Since then, the award ceremonies and opportunities to dazzle photographers have been plentiful for Nyong'o, whose mesmerizing performance as Patsey earned her numerous accolades and recognition, including an Oscar nomination for Best Actress in a Supporting Role.
Though all this attention
is new to Nyong'o, who was born in Mexico to Kenyan parents, the young actress
seems to enjoy all the hype around her. But there is much more to her story
than how she captivates the cameras on the red carpet.
CNN's Stephanie Elam caught
up with Nyong'o to speak about her journey from Kenya to Hollywood. An edited
version of the interview follows.
Lupita Nyong'o: My father is a politician. At the time he was also a professor of
political science and he was organizing for democracy in Kenya. We were under
an autocratic regime and after a series of unfortunate events, including the
disappearance of his brother, he went into political exile in Mexico. I was
born in his last year there.
LN: Yes, all my conscious memories are in Kenya until when I was 16 my
parents sent me back to Mexico to learn Spanish. I grew up in Nairobi, which is
the capital of Kenya, so it's hustle and bustle and there's always something
going on. I come from a very big family and we're very close knit so I had lots
of time with me family.
My parents raised all of us to just
pursue our hearts' desires. They were like "figure out what your purpose
is on this world and then do it and do it to excellence; no matter what it is,
whether it's being a janitor or a doctor, as long as you're filling your life's
purpose then we're good." No pressure to pursue one thing or another,
although I will say my father was very upset when I dropped physics though.
CNN: Not too long after you arrived to Mexico you decided to go to school
in the United States. One of the things I read about was your discovery of race
in America and how it's treated.
LN: I grew up in a world where the majority of people were black so that
wasn't the defining quality of anyone. When you're describing someone, you
don't start out with "he's black, he's white." No, I was a girl, I
was my ethnic group Luo, I was middle class, I was many things before I was
black, so it was like a rearrangement when I came here and realized that in
America that's the first thing that people notice about me. You don't hear that
word, "black, black" very often in Kenya to tell you the truth, so that
was definitely jarring.
CNN: "12 years A Slave" is your first feature film. Where do you
go inside yourself to play a role like that of Patsey with such generosity of
spirit?
LN: I don't believe that we are really as individual as we think we are
and that's what makes the profession of acting possible -- that we can
empathize with things that are more than our personal, limited experience. And
I think that you do work and like Oprah [Winfrey] said to me, "you let God
walk in the door." I think it's less about going into myself than opening
myself; just opening myself to the research, the script, the autobiography, the
other things that I read, the other things I saw and just trying to immerse
myself in a world that I personally don't know -- but I know that my spirit
does -- and can know if I allow myself to open up to it.
There is something about acting that's
mysterious and magical.
Lupita Nyong'o
Lupita Nyong'o
There is something about
acting that's mysterious and magical because there is only so much I can do to
prepare and then I have to just let go and breathe and believe that it will
come through.
Because I think if I had
been required to play Patsey in any sort of methodical way where I go in and I
never go out until we wrap the picture, I don't think I would have survived
emotionally because it's heavy. But having those moments of lightness and
separation from the work we were doing on set was very important, even to
fortifying our trust for each other while we were doing the work..
CNN: How do you feel about all the hype surrounding you since you since
"12 Years A Slave"?
And I've felt relief as
well that people are registering Patsey's loftiness -- in praising me I feel
like her spirit is being uplifted, really, because what I met in those pages of
Solomon Northup's book was heartbreaking -- and it still breaks my heart -- and
inspiring, and I had the privilege of bringing her back to life. I'm just happy
and filled with gratitude to have had the experience in the first place and for
it to be so well received.
CNN
Kudos
ReplyDeletePersistent, hardwork and dedication is crucial, admire Lupita
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