“When I was working in my early 20s and even my late teens, I felt that I got somehow typecast as ‘hyper-đ eđ„ualized,'” says Scarlett Johansson
Scarlett Johansson was labeled a đ eđ„ symbol by Hollywood early in her career â and sheâs trying to change the narrative.
In conversation with The Hollywood Reporter as part of the annual Drama Actress Roundtable, Johansson, 34, opened up about the difficulties she faced when casting directors only saw her in one light.
âWhen I was working in my early 20s and even my late teens, I felt that I got somehow typecast as âhyper-đ eđ„ualized,â which I guess at the time seemed okay to everyone â it was another time â even though it wasnât part of my own narrative,â Johansson said. âIt was kind of crafted for me by probably a bunch of dudes in the industry.â
Though she doesnât point to any past projects in particular, some of her films from that time of her career included In Good Company (2004), The Island (2005), Match Point (2005), to name a few.
Johansson is now the highest-paid actress in Hollywood, according to Forbes â but she says the limited scope of roles she was once offered made her consider stepping away from an onscreen career altogether.
âIt was really difficult for me to try to figure out how to get out of being an ingĂ©nue or the âother womanâ because it was never anything that I had intended,â she said. â⊠I remember thinking at the time that maybe I needed a different job in this industry that would be more fulfilling, because it seemed like there was nowhere to go.â
RenĂ©e Zellweger, one of the other actresses included in the THR roundtable â along with Laura Dern (Little Women, Marriage Story), Jennifer Lopez (Hustlers) Lupita Nyongâo (Us) and Awkwafina (The Farewell) â related all too well to the studio systemâs knack for confining young actresses to đ eđ„ appeal.
âAs a young person starting out, I would get the cut-off shorts jobs and the âother woman,â the one-night-stand girl ⊠and I thought, âI think Iâm going to not do this anymore because I know where that road will go,’â Zellweger, 50, said, ââI donât know what itâs going to look like ultimately, but I bet it would be really hard to get off that road.’â
Scarlett Johansson in Marriage Story.
Zellweger added: âThere is the inevitability of your body changing and you growing older. I want to work in a way where I can portray women who are relatable throughout my life. I donât want to have to stop at a particular time because I canât wear the cut-offs anymore because it looks weird.â
This year, Johansson demonstrated that roles for women are more wide-ranging than ever. Not only did she lead the pack in the superhero blockbuster Avengers: Endgame over the summer, but the star has been met with awards buzz for Jojo Rabbit and Marriage Story, in which she portrays two differently complex mothers.
âThe climate is so different now,â Johansson said. âThereâs so many wonderful opportunities for women of every age to play all different types of people.â