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Scarlett Johansson Feared Being "Hypersexualized" And "Pigeonholed" As An Actor Earlier In Her Career

In a podcast interview, the actor reflects on being seen as older than she was earlier in her career.

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Scarlett Johansson, 37, said in a recent interview that despite having an acting career that started at age seven and has earned her two Oscar nominations, she was "pigeonholed" as a young actor and once felt it'd be impossible to diversify her onscreen roles. Johansson opened up about her career on Dax Shepard's Armchair Expert podcast.

"I kind of became objectified and pigeonholed in this way where I felt like I wasn't getting offers for work for things that I wanted to do," Johansson said (via Yahoo). "I remember thinking to myself, 'I think people think I'm 40 years old.' It somehow stopped being something that was desirable and something that I was fighting against."

Johansson continued, "I got kind of pigeonholed into this weird hypersexualized thing… I felt like [my career] was over. It was like: that's the kind of career you have, these are the roles you've played. And I was like, 'This is it?'" She added that she feels the industry has changed in a more positive direction, noticing that younger actors like Zendaya and Florence Pugh are not pigeonholed as easily as she feels she was.

Johansson's most recent on-screen role was Black Widow, the Marvel character's 2021 solo prequel film. The film also led to her filing a lawsuit against Disney, which has been subsequently settled, regarding a shift in salary and compensation after the film pivoted to a Disney+ rather than theatrical release. Her next expected role will be her first for a Wes Anderson project, Asteroid City--at some point after that, she will also appear in Kristin Scott Thomas's directorial debut My Mother's Wedding.

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freddy_diggler

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I wish I was hypersexualized more often. I think I'm on par with cellophane to the opposite sex. :-(

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jenovaschilld

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Edited By jenovaschilld

Her Lost in Translation performance was stunning, I could not believe she could hold a screen presence to Bill Murray so easily. Not only incredible to behold, but even then she knew how to perform into the camera and not in front of. And was just ... wow, 17.

Truthfully, I do not remember her much in anything before Lost in Translation or after until Iron Man 2. The girl with a pearl earring was good, but do not remember anything else.

She can act and does it well. But if it was not for the Marvel movies, she would not be the star she is now. She was hypersexualized, because that was her job, during her early career, as her roles were just that. But either through bad luck, or bad casting she never got the breakout roles she wanted. With the high profile, high earning roles in the marvel movies (being the only girl) that allowed her to pick and choose her films as well as produce and direct.

She is way more talented then half the women they put on screen, who certainly cannot act as well, but it was her looks that help get her foot through the door and her amazing ass that pushed the door wide open. She was type casted, but she hung in there, and that takes more then just looks.

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bat725

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Hypersexualized?

Oh, you mean like Chris Hemsworth!

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naryanrobinson

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If she was so worried about it she shouldn't have opened herself up to it completely, entirely, film after film after film for basically her entire career.

She objectified herself for money. Endlessly.

She said, “Hey that looks like a potential pothole.” then jumped into it and stayed there by choice for basically the entire length of time she had a body people were sexually attracted to.

Until she says it was her fault, at least mostly, I can't sympathise.

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deactivated-64efdf49333c4

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@naryanrobinson: I was going to say...she didn't exactly try very hard to change that perception.

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alex33x

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A female who acts, is called an actress. Even most languages around the world, have a word for actress. I should know I speak 3 of them.

Stop trying to push your woke politics gamespot.

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deactivated-64efdf49333c4

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@alex33x: Actually, the word "actor" has no gender implications.

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alex33x

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Edited By alex33x

@Barighm: It is when it's being used with gender implications which is the case here. Go back to five years ago, headlines with actress and female actresses were always referred as actress. Even during the Oscars awards were for best Actress etc.

I know Actor can be gender neutral in the English language yes, but we didn't start picking up and using the word for female actors, until the culture wars started. My first language is Spanish my second language, was Italian, my third Language is English I've lived in the US for 20 years now.

As someone mentioned Portuguese, French, Spanish and Italian there is no gender neutral for actor. Everything is defined in male or female, because there are only two genders. Despite what all these crazies will have you believe.

That is why language around history, was built with the premise of male and female, because there are only two genders.

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deactivated-64ff549d2d157

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@alex33x: The group is correct when they observe that the work 'Actor' is gender neutral. It is historically used to describe men who act, but they do have a point.

You also have a point when you ask why female words are no longer used, but i believe you're asking the wrong question.

I think the question you need to ask is why do activists equivocate female words with "Less than".

That's really the root of the problem.

Being a female, somewhere in activism history, went from "different from male" to "less than male".

Feminism became about women adopting male traits rather than empowering women, so simple things like calling a woman an "actress" became offensive.

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jenovaschilld

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@alex33x: This same guy was pulled over by a policewoman, and asked her, "uh, can I help you cop-tress?"

Brittle souls.

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Fernin-Ker

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@alex33x: Bro how thin is your skin that the use of the word "actor" instead of "actress" (which has been done per writer taste for as long as the words have existed) puts you in a frenzy about "woke" politics? jfc dude go outside and touch some grass.

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RicklePick

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@Fernin-Ker: it’s moments like these that make me wish English had grammatical gender. Could you imagine how hilarious/exhausting it would be in our current political climate if we had to deal with every noun in our language being feminine or masculine like it is in French or Portuguese?

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deactivated-64efdf49333c4

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@Fernin-Ker: Actually, the word "actress" was first used officially in 1700.

http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/weekender/scripts/weekender_actor_070406.pdf

*This is a download, fyi.

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mogan

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mogan  Moderator

@alex33x: Actor isn't a gendered word. It's just a person who acts.

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