BLACK PANTHER Star Lupita Nyong'o On Movie Offers Following Oscar Win: "This Time You’re On A Slave Ship!"

BLACK PANTHER Star Lupita Nyong'o On Movie Offers Following Oscar Win: "This Time You’re On A Slave Ship!"

Lupita Nyong'o has proven herself as a highly versatile actress over the years, but it seems Hollywood attempted to typecast her following her Academy Award win for 12 Years a Slave...

By MarkCassidy - Nov 24, 2025 10:11 PM EST
Filed Under: Black Panther

Lupita Nyong'o, who plays Nakia in the Marvel Cinematic Universe, has more than proven her versatility over the years with memorable roles in the likes of Us, Little Monsters, Queen of Katwe, Star Wars: The Force Awakens, and many more, but the actress has now revealed that there was an attempt to typecast her following her Oscar win.

Nyong'o blasted onto the scene with Steve McQueen's powerful 2013 film 12 Years a Slave, winning a Best Supporting Actress Academy Award for her feature debut as Patsey. 

“My winning an Academy Award came at the very start of my career,” Nyong’o said during an interview with CNN Africa. “It was for the first film I had ever done. So, it really did set the paces for everything I’ve done since. What’s very interesting is that after I won the Academy Award, you’d think like, ‘Oh, I’m going to get the lead roles here and there.’ But it’s ‘Oh, Lupita. We’d like you to do another movie where you’re a slave but this time you’re on a slave ship.’ Those are the kinds of offers [I was getting] in the months after winning my Academy Award.”

Typecasting can be an easy trap to fall into for any actor, as studios will often attempt to capitalize on the success of a major hit by... replicating everything that made it a hit.

“It was a very tender time,” she continued. “There is an expectation for you and your career. There were think pieces about is this the beginning or the end of this African woman’s career? I had to deafen myself to all those pontificators because at the end of the day I am not a theory. I am an actual person. I like to be a joyful warrior for changing the paradigms of what it means to be African. If that means I work one less job a year to ensure that I am not perpetuating these stereotypes that are expected of people from my content then let me do that.”

While speaking about The Wild Robot at a BFI London Film Festival event last year, Nyong’o was shown a clip from Black Panther featuring Nakia and Chadwick Boseman’s T’Challa, and became emotional when thinking about her late friend.

“The grief is the love, and no place to put it,” she said. “No, no… It’s fine. I don’t want to run away from the tears or the grief. You just live with it. That experience will never be separate from the love that was formed. I watch this clip and I’m filled with grief and I don’t know whether I’ll ever be done shedding my tears from losing my friend. But I’m like, we get to see him alive. And that’s so wonderful.”

Nyong'o went on to recall the incredibly positive response to the movie, while admitting that the studio did have some reservations.

“There was a lot of fear, definitely from the executives… Marvel was shaking a little bit in their boots!” she laughed, adding, “We were too because we were like, we only get to do this once. And we gotta do it right. But ultimately, it totally shattered the myth that Black doesn’t sell.”

Black Panther: Wakanda Forever didn't quite reach the same heights as the original, but was still a big hit.

We're not sure if Nakia will be a part of the next Avengers movies, but Nyong'o is certain to reprise the role for Ryan Coogler's Black Panther 3.

About The Author:
MarkCassidy
Member Since 11/9/2008
Mark Cassidy is a writer, photographer, amateur filmmaker, and Rotten Tomatoes-approved critic from Dublin, Ireland.
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TheLobster
TheLobster - 11/24/2025, 10:50 PM
She’s an incredible actor so I’m glad she didn’t allow herself to get pigeonholed.
EarlChai
EarlChai - 11/30/2025, 8:47 PM
@Apophis71 - Just once I want to see a producer say “I’m going to take the $100 million that we’d use to make one blockbuster and instead give it to ten creative directors to make me ten mid-budget $10 million movies. Surely ONE of them will be good and start a new franchise.”
EarlChai
EarlChai - 11/24/2025, 10:53 PM
I’m increasingly convinced that Hollywood producers are some of the least-creative people on the planet.
Apophis71
Apophis71 - 11/25/2025, 6:17 AM
@EarlChai - Certainly the Exec levels ones who mostly drive the decisions of what is made seem to mostly not be, caring less about what would be good to do and where someone could shine in a role and more over-thinking what will sell well and 'safe' casting choices so you get all the typecasting, formula's and a glut of a specific type of film after one of that type does well.

There are however some more creative producers that are all about pushing for ideas long on their wish list to adapt or realy get a good original pitch when they see them but those TEND to be the ones who worked their way up to producer from writer thru director first with a string of hits giving them a lot more Exec like control/power. Even those however still have to convince the playing it safe fools to get the money unless self funding a project.
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 11/25/2025, 10:47 PM
@soberchimera - their comment isn't negating the success. The comments from the likes of the Ike's do that. There's still a stigma to this day. Then you can add in any time it's a black lead it's woke and/or DEI
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 11/25/2025, 10:58 PM
@ShimmyShimmyYA - man... people who weren't there commenting lol boomerang and a lot of other black led movies had a hard time being made. I literally was just reading a well known black screenwriter talk about this.

Every year it feels like they have to fight the same battle.

Blade had a hard time being made too
soberchimera
soberchimera - 11/24/2025, 11:03 PM
And we gotta do it right. But ultimately, it totally shattered the myth that Black doesn’t sell.
Well yeah….if you completely ignore the Will Smith, Eddie Murphy, and Blade movies that came out before BP.
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 11/25/2025, 12:09 AM
@soberchimera - well yeah. I guess if you ignore the likes of the Ike's of the world literally saying what she said. And black panther wouldn't of ever got made had he still been there
MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 11/25/2025, 12:10 AM
But I guess that one black friend counts
ShimmyShimmyYA
ShimmyShimmyYA - 11/25/2025, 7:54 AM
@MyCoolYoung - him referencing Eddie but not acknowledging that one of his best boomerang has this same narrative hanging over it is funny
soberchimera
soberchimera - 11/25/2025, 11:03 AM
@MyCoolYoung - Ok? That in no way, shape, or form negates the success or existence of black led blockbuster films prior to 2018.
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DocSpock
DocSpock - 11/24/2025, 11:14 PM

She is an outstanding actress. I hate when they mention that horrible Star Wars move. That crap wasn't her fault.

And Mark called her an actress instead of actor. I enjoyed that.



ModHaterSLADE
ModHaterSLADE - 11/24/2025, 11:18 PM
Well, good for her for still getting better roles; Hollywood likes to typecast all the time, in large part due to a lack of creativity.
JackDeth
JackDeth - 11/24/2025, 11:33 PM
I think most Hollywood producers only look at past numbers and don't take the ever-shifting cultural landscape into account at all. They look at pre-pandemic numbers and think they will match up with post-pandemic numbers in the same circumstances, they look at poorly-written films with black leads and think all movies with black leads will do the same numbers, they look at poorly-written films with female leads and think all films with female leads will do the same numbers, and they look at the possibility of genre films succeeding without taking into consideration the current popularity of the genre. Long story short, they don't know what makes money and what doesn't.
TheVisionary25
TheVisionary25 - 11/24/2025, 11:35 PM
Good on Lupita for not yielding to Hollywood’s desire to typecast or stereotype her even if it means she has had to reject projects…

Looking at her body of work thus far , she actually hasn’t done many films & such but they have been well received and she’s gotten acclaim for the most part.

Anyway , I of course have liked her as Nakia in the BP films but also enjoyed her as Maz Kanata in the sequel trilogy aswell!!.

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MyCoolYoung
MyCoolYoung - 11/25/2025, 12:19 AM
"Black Panther: Wakanda Forever didn't quite reach the same heights as the original but was still a big hit."

The movie was almost 3 hours long, dealt with grief in a real way, came at the tail end of COVID and the forever-changed box office landscape, and was released in China 3 months after its original release. I think, all things considered, it was just as big a hit, even if I do understand that, number for number, it didn't.

Of course im being purposely obtuse Ror 🤣
Forthas
Forthas - 11/25/2025, 12:30 AM
An absolute beauty and class act. Glad to see her represent with dignity!


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WAKANDA FOREVER!!!!!!
Matchesz
Matchesz - 11/25/2025, 12:51 AM
@Forthas - She was shaking that thang in the third gif
AgentofSH1ELD
AgentofSH1ELD - 11/25/2025, 7:07 AM
@Forthas - can anyone explain the whole body modification thing? Like the dude with the tea saucer in his lip
Forthas
Forthas - 11/25/2025, 11:42 AM
@AgentofSH1ELD -

African scarification is the practice of creating permanent scars on the skin for cultural, social, or medical reasons. Historically, it served to denote ethnic identity, social status, and maturity, with some cultures believing scars offered protection from disease. Methods involve cutting or skinning the skin and sometimes rubbing in ink or other materials to create a specific visual outcome. Body modification procedure that offered a sculptural quality to the skin. Sometimes a colored pigment was added to the incisions forming a kind of tattoo, sometimes not. Because there were a plethora of meanings that were embodied within the sacred art forms of the skin, African body art moved far beyond the Western construct of “art” itself. For it represented a much wider corpus of knowledge and expression.
ShimmyShimmyYA
ShimmyShimmyYA - 11/25/2025, 4:41 PM
@ObserverIO - I think you’re being a little disingenuous . If it was a movie about a historic African kingdom that’s historical and not what she was talking about

She’s specifically talking about 1 type of movie we don’t have to play dumb
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/25/2025, 5:01 PM
@ShimmyShimmyYA - I just assumed that when she was talking about not wanting to be typecast because of her ethnicity she meant in general. I'm still not certain she just meant slave movies like you say, but if that's what she did mean then fair enough.

Otherwise I think my advice is pretty good and would give it to anyone who doesn't wanna be pigeonholed as the black-specific character. Or to let any one part of them define the roles they get skin color, gender, height, weight, age, sexuality, anything.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/25/2025, 5:08 AM
If you don't want to perpetuate a stereotype and want to change the paradigm of what it means to be an African, then maybe don't make being an African your whole identity and doing roles that are primarily about you being black.
ObserverIO
ObserverIO - 11/25/2025, 5:10 AM
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Vigor
Vigor - 11/25/2025, 5:21 AM
@ObserverIO - absolutely terrible take. Yes even worse than your other terrible takes

She explicitly states here she avoids roles about being typecast.
MisterBones
MisterBones - 11/25/2025, 5:54 AM
Her performance in Us is one of the more criminally underrated ones. I thought she deserved some nominations for that one. It proved she’s prime leading lady material.
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AgentofSH1ELD
AgentofSH1ELD - 11/25/2025, 7:05 AM
Thats the shit that kills me about liberal ass hollywood. Great actor and the only thing they can see is that she is black and should be playing a slave. like wtf. These are the same people that spend millions of dollars to tell you who you should vote for to advance their own agenda. Of course its OK though.
Not making it too political, but only one side of the circus runs to skin color before anything else.
Like I get it she is black and apparently only black people can portray slaves-- err American Slaves. Everyone forgets all the others.
If I were a black actor Id be damned if I ever took a role because I was typecast. We need a black person! This is where Morgan Freeman wins.
Wahhvacado
Wahhvacado - 11/25/2025, 9:51 AM
She is insanely talented and one of the most beautiful people on the planet

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