Michael B. Jordan Says He Only Wants The Roles Written For White Men
Michael B. Jordan has become one of the most sought-after actors in Hollywood. The 31-year-old Santa Ana, California native played “Kilmonger” in this year’s Black Panther. He is reprising his role as “Adonis ‘Donnie’ Johnson Creed in the upcoming November Creedsequel. Five years ago, Jordan played the real-life Oscar Grant in Fruitvale Station. Ahead of film, Jordan played corner-boy “Wallace” inThe Wire, with prominent roles on Friday Night Lights, The Assistants, Parenthood, and soap opera All My Children.
As an actor, Jordan pushes through all limitations, whether due to screenwriter bias or old-guard industry thinking. “I wanted to go out for these roles because it was just playingpeople. It didn’t have to be like, ‘You’re playing the Black guy in this.’” Jordan’s declaration is also one made with his peers in mind. “Everybody would be going out for the same role. Every young Black actor from ages to 17 to 40 going out for the same role. How do you reverse engineer that problem of pitted competition with each other and give more opportunities to eat and be successful?” Jordan says that his agency, WME, embraces his perspective.
Jordan and Rae appear together on cover for the latest issue of Variety.
Comments
Post a Comment