Thursday, May 6, 2010

Has fame changed Gabourey Sidibe? According to some it has; Importance of Common Courtesy

Seems like Gabourey Sidibe ruffed a couple of feathers at the White House Correspondents dinner this past weekend.
I was thrilled to spot her at a table laughing uproariously with the man sitting to her right. "I know you're having a good time and I'm sorry to interrupt," I began. My next sentence didn't come out because Sidibe shouted over the din, "Yeah, come back in five minutes!" Thinking she was joking, I laughed and pretended to walk away. When I noticed that the look in her eyes meant she was serious, I walked back to her and said, "I just wanted to congratulate you on your nomination. I thought your performance was spectacular. I even wrote a column about it." After wishing her good luck, I rejoined my friends.

Back at the table, I sheepishly related the incident to my colleague Jo-Ann Armao. "Oh! She's horrible," Armao said in her wonderfully blunt way. She told me that she saw Sidibe at the pre-cocktails and told her that she'd seen "Precious" three times (an amazing emotional feat that only adds to my awe of Armao) and that she thought Sidibe's performance was "incandescent." What was Sidibe's response? "I guess I should say, 'Thank you.'"
At the MSNBC after party, the partner of a "Countdown with Keith Olbermann" producer said to me, "Look! There's Gabby Sidibe. I'm going to ask her to take a picture with me." I warned him, "She's mean." To which he said, "I don't care. I just want a picture." I didn't see what went down, but the dejected fan came back and said incredulously, "She said no."


We hope this is not true, but it probably is.  We hope that fame hasn't changed Gabby like it does a lot of people. 

We all have to watch ourselves and how we interact with people at all times.  You never that the smallest thing you do (or don't do)  may leave the biggest impression on somebody, negative or positive.  We are not saying care what others thing, but having simple common courtesy can go a long way in the world we live in.  It also shows how decent of a person you are.


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