Viola Davis Finally Has The Role She's Worked Decades For



via BuzzFeed

“I feel like Shonda gets me, all of me,” the How to Get Away With Murder actress said at BuzzFeed Brews with Facebook Live. “Not just maybe what I would represent in a generic form, which is mama, maid.”



Macey J. Foronda/BuzzFeed


Viola Davis made headlines during the Television Critics Association press tour in July when she said, "I have gotten so many wonderful film roles, but I've gotten even more film roles where I haven't been the show. It's like I've been invited to a really fabulous party, only to hold up the wall. I wanted to be the show." And that's what the actress, who stars in Shonda Rhimes' upcoming ABC drama How to Get Away With Murder, finally is.


When asked about that comment at BuzzFeed Brews with Facebook Live on Wednesday in Hollywood, she said, "I said that statement and I want to take it back ... I was saying that for a very simple reason, and the reason is, after a while you get tired of being the third girl from the left."


Davis, who has been nominated for two Academy Awards for her performances in 2008's Doubt and in 2011's The Help, has obviously found success in the film industry, but it hadn't always been in the most flattering roles: As she noted at BuzzFeed Brews with Facebook Live, she's "played a lot of maids."



BuzzFeed Brews with Facebook Live


One of the biggest struggles of Davis' career has been not being seen as more than "the maid" and not having the opportunity to truly exercise the skills she's worked so hard to hone. "I think that when you go through your life, you expect to get the best of anything," she said. "Whatever profession you're in, you expect the world to see you. Especially when you spend 10 years in acting school, which I did, you just feel like everybody is primed to be Meryl Streep, whoever you are, white, black, whatever."


"But then, you go out there," she continued. "You see all these walls that are held up because you're a woman, you're a certain age, you're a certain hue of color. And it's shocking that people don't see that. You know, Look at me. I am good, I do have talent. See me. So I think that it was a little bit of a shock after the Oscars that people were still saying, 'You know, you've got four scenes in a movie, but you're going to be playing opposite so-and-so.' And I'm like, 'I don't care if I'm going to be playing opposite so-and-so. I want so-and-so's role!'"




View Entire List ›



No comments:

NEWS