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Regina King Talks Ambition, Success And How Best To Use Her Megaphone As She Covers The Hollywood Reporter February Issue

Regina King Talks Ambition, Success And How Best To Use Her Megaphone As She Covers The Hollywood Reporter February Issue

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The Hollywood Reporter agrees that Regina King has been on a roll since 2018: from her first Oscar for her role in “If Beale street could talk” to her first directorial debut with “One night in Miami.” Just recently, it was announced that the actor and director had been tapped to play the first Black congresswoman, Shirley Chisholm in the titular movie.

In honor of Black History month, The Hollywood Reporter brought together Regina King and Gina Prince-Bythewood, Director of “The Old Guard,” “Love and Basketball,” etc — two thriving Black women in Hollywood — for a star on star conversation about Blackness, ambition, their sons, being a Black woman in Hollywood and more.

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Photo: Matt Sayles for The Hollywood Reporter

For her Hollywood Reporter cover, Regina King was styled by her go-to styling team, Wayman Bannerman and Micah McDonalds. Her soft glam makeup was done by Latrice Johnson, and her hair styled by Larry Sims and Angie Perrantes. The shots were taken by Matt Sayles. She is wearing an Alberta Ferretti coat, Paris Texas boots and a mix of Cartier and Bulgari pieces of jewelry.

To begin the conversation, Regina borrows a quote from renowned writer, James Baldwin: “Our crown has already been bought and paid for, all we have to do is wear it.”

Here are 3 things Regina King shared with The Hollywood Reporter…

#1. On greatness being subjective:

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Photo: Matt Sayles for The Hollywood Reporter

When asked if she feels greatness at the moment, Regina tells Gina she does not believe greatness is a certain thing. She believes it is subjective. “I guess I have a hard time with phrases like that. Because what is that? It’s subjective. There are moments that I feel like I’ve always been great. And then there are moments that I feel like there’s no such thing as greatness being a certain thing.”

She explains further citing Beyoncé and Serena Williams as examples of people who have achieved career greatness, and Chadwick Boseman as someone whose greatness encompasses how he was able to touch everyone around him with kindness.

#2. On the power of ambition as Black women:

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Photo: Matt Sayles for The Hollywood Reporter

The two bonded over the way Black women are confident about their greatness, in a way labeled arrogant. They agree that there’s nothing wrong with ambition and that ambition is indeed good. For what they do, the difference between good and great is minuscule.

Regina says: “I feel like just as Black women, we are so conditioned to not feel that it’s OK to want to be great. Something I find often with Black women is that you give us a little window, we’re going to kick it all the way open and take that moment. And sometimes it can be perceived as taking all the air out of the room or, “Wow, she is so big, she’s so [loud].”” She continues: “But it’s also the very thing that makes us unique; it’s the history of what the Black woman has had to endure that has become part of our DNA. So when you see that window just crack open, you push through.”

#3. On whether she brings the Black female lens to her work:

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Photo: Matt Sayles for The Hollywood Reporter

When asked if she feels her Black female lens brings something totally different, Regina implies that people need to stop seeing Black women in Hollywood as monoliths because they all have different perspectives to offer.

“I’ve been asked that question as well, Gina, and you know how I’ve answered it? “Absolutely. But what my Black female brings to it is different than what Gina’s Black female lens brings to it.” We could tell a story that could be about the same subject matter but be a different perspective.”

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Photo: Matt Sayles for The Hollywood Reporter

She further explains: “So, when I get hit with that question, I challenge that person to understand that: one, you would never ask a white male director that question; and two, that that is the reason why we need more [of us]. So many stories are told through the white male gaze — they feel so familiar all the time because we’ve gotten all of their different perspectives. We’ve gotten more different white male perspectives than we’ve gotten different Black female perspectives or different Asian male perspectives. It is unfair to try to put Gina and Regina in the same box just because we are both Black and female.”

Read the full interview here.

Photo credit: Matt Sayles for The Hollywood Reporter


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