Taye Diggs' Child Served As Inspiration For 'Mixed Me' | WFAE 90.7 - Charlotte's NPR News Source

Taye Diggs' Child Served As Inspiration For 'Mixed Me' | WFAE 90.7 - Charlotte's NPR News Source


Play all audios:


Taye Diggs' Child Served As Inspiration For 'Mixed Me' By NPR Staff Published November 22, 2015 at 5:07 PM EST Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email Listen • 4:19 Courtesy of Macmillan Children's


Publishing GroupTaye Diggs


He's known for his starring roles on screens both big and small, but it's his lifetime role that inspired his latest book — that of a father.


Taye Diggs joined NPR's Michel Martin for a conversation about his new book, Mixed Me, which is inspired by his son, Walker, and focuses on a day in the life of a mixed-race


child.

Interview Highlights


On what inspired him to write the book


You know I go to pick up and drop my son off at school. It seems like every other kid I see looks very, very similar to him. And when I was growing up, that wasn't the case. We saw somebody


with fair skin, curly hair and perhaps light eyes – we immediately assumed that that kid was mixed. And then as a child I would ask the questions: which parent was black, which parent was


white, which parent did the child connect with, relate to more? And then throughout the years, I would kind of cobble up my own explanations as to why this mixed person preferred to date


lighter or darker. But these days it's all different. And I'm thankful for that. I wrote the book just in case there were questions and to definitely highlight who my son is and how he


should feel about himself regardless of how he's viewed by the outside world.


On if being a celebrity, as is Walker's mother, actress Idina Menzel of "Frozen" fame, makes it easier or harder on them from others about their mixed-race child


Just because people know us, so we've been an item, and I almost feel like people gave us a pass. Because we were kind of well-known figures. Whereas if we were kind of quote-unquote regular


folks, maybe we would've gotten treated a little differently. People might've just rolled their eyes and said, well you know they're artist types. So they're allowed. As opposed to their


next door neighbors being an interracial couple I think. They use the celebrity card.


On where the experience of having a mixed-race child came from


Those are the questions that I grew up with. My cousin is considered bi-racial. I've got a group of friends that have been called light skinned, high yellow, mixed, Spanish. The list goes on


and on. And just hearing their accounts of what it was like to grow up and having to choose a group to kind of align themselves with. If you were mixed and chose to date outside the black


race, you were looked at differently. And no one, it never seems, if anybody white or black really acknowledged the white side of the family. So I've had to deal with all of that through


friends and family.


Copyright 2023 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.