When it comes to keeping it classy while still setting the record straightf, nobody does it quite like our forever First Lady, Michelle Obama. For years, the internet has been buzzing about Viola Davis’s heavy-handed portrayal of Michelle in the 2022 Showtime series The First Lady.
While the memes about those iconic pursed lips have lived a long life on social media, the woman herself has finally broken her silence on why she just couldn’t bring herself to hit play on that particular project.
During a fresh sit-down on the Baby, This is Keke Palmer podcast, Michelle opened up about the surreal experience of seeing herself depicted on the small screen. When Keke brought up the series, Michelle didn’t hold back, admitting with a laugh that she hasn’t seen a single frame of it. She kept it real, explaining that watching someone else try to inhabit your own life is the one thing she simply cannot do.
The conversation wasn’t all about dodging the drama, though. Michelle made it clear that her decision to skip the show wasn’t a jab at Viola Davis’s legendary talent. In fact, she showered the EGOT winner with nothing but love, calling her “the greatest” and even floating the idea of a one-on-one sit-down. Michelle suggested that maybe they could link up on her own IMO podcast to chop it up about the specific scenes that had the timeline in a chokehold. She joked that once they actually talk through it together, then, and only then, might she be ready to watch.
This response comes as a bit of a full-circle moment since the series first aired. Back in 2022, Viola Davis caught serious heat for her physical choices in the role, with critics claiming the performance veered into caricature territory.
At the time, Viola stood ten toes down on her craft, noting that taking bold risks is part of being a leader in the acting game, even if it hurts when the feedback isn’t all praise. With Michelle now extending an olive branch for a real conversation, it looks like any perceived tension is being traded for mutual respect between two of the most powerful Black women in the culture.