heroes had met in Jerusalem during the Third Crusade. By last year’s Mary, Queen of Scots, however, no justification was seen as necessary for explaining the casting of random blacks and […]
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[…] in January, I wrote an article criticizing director Josie Rourke’s “colorblind casting” choice in her historical film Mary […]
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[…] anachronisms and inaccuracies throughout Mary Queen of Scots, not the least of which was “colorblind casting” that falsely portrays 16th-Century England and Scotland’s aristocracy as racially […]
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Thank you!
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Thoughtful assessment – great post!
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