Phyllida Swift, CEO of Face Equality Worldwide, has spearheaded this empowering marketing campaign with Sephora UK. She sustained facial scarring when she was 22 after surviving a automotive accident in Ghana. “It was an enormous adjustment,” she tells GLAMOUR.
“An enormous a part of why it’s difficult for anybody, and it was significantly difficult for me, is that each time I noticed a scar on display screen TV, it was a villain, a weak particular person, a sufferer. And I hated that, and I hated the concept somebody may pity me or suppose that I used to be untrustworthy or evil or villainous due to one thing that I had no management over.”
Phyllida continues, “It was seeing the whole and utter lack of illustration of scars and a constructive gentle on the market on this planet that lit the fireplace in my stomach, to go on the market and recognise that this isn’t okay. Why is that this narrative continually being pushed? And Halloween is just an extra instance of that, the place we’re continually telling youngsters to concern scars and facial variations.”
As a part of her work with Face Equality, the topic of Halloween costumes crops up time and time once more. “I hear tales of individuals being requested whether or not their face is a masks or having issues stated to them, reminiscent of, ‘Oh, properly, you needn’t put on a masks since you’ve already acquired your Halloween costume’.
“Children are bullied utilizing examples like, ‘Hey, you seem like Freddy Krueger’ or ‘Hey, you seem like the Joker’. Now we have this assumption that it is simply enjoyable, it is simply costume up, it is simply play, it is only a movie. However truly, that is enjoying out in folks’s actual lives, and it is extremely dehumanising.”
It is also one thing that Phyllida has skilled herself. “I’ve had folks ask me round this time of 12 months whether or not my face is make-up […] Why is that particular person questioning if I am sporting a fancy dress, and what is the subtext behind these costumes? Is that I am to be seen as scary? That hurts, and it is one thing that individuals with facial variations, who’re already topic to hate crime and bullying, expertise at this specific time of 12 months – significantly when grocery store cabinets are lined with scarring kits and costumes.
Phyllida asks, “What’s the message that we’re promoting to our kids about folks with facial variations, and why are we poisoning their younger minds with this narrative that’s forcing them to different us – and have an aversion to this complete neighborhood who’re wonderful and should be celebrated?”
I ask Phyllida why it is so necessary that Sephora UK has embraced the marketing campaign, provided that so many individuals will probably purchase their Halloween make-up from the wonder retailer. “When [Face Equality INT] pitched the thought to Sephora UK, we knew it was a doubtlessly confronting idea,” she begins.
“However we had been blown away by how positively it was obtained. We had been so thrilled by their willingness to have interaction their neighborhood in a dialog as a result of that is in the end what it’s. It isn’t about cancel tradition. It isn’t about making folks really feel responsible. We’re all on this journey in the direction of inclusion of marginalised communities.”
You’ll be able to watch the highly effective marketing campaign video in full right here:
For extra from Glamour UK’s Lucy Morgan, observe her on Instagram @lucyalexxandra.