I'm centered in who I am, and I'm really grateful. I'm not perfect.
Letitia Wright
I'm not trying to be famous, I'm not trying to be the next whatever. I'm just trying to be someone that contributes positivity with my talent.
It was cool to play an African princess who's the smartest in the whole world. That never happens. So I hope all the young girls can feel smart, too.
Netflix is my homepage.
In my country where I was born, Guyana, we push more for education. It's more being a lawyer, doctor, teacher, or scientist.
Makeup is cool. I mean, you can turn up and feel really good and treat yourself, but it shouldn't be something you hang on to to validate your beauty or something you have to do to make you feel beautiful.
I'm just a young girl trying to fulfill the purpose that's been placed in my heart to do.
I gave my life to Christ, and I thought that would be it for me, and He was, like, 'No, you're not finished with acting; acting is not finished with you. This is your talent. Go back into it, but you're going back into it with a heart that's not obsessive over it.'
Say you want to be with someone, and you're doing something that they don't really like. They're gonna ask you to stop it, just for a moment to take a look at them, to see them clearly. That's what God wanted for me.
I just want to do something meaningful in the world. I want to contribute positively. That means the roles I get to play as well.
My aim is just to remain as humble and as godly as I can be.
If I can be of inspiration to anyone to go after their goals and their dreams, then I feel like I'll be satisfied with that.
I fell in love with Jesus, and I'm still in love. Amen!
I grew up seeing so many stereotypes on TV, and I didn't want to play that as well.
No, I'm not super-smart and tech-savvy.
When I was a kid, people bullied me about my weight and being skinny. Throughout my teenage years, I had to just depend on the fact that, look, this is who God created me to be, so I'm going to depend on what's already there.
I have to also get into producing if I want to see these stories being made... Let's venture out and do projects with people of different ethnicities: not just black but also Asian actors and Asian superhero films. Just an equality across the board.
Maybe we can have an all-female Marvel film. We've been talking about it. It's only a matter of time.
I would love to be producing movies, acting in more movies, and doing projects that are Oscar-worthy... have kids, be married, all that, being a normal human being as well, balancing it all out.
I think the more open-minded people we have - like casting directors and producers - the better things are going to be.
I'm not perfect. As a Christian, you're not perfect, you know, but you're walking every day and trying to stay connected.
So many young black women love science, technology, engineering, and maths. But that's not the widely held image of the kind of person who likes those things.
I didn't see a lot of role models or women who looked like me on screen when I was growing up. For me, one thing that changed all of that was seeing Keke Palmer in 'Akeelah and The Bee.' That film made me realize that I wasn't an alien.
I don't need to be validated by anybody else; I don't need to be accepted or approved of for my happiness.
The 'Black Panther' world taught me about the importance of exfoliating.
I was born in Guyana, South America.
Wherever the good stories are, I'm trying to place myself there.
We need to include more writers from different backgrounds and ethnicities. We need to see different experiences instead of the same people writing the same kinds of stories.
As soon as I was obedient to just taking a chance on God, all of these things that you're seeing - 'Black Panther' or 'Humans' or 'The Commuter' or Steven Spielberg - it came right after I took that break.
I want to do stuff like 'Lady Bird.' I want people to say, 'She told amazing stories.'
I'm really proud of the Time's Up movement, and I hope it continues and it grows stronger and that it can really be established.
I don't come from a creative background. I don't know anyone in my family who is a musician or actor or singer. It's a lot of teachers, lawyers. Professional stuff like that.
I wish I watched movies like 'Hidden Figures' when I was a kid, and maybe I would've taken science classes super seriously, because I saw myself.
When I came to England, everybody was indoors all the time, and nobody said hello to each other. That was weird.
Tottenham was a dope place to grow up because it's so community-based. It's a melting pot of cultures. I'll always be a north London girl.
I still have a lot to prove within the industry as a young person in the Marvel Universe.
If I want to put makeup on, then, cool, I'll do that. But it's not going to be my crutch.
That's something I would love to do - play leading roles and really hold it on my own in those leading roles.
I have little brothers and sisters, and they annoy me a lot, but I love them so much because they're so smart and witty.
Everybody has their thing that they're truthful about. My thing is just a love of God... so that's what I'm going to do.
I said, 'Okay, Jesus, I'll try you,' and I haven't looked back since.
I don't really consider myself religious. I view it more as a relationship. And if anyone thinks that's weird, then okay.
I'm not really wanting to be famous.
With 'Black Panther,' it was like stepping up to the plate, working crazy hours, and still bringing your best to the table every time.
I started doing amateur theatre and played Rosa Parks at the age of 12 or 13. At 16, I decided it was what I wanted to do.
I love Drake; he's amazing.
'Black Panther' has made me embrace my natural black hair. The representation of natural black hair in the film has made me reflect on myself.
I want people, no matter who they are to be inspired by 'Black Panther.'
When I need motivation, I just think I can do everything if I maintain a strong sense of will.
In my mind, I don't really see myself as being famous. I just think my work is being exposed to a bigger audience.