She thought her career would end early on because she was seen in a certain way from a young age.
Scarlett Johansson might be regarded as one of Hollywoodâs most beautiful stars â but it hasnât always been easy on the Oscar nominee.
âI kind of became objectified and pigeonholed in this way where I felt like I wasnât getting offers for work for things that I wanted to do,â the Avengers star, 37, said on the landmark 500th episode of Dax Shepardâs Armchair Expert podcast.
âI remember thinking to myself, âI think people think Iâm 40 years old,ââ said Johansson, who has been in films since North in 1994. âIt somehow stopped being something that was desirable and something that I was fighting against.â
Pointing to her role as an aimless 22-year-old wife in Sofia Coppolaâs Oscar-winning Lost In Translation, at which point Johansson herself was 17, opposite Bill Murrayâs unconventional middle-aged romantic lead, the actress said she was viewed as a veteran actor.
âI got kind of pigeonholed into this weird hyperđ eđ„ualised thing. I felt like (my career) was over,â she explained.
These days, up-and-coming actors are âallowed to be all these different things,â said Johansson, noting: âItâs another time, too. Weâre not even allowed to really pigeonhole other actors anymore, thankfully, right? People are much more dynamic.â
Noting that she feels like she spans two generations, Johansson at one point told Shepard she was encouraged to âuse your feminine wiles, use your đ eđ„ualityâ to get ahead.
âThereâs our generation I think thatâs done that but also been like âThis doesnât feel right. Thereâs gotta be some other way,ââ she said, noting that women who are around 15 years younger believe, ââYou donât have to take any of that câp. No pandering.â … Itâs an interesting place to be in the in-between of.â
Johansson said sheâs also learned that âmeaningfulâ change, whether in the entertainment industry or the world at large, isnât linear.
âIt takes two steps forward and two steps back, and then it gets better and then it gets worse. Itâs not finite,â she said. âI think if you donât leave room for people to figure it out, then the actual progressive change doesnât really happen.â
Source:https://www.thestar.com.my