It was a tribute to Eritrea that left social media abuzz with delight and joy.
At the 90th Academy Awards ceremony, actress Tiffany Haddish graced the red carpet wearing a traditional Eritrean dress known as zuria. The creamy gown had black and gold embroidery along with a matching black cape.
Haddish was born in California to an African American mother and an Eritrean father. She said she wore the dress to honor his roots. In response to the question “What are you wearing?” on the red carpet, the actress
said: “My father is from Eritrea. He passed away last year. He said one day I will end up here. And if I ever end up at the Oscars to honor my people. So I am honoring my fellow Eritreans.” After her answer, she also did the
traditional ululation and broke into the
eskistadance.
The choice of dress comes days after Haddish told
Entertainment Tonight that
she wanted Oprah’s advice (minute 0:51) if she should wear the traditional dress to the Oscars. “Because my daddy from Eritrea and he passed away, and I want to pay respect. I want to show the world,” she said.
Last year, the 38-year-old actress
became the first black female stand-up comedian to host
Saturday Night Live in its 43 seasons. Haddish also got her big break last year after starring in the raucous sisterhood comedy
Girls Trip. And despite not receiving a nomination for that role, she announced the Oscar nominations alongside English actor Andy Serkis, a moment that
endeared her to so many fans. And along with actress Maya Rudolph last night, she presented the award for best animated and live action short film—
wearing the same white sheath dress she wore to SNL.
Haddish’s dress set off Eritrea pride on social media.
Haddish’s father Tsihaye was an Eritrean refugee who left the family when she was three years old. After being estranged for years, she
reconnected with him in Philadelphia, and he walked her down the aisle on her wedding day, a day
she described as “one of the happiest days of my life.” Earlier this year, the actress
traveled to Eritrea to meet her relatives and to bury her father’s remains. In an interview on Eritrean television, she
described the experience as “amazing” and talked about eating the injera flatbread and touring historic sites and cities including the Red Sea port city of Massawa.
“I am finally home. I am finally where I was supposed to be a long time ago,” she said at the time. “I felt like my heart was being healed. I have been through a lot of things.”