In an interview on the The Diane Rehm Show, Shirley Temple stated about her parents: "They bathed me in love my whole life. My mother was, I think, the most wonderful mother that a girl could have."
While it's good to hear that Shirley Temple had such fond memories of her mother in the above 1988 interview, she was still subjected to an industry that treated her as less than human. When she was just 12 years old, an MGM producer exposed himself to her. On sets she also faced sexualization and horrid working conditions.
In his book The Cultural Turn in U. S. History: Past, Present, and Future, author and historian John Kassan details what the working conditions of Baby Burlesks (Temple's debut film) were like: "To threaten and punish uncooperative child actors, the director, Charles Lamont, kept a soundproof black box, six feet on each side, containing a block of ice. An offending child was locked within this dark, cramped interior and either stood uncomfortably in the cold, humid air or had to sit on the ice. Those who told their parents about this torture were threatened with further punishment."
Moreover, Baby Burlesks (as in, "baby burlesques") sexualizes its child stars throughout the film. Shirley Temple went on to call it a "a cynical exploitation of our childish innocence that occasionally were racist or sexist."
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