“They could do their bad accents together”: Trevor Noah Publicly Humiliated Leonardo DiCaprio’s Accent In $171 Million Movie, Called Him A ‘Drunk Australian’

Trevor Noah Publicly Humiliated Leonardo DiCaprio’s Accent In $171 Million Movie, Called Him A 'Drunk Australian'
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Leonardo DiCaprio, known to be one of the most elite actors in Hollywood, collaborated with director Edward Zwick (Jack Reacher: Never Go Back) for a film that showcased Sierra Leone’s (country in West Africa) pain during the civil war along with gripping performances from Djimon Hounsou (Shazam!) and Jennifer Connelly (Top Gun: Maverick).

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The film – Blood Diamond, released in 2006, got DiCaprio an Oscar nod for his performance as Danny Archer, a mercenary who looked to benefit from the rare gem that Hounsou’s Solomon Vandy discovered being a slave laborer to the regional warlords.

Trevor Noah
Trevor Noah

DiCaprio, 48, had to develop an African accent for his role, but it invited some criticism. Media personality, Trevor Noah, in January 2019, remarked on the actor’s divisive accent in the $171 million film while commenting about one of America’s most expensive Jewelry brands – Tiffany & Co.

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Trevor Noah Hated Leonardo DiCaprio’s Blood Diamond Accent

According to Trevor Noah’s The Daily Show’s Twitter handle, a spokesperson for Tiffany & Co. explained that their diamonds would be conflict-free going forward, to which he said that his ad campaign was, “shop here, we didn’t kill any Africans.”

He later said that diamonds got the attention as Leonardo DiCaprio made a film on conflict-stricken diamonds. But, the actor’s accent got a lot more flak.

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Leonardo DiCaprio
Djimon Hounsou and Leonardo DiCaprio in Blood Diamond (2006)

Mimicking DiCaprio’s accent, Noah said –

“Maybe you guys won’t remember that, but we Africans will never forget. He was like, ‘We gotta go back to those bloody get the diamonds. Get the bloody diamonds.’ What are you a drunk Australian?”

Not just DiCaprio, he dragged Forrest Whitaker’s Black Panther character Zuri into the mix by saying that they both should make a film and do “bad accents together.”

Read More: “I think it’s the best script I’ve ever written”: Christopher Nolan’s Dream Project With Jim Carrey Was Derailed By Leonardo DiCaprio That Made Oppenheimer Possible

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Leonardo DiCaprio’s Take On His African Accent

DiCaprio put in a lot of work to develop an accent that could match the native one, according to Time Magazine’s Q&A in 2006. He noted that he tortured the dialect coach who helped him through the film to accommodate the language and tone in the region.

Leonardo DiCaprio in Blood Diamond
Leonardo DiCaprio in Blood Diamond

“I’m pretty good at imitating people. I interviewed a number of different people in South Africa and honed in on the one guy I wanted to sound like. Then it was a process where [dialect coach] Tim Monich and I recorded him and tortured him (laughs) by making him say sentences in varying ways and different energies and different tempos. Those recordings became a kind of mantra I’d listen to over and over again.”

Also Read: “No offense to the Native talent”: Leonardo DiCaprio’s Killers of the Flower Moon Co-Actress Calls Yellowstone ‘Deplorable’, Admits Her Auditions Were Rejected Multiple Times

DiCaprio’s Blood Diamond became a much-decorated addition to his portfolio as the storyline touched on the horrors of Sierra Leone’s Civil War that went on from 1991 to 2002.

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Reuniting with his long-time collaborator, Martin Scorsese, DiCaprio will land with his next – Killers of the Flower Moon on October 20. It will premiere on Apple TV+ in November.

Source: The Daily Show

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Written by Ojaswi Chaudhary

Articles Published: 265

Extremely passionate about a great story since the little guy was 8. He has lived through nothing short of almost 300 of Hollywood's finest pieces of work, and is now creating some of his own here at FandomWire. He loves to make time for a good book and a good meal.