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The White Lotus Aimee Lou Wood star called a Saturday Night Live (SNL) sketch, which introduced it, using exaggerated prosthetic teeth “medium and disadvantaged”.
The British actress said the US comedy program “hit” and suggested that the sketch was misogynistic.
In a series of publications on Instagram, Wood wrote that she was happy to make fun of “when she is smart and in a good mood”, but that “there should be a more smart, more unjuven, less cheap way.”
31 -year -old Wood said she had received SNL apologies after sharing her criticism. The BBC has contacted the NBC television operator for an answer.
The role of the born in Manchester in Third Series of the White Lotus, which follows a group of guests in a resort, prompted significant media attention around what he calls her “big teeth for gaps.”
The SNL sketch, which aired this week, imagined US President Donald Trump and his best team by spending time at a fictional hotel.
Wood Chelsea’s character was depicted by a member of the cast of Sarah Sherman, using a pronounced accent and fake teeth.
At one point, in a reference to the actress’s teeth, she asks, “Fluoride? What is it?”
Wood, who burst into the screens in Netflix’s sexual education, said it was “not thin skin” and realized that SNL was for “cartoon”.
“But the whole joke was for fluoride,” she wrote on Sunday.
“I have teeth with big gaps, not bad teeth.”
“The rest of the Scythian was hitting,” Wood added, “and I/Chelsea was the only pierced.”
She said she did not “hate” Sarah Sherman, but “hates the concept”.
Wood also shared a comment from an unnamed user describing the sketch as “sharp and fun” before making a “creaking turn in misogya from the 70s.”
“This summarizes my opinion,” the actress added.
She also criticizes Sherman’s accent, writing, “I respect the accuracy, even if it is mean.”
Wood wrote that she had received “thousands of messages”, agreeing with her after sharing her publications and that she was glad to say something.
Speaking to GQ magazine last week, Wood said That the conversation around her teeth made her “a little sad because I don’t think to talk about my work.”
“It makes me really happy that it symbolizes rebellion and freedom, but there is a restriction,” she said.
Wood added, “I don’t know if he was a man, we’ll talk so much about it? It’s still happening about the woman’s appearance.”