‘I can change the way Black women are seen’: Viola Davis on stereotypes, success and playing a warrior

Raised in poverty, the actor has conquered Hollywood, winning an Oscar, an Emmy and two Tony awards. Now she has brought her passion project to the screen – The Woman King’s epic tale of an elite female fighting force

Viola Davis is tired. I know because she has told me – “Let me just be honest, I’m tired,” she says at one point, with all the heartfelt emphasis of those Academy Award-winning eyes – but I also know because I’ve seen her latest film, and anyone would be tired after pulling that off. The Woman King is an 1820s-set, action-packed historical epic about the Agojie, the all-female warrior unit of the Kingdom of Dahomy, which once existed in what is now Benin. Davis gives a performance of phenomenal physical and emotional power as Agojie general Nanisca. Her co-stars include Star Wars’ John Boyega as King Ghezo, but while he spends most of the film peacocking around the palace, the women are out doing bloody battle. The fight choreography is thrilling, and the then 56-year-old Davis did nearly all her own stunts.

In preparation, Davis and her female castmates, including erstwhile 007 Lashana Lynch and Thuso Mbedu, the fast-rising star of Barry Jenkins’ The Underground Railroad, embarked on a rehearsal period like no other. “I mean, I’m a woman who works out, but not like five hours a day,” says Davis. Today, she looks red-carpet-ready in a white pearlescent dress, with a full face of flawless makeup and hair piled high. Only her monogrammed hotel slippers suggest she is still in recuperation mode. “Me and Thuso would do choreography where we had to fight 15 or more men, on a day-to-day basis.” The sprinting, weightlifting and martial arts continued even after they had flown out to the South African shoot location, then in 30C heat. “Trust me,” Davis adds with a throaty chuckle, “by the time I got to the last stunt, I definitely celebrated with a glass of pinotage.”

This eight-month warrior workout was only the most recent leg of The Woman King’s seven-year struggle to the screen. “It’s a fight,” says Davis, who was also one of the film’s producers through her company JuVee Productions. “I call it The Fight. It’s a fight to find partners who have the same vision as you, who are able to give it a green light. And then the other fight, if it’s a predominantly Black female cast, is that because we haven’t led the global box office, there’s no precedent that it will work and make the money back for the people who invest in it … The bottom line is money. It’s not about cultural impact – it’s about money.”

Davis says telling stories she wants to tell remains a struggle, even now. In 2016, she completed the coveted “triple crown of acting” (an Academy Award, an acting category Emmy and a Tony – or two, in Davis’s case) by winning the best supporting actress Oscar for her role opposite Denzel Washington in the 1950s drama Fences. She is the first and, to date, only Black actor to do so. Only eight years earlier, she had sprung to mainstream notice with an eight-minute, single-scene, Oscar-nominated turn alongside Meryl Streep in the 2008 film Doubt. And yet, she says: “I can’t walk into every room and get any movie made. I actually feel pretty confident, but I can’t do that.”

But she is used to fighting for what she wants. In April, her bestselling memoir Finding Me revealed just how much she had to overcome in her youth.

Davis grew up the second-youngest of six children, amid abject poverty, racism, sexual abuse, domestic violence and alcoholism. Living in a rat-infested, condemned building, the sisters were too terrified to go to the toilet at night and all became chronic bed-wetters. When the pipes froze over, during the merciless Rhode Island winters, they had no way to clean themselves and had to go to school smelling of urine, only to face more bullying. Davis says she and all her sisters were subjected to sexual assaults by relatives, baby-sitters and the neighbourhood “dirty old men” while their parents were too caught up in their own struggle for survival to offer any protection. (She has since forgiven and reconciled with them both.)

She calls her four sisters “my platoon”, while their predominantly white home town was “a minefield … where you were constantly trying to dodge little and big explosions that could level you”. No wonder she feels such a personal connection to The Woman King. “Here’s the thing: we’re sisters, the Agojie are sisters. That’s not the mentality of just hanging out, doing some shopping and having an Aperol spritz. It is a spirit of literally going into battle, and it’s for the love of each other that you’re fighting.” Nanisca is the kind of action role that might have been all high kicks and smart quips in other hands, but Davis imbues enough authentic emotion that she is already being talked of as a contender for yet more awards. “I don’t see Nanisca as an action hero,” she says. “She is a woman who is a warrior.”

One of the movie’s most powerful moments comes from this understanding. It’s in a scene at the slave market, where Nanisca and her troops are meeting General Oba of the enemy Oyo Empire, for what he assumes is a payment of tribute. Instead, Nanisca ambushes him with an attempt to provoke a war, but just before that moment-of-no-return a fleeting expression of terror passes across her face. It is the physical demonstration of a line that Davis often quotes by the novelist Anne Lamott: “Courage is fear said with prayers.”

“Every time I approached Oba,” Davis says, “I was approaching the man who sexually assaulted me. I was not just approaching the enemy. Listen, the things that have taken the strongest human being down have been a traumatic memory that they could not fight through.”

Does she mean “me” in the method acting sense? Or is she drawing directly from her own experience? “I’m talking about Nanisca, but I talk about Viola in terms of facing my fears too, every single day … Every woman who has been sexually assaulted knows exactly what I mean at that moment.”

These glimpses of the human beneath the genre trappings have become a Viola Davis speciality. In the six-season TV melodrama How to Get Away With Murder, it was the moment when Davis’s character, the law professor, adulteress and possible sociopath Annalise Keating, gets home after a long day of being fierce and fabulous, sits down and takes her wig off. In Fences, it’s the streaming tears and snot that Rose never wipes away as she finally offloads decades of disappointments on her husband.

Davis obviously has deep respect for acting’s therapeutic potential, but is more ambivalent about her formal training. She describes her four years at New York’s prestigious performing arts conservatory, Juilliard, as “Eurocentric … I felt I came in with a wrong palette. I was too big. I was too Black. My voice was too deep.” In the same breath, though, she credits Juilliard with funding her transformational first trip to Africa, back in the 90s.

It was in the Gambia, as she was watching a performance by the kañeleng – an association of childless women – that Davis says everything clicked into place. “They were just screaming, not even with any objective of singing beautifully. It was the objective of just making noise, so God can hear it.” In that moment she understood what it meant to make art, and what her own contribution might be: “If I don’t start with the palette of what is Viola, then I’m doing absolutely nothing. Whether or not it’s received by the masses, I cannot control. But I can control that.”

Davies has had her own struggles with infertility, as she details in her memoir. When she was a single woman in her early 30s, an operation to remove fibroids on her womb left her with a small window in which to get pregnant. This led to an incident, now passed into Viola Davis lore, in which she manifested her future husband with a kañeleng-like directness. “God, you have not heard from me in a long time. I know you’re surprised. My name is Viola Davis,” she remembers saying, before issuing, in prayer form, a dating wishlist that included “ex-athlete”, “someone real country” and someone who “had a wife before me and children already”, so there was no pressure to get pregnant. Three weeks later she met the actor and producer Julius Tennon, who was all of those things, and in 2011 they adopted their daughter, Genesis.

But back to the present. “I’m 57 years old,” Davis says, all that fatigue back in her voice. “I don’t have the same enthusiasm that I had at 28, or younger. When I saw Cicely Tyson for the first time, it was: ‘Wow, I can be Miss Tyson. I can be a great actress of the stage and cinema – people will just throw flowers at me!’” Her role in Doubt, alongside Meryl Streep, gave her a big lift, at the age of 42. “And I said: ‘Oh my God! I hit it!’ But that lasts for two seconds or less. Because with that comes disillusionment, with that comes exhaustion … There is an emptiness that comes with fighting for success.” Davis says she now understands her work not only as a means to escape poverty, or attain a sense of self-worth, but as her small part of a larger struggle for justice. “At the same time, I have a true understanding of my limitations as a human being. I cannot carry the weight of the past on my shoulders. I can’t do that. I’m not God. What I can do is what I can do.”

For Davis, The Fight is also about kicking open that narrow on-screen box that women who look like her currently have to fit into. “What is in my power to change is to show people that we are more than the stamp that people have put on dark-skinned women. That we are sexual, that we are desirable, that we can be smart, that we are way more expansive and our identity is not determined by your gaze. I can change that. I can change the way Black women are seen, to some extent, within the industry.”

Davis knows something about that “box”, having earned her second of four Academy Award nominations for playing a maid – some said a modern-day Mammy – in 2011’s civil rights-era drama The Help. The supporting cast was filled with impressive Black actors, including Davis’s childhood hero Cicely Tyson and her friend Octavia Spencer, who won an Oscar for her role. The lead, though, was white actor Emma Stone, playing a well-meaning journalist who sets out to expose her town’s racism. Davis has since spoken of her regret over making the film, saying she felt she had “betrayed myself and my people”.

Now that The Woman King has finally arrived, it feels, says Davis, like “a culmination of my career over the last 33 years”. It is a film that could not have been made without her and represents her ascension to a whole new level. “I arrived in Hollywood having hopes and dreams for my career, but never quite having ownership or agency,” she says. “The Woman King has seemed like the ultimate gift and conduit to give me that agency.”

This is also a much-anticipated moment of “culmination” for many others besides. It is for anyone who dared hope Black Panther’s success might change Hollywood; for anyone who wants period dramas to tell diverse, untold stories that confront the legacy of colonialism, and also for anyone who’s ever wondered why women in action movies tend to be twentysomethings in high heels, but Liam Neeson still gets to punch through walls when he’s pushing 70.

Can Davis see herself doing a similar pivot towards more action roles? She gives this suggestion the kind of derisive look that Annalise Keating reserved for her most moronic law students. “Oh no. No. That doesn’t appeal to me at all. My body is so sore right now.”

The Woman King is in cinemas now

Contributor

Ellen E Jones

The GuardianTramp

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