Viola Davis He did not interpret President Danielle Sutton as a “vision of hope”.
It G20 Star told the administration of the administration and the act of Blavity Trey Mangum that it is up to the public to see his character as a hopeful vision of the future, especially considering how the United States almost had his first black woman in vice president Kamala Harris.
Instead, he said he approached the role focusing on the seriousness of the situation: saving his family and the political leaders of a terrorist attack.
As Viola Davis prepared to play a president in “G20”
“The difficulty of playing a leader is that you have to negotiate. You have to negotiate your answers,” he said. “You are at the G20 summit. Suddenly there are explosions … Your kids are out. You have just dropped? You have just left, remove -you lay or anything and say,” I’m going to save my children, I will forget to be president “? Do you have what is in me, what is Danielle Sutton. I had to show people why she was chosen.”
Why does Viola Davis embrace the roles of action with the heart
He added that taking the heavy paper was a refreshing challenge.
“The action always challenges me in a good way … I love to fight scenes. Allow me to tell you something, I love to fight the scenes because I always tried to overcome the boys when he was younger,” he said. “It makes me feel again as a child.”
“But I think this (movie) has a heart. Always (must have) heart. It’s what makes people connect,” he continued. “You know, we find connection as people and as artists. No matter what we do. This must be the central focus in any movie, whether commercial or artistic of Uber. If there is no heart, there is no humanity and there is no reason to sit with these characters for two hours or an hour and 45 minutes or as long as it is.”
Look at the complete interviews with Davis and the Dalt Distribution. Also starring Anthony Anderson, Marsai Martin, Christopher Farrar and Antony Starr, G20 It is now transmitted on the main video.