The Province

Davis craves ‘significan­ce’

Wants to push through her tiredness to become influentia­l

- CASSANDRA SZKLARSKI

TORONTO — Stage, screen and film star Viola Davis says now that she’s achieved a level of success, she’s focused on achieving “significan­ce.”

“You get a certain amount of money, you buy a house, you’re on a TV show, which I’m at, and then you’re tired,” the Oscar-winner said at the Toronto Internatio­nal Film Festival in September, when asked how she measures success after all of her accolades.

“You’re just tired and disillusio­ned. And frankly, just being honest, you’re miserable a lot. You’re like, ‘I’m tired, I don’t want to go to work, people don’t even know how hard this is,’” she said to laughs from fellow cast members and assembled media. “You start complainin­g in your 8,000-square-foot house. And you realize that you’ve missed the final step — which is not success, but significan­ce.”

Davis made the comments while supporting her movie Widows, a Chicago-set heist thriller. Adapted from a 1980sera British TV series by 12 Years a Slave director Steve McQueen and Gone Girl author Gillian Flynn, it follows four women forced to take extreme measures when their criminal husbands are killed

on a job that goes very wrong.

The film’s star-packed news conference included score composer Hans Zimmer and co-stars Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, Cynthia Erivo, Brian Tyree Henry, Daniel Kaluuya and Colin Farrell.

Davis spoke about what drives her work today, and called on Hollywood to do more to cast a variety of actors in significan­t roles.

“I measure significan­ce as living a life bigger than myself — that’s why I have a production company.

“When I became an actress, I became an actress because I saw Miss Cicely Tyson in The Autobiogra­phy of Miss Jane

Pittman,” she said.

“She gave me permission to do it. But she also showed me a way out of poverty, of feeling invisible, and I just feel like the narratives that are created in Hollywood right now have got to become inclusive. They have got to reflect the changing world and the changing cultures.”

Davis, who also stars in the drama How to Get Away With Murder, airing on ABC and CTV, said she’s mindful of “that little girl” she used to be.

“I want that little girl to be able to see images that she can attach herself to and to give her permission to feel ... that she is being seen,” she said.

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Viola Davis says she decided to act after seeing Cicely Tyson in The Autobiogra­phy of Miss Jane Pittman.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Viola Davis says she decided to act after seeing Cicely Tyson in The Autobiogra­phy of Miss Jane Pittman.

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