ELLE (Canada)

CELEBRITY Meet rising star Letitia Wright.

UNAFRAID, UNAPOLOGET­IC, UNSTOPPABL­E, UNMISTAKAB­LE.

- BY LIV LITTLE

WHEN I SPEAK WITH LETITIA WRIGHT,

the 27-year-old actor is hanging out in her flat in North London, England, doing her laundry. She has mostly kept busy during lockdown setting up her own production company, Three-sixteen Production­s. It is, she tells me, her way of creating roles for those who don’t often get a seat at the table. “It’s an opportunit­y to create the roles that I didn’t see for Black women and men and Asian people,” she says in her soft, comforting tone after we talk about our shared Guyanese heritage like old friends. If you don’t know Wright, you will undoubtedl­y recognize her. She is one of the stars of Black Panther, Marvel’s runaway 2018 box-o ce hit, which quickly made her a face for Black girls everywhere to look up to. Wright tells me that she has turned down roles in massive Hollywood production­s because they didn’t feel quite right. She is a rarity in that sense: Not every actor is able to maintain a steady sense of integrity when they make it big in Hollywood. But for her, it has paid o , taking her from small-screen appearance­s on British TV (including a particular­ly hard-hitting season finale of Black Mirror) straight into the heart of Hollywood.

In Black Panther, which eventually took in over $1.2 billion worldwide, Wright played the role of Shuri, a princess in the fictional kingdom of Wakanda. It was a life-changing role, catapultin­g her into the realm of celebrity, where even a supermarke­t can become a minefield. “They’re like, ‘Yo, I swear that’s my girl from Black Panther!’” she says. People still show her their “Wakanda arms”—the now iconic stance of arms crossed over chest—a signal of solidarity and Black power.

I saw Black Panther when it was first released, but it was another project that Wright did that year that stood out for me. She starred in The Convert, a play written by fellow Black Panther star Danai Gurira about the story of Jekesai, a young woman who finds herself having to convert to Catholicis­m after fleeing a forced marriage.

It turns out I wasn’t the only one blown away by her talent that winter— Kenneth Branagh also went to see The Convert and was struck by Wright’s performanc­e. “I used to watch him and Denzel Washington in Much Ado About Nothing,” says Wright. “He’s a bad-boy actor, so for him to come to the play was amazing. It opened the gate for me to get another role, which is a blessing.” She’s talking about Death on the Nile, the Agatha Christie thriller about a murder on a luxurious cruise, starring everyone from Annette Bening to Gal Gadot and directed by Branagh himself (who also reprises his role as Hercule Poirot).

Being back on a big Hollywood set at the end of last year to film Death on the Nile was a gear shift after a summer spent filming Steve McQueen’s Small Axe, an upcoming series for the BBC and Amazon Prime Video comprising five films that follow London’s Caribbean communitie­s from the late 1960s to the mid-1980s. The title of the series is based on the proverb “If you are the big tree, we are the small axe,” meaning that even the most marginaliz­ed of voices can have transforma­tive power.

Wright’s interest was piqued by the project as soon as it was announced; after all, she moved to the U.K. from Guyana at age seven, so Caribbean culture plays a huge role in her identity. When she eventually met McQueen, the director, in London, she asked when she’d have to o cially audition. “He was like, ‘You just did. I’ve seen your work and I think you’re phenomenal,’” she says. “He said that was how he worked with all his main actors. †

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Jacket, shorts and socks (Marc Jacobs) and shoes (Prada)
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