USA TODAY International Edition

Majors’ own ‘ Devotion’ spans films, fatherhood

- Brian Truitt USA TODAY

CHARLOTTES­VILLE, Virginia – Well before the birth of his daughter and before he fell in love with acting, Jonathan Majors was completely devoted to Iggy the iguana. ● Majors, 33, was gifted his first pet for his ninth birthday, right before he moved from California to Texas. “I’d get up in the middle of the night, hunting for crickets,” he remembers. “I just loved him. And when he went, my heart was just broken.”

His new Korean war drama “Devotion” ( in theaters Wednesday), in which he plays real- life Navy aviator Jesse Brown, has Majors thinking about the definition of that movie title: “Devotion is going beyond essentiall­y the call of duty. Coach tells you to run two miles, you run three miles. Not for ego ... but because of a spiritual acknowledg­ment of your connection to something else. And Iggy was the first time I experience­d that.”

Majors takes flight in his new film while also soaring into Hollywood’s

stratosphe­re: Go to the movies and half the trailers you’ll see feature the Yaleeducat­ed actor. An Emmy nominee for HBO’s “Lovecraft Country,” Majors brings the next big bad to the Marvel Cinematic Universe as Kang the Conqueror in “Ant- Man and the Wasp: Quantumani­a” ( due Feb. 17) and puts his dukes up against Michael B. Jordan as ring antagonist Damian Anderson in boxing drama “Creed III” ( March 3).

Throw in his role as an amateur body

builder in the upcoming “Magazine Dreams” and playing mercurial basketball icon Dennis Rodman in “48 Hours in Vegas,” and, well, the sky’s the limit.

“Part of the magic trick of seeing Jonathan on screen is that he commands such a presence, yet you don’t see Jonathan Majors,” says “Devotion” director JD Dillard. “To be both character actor and movie star, it’s a really exciting thing to see.”

In Brown, the first Black naval aviator in a newly desegregat­ed military, Majors found a man with a similar drive. “His monomania for flying is akin to my monomania for acting and art making,” Majors says in an interview at the historic Paramount Theater, a few hours before a Virginia Film Festival screening of “Devotion.” “I saw his ambition and his willingnes­s and ultimately his service, because he’s doing that for his family. He’s doing that for himself. He’s doing that for his country. He’s doing that for his culture, his people at large. And I, too, am humbly on that same mission.”

“Devotion” tracks Brown’s friendship with white pilot Tom Hudner ( Glen Powell), but also the racism and prejudice he faced. One scene shows Majors’ character, to motivate himself, facing a mirror screaming the slurs and insults that have been hurled his way.

That moment is “cathartic in a way, but not necessaril­y for me – for us,” Majors says. “Trauma is a universal thing. Being a victim of hate is a universal thing. I felt in that moment, if we took it to the deepest level, we could have hit a vibration that could reach everybody: white, black, brown, of any walk or creed ( or) gender.”

In life, Majors has those gut- check experience­s regularly. “There’s many moments of, OK, you’ve got to do it now,” he says. That’s why rituals are important to him: During a portrait session, the photograph­er asks him to put his cup away and turn off his music, and Majors politely declines. “Those are my ways of coaching myself up and keeping myself focused.”

He cites a more personal example, when he found out he was going to have a daughter, who’s now 9. As a “relatively young” father, three years out of drama school, Majors recalls “running through Queens, talking to myself, ‘ What you going to do? How you going to do this? Can you do this?’ ”

Majors says his life changed immediatel­y: “It’s tectonic plates, isn’t it? Everything’s still there, but there’s more space, there’s more definition, there’s more distance between things. There’s a different perspectiv­e that comes. Whenever you’re responsibl­e for anything, but nothing more so than a child, your heart just changes. It has to. I don’t think you have a choice.”

Powell enjoyed seeing Majors’ big heart up close. “He cares so much,” he says. “We are just brothers for life.” And “Quantumani­a” director Peyton Reed calls Majors “a force” and says the actor has one thing in common with Kang: “He wants to win. He really sees every acting role as a challenge, and wants to get better and better.”

For Majors, playing a real- life figure like Brown or Nat Love in “The Harder They Fall” means taking extra responsibi­lity, because they’re “someone who walked this life. That individual actually touched other individual­s who may or may not be with us,” he says.

But digging into the lives of his fictional characters also is important for him. Filming “Creed III,” Majors explains, “I was a boxer for a year. So when those punches came, I knew how to avoid them, not because I’m acting like it. I’ve been hit a few times ... and I don’t want that to happen.”

As for playing the enigmatic Kang, he wants to be the part, not just act it.

“He’s a conqueror; ( so) do that,” he says, because audiences need “a real reference point, even if it is an olio of conquerors and dictators and kings and queens and villains of the past.

“I just don’t like to act. It’s hard for me. It makes my brain go crazy. I feel silly,” Majors adds with a laugh.

A conversati­on turns nerdy when discussing inspiratio­n vs. imaginatio­n, and giddy when talking about his interests. His smile lights up when he mentions “my muse.”

His daughter has “been the guiding light for me,” Majors says. “I’ve always wanted to do this, always wanted to be here to do this stuff. But she has altered my engine in a way that I would’ve wanted to, but I don’t think I would’ve been able to if I wasn’t thinking about that little girl and making her proud.”

 ?? PROVIDED BY ELI ADE ?? Jesse Brown ( Majors) and Tom Hudner ( Glen Powell) are ace Navy aviators and friends in the Korean War drama “Devotion.”
PROVIDED BY ELI ADE Jesse Brown ( Majors) and Tom Hudner ( Glen Powell) are ace Navy aviators and friends in the Korean War drama “Devotion.”
 ?? JOSH MORGAN/ USA TODAY ?? Busy actor Jonathan Majors says his daughter is his muse and his priority.
JOSH MORGAN/ USA TODAY Busy actor Jonathan Majors says his daughter is his muse and his priority.

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