Djimon Hounsou Opens Up About Feeling Undervalued in Hollywood: 'I'm Still Battling to Find Financial Stability

The acclaimed actor shares his ongoing frustration with being overlooked in the industry. "I’m still struggling to try to make a dollar!" Hounsou revealed in an interview with The Guardian.

Djimon Hounsou Opens Up About Feeling Undervalued in Hollywood: 'I'm Still Battling to Find Financial Stability

The acclaimed actor shares his ongoing frustration with being overlooked in the industry. "I’m still struggling to try to make a dollar!" Hounsou revealed in an interview with The Guardian.

Entertainment
September 16, 2024
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Djimon Hounsou claims he is still being overlooked in Hollywood. "I'm still struggling to try to make a dollar!" the Beninese-American actor expressed in an interview with the Guardian. "I've come up in the business with some people who are absolutely well off and have very few accolades compared to me. So I feel tremendously cheated, both in terms of finances and workload."

Hounsou made his film debut over 30 years ago in the Sandra Bernhard-led comedy Without You I'm Nothing. Since then, the 58-year-old has appeared in numerous prestigious and critically acclaimed projects, including Steven Spielberg's Amistad, Ridley Scott's Gladiator, and Edward Zwick's Blood Diamond, which earned him a Best Supporting Actor nomination at the 79th Academy Awards.

“I’ve gone to studios for meetings and they’re like: ‘Wow, we felt like you just got off the boat and then went back [after [Amistad],” he explained. We didn’t know you were here as a true actor.’ When you hear things like that, you can see that some people’s vision of you, or what you represent, is very limiting. But it is what it is. It’s up to me to redeem that.”

Hounsou has appeared in numerous blockbusters, including Marvel's Guardians of the Galaxy and Captain America, the Fast and Furious franchise, A Quiet Place II, and most recently, Shazam! Fury of the Gods, which premiered in US theaters on Friday.

He says he still has “to prove why I need to get paid.”

“They always come at me with a complete low ball: ‘We only have this much for the role, but we love you so much and we really think you can bring so much’… Film after film, it’s a struggle,” he explained. “I have yet to meet the film that paid me fairly.”

Although Hollywood still has a long way to go in terms of pay equity and representation, Honsou acknowledges that there has been improvement over the years. He cites his role in the Shazam franchise, which was significantly expanded in the newly released sequel.

“Out of them all, the DC universe has a level of respect,” says Honsou, who plays The Wizard. “There wasn’t much to the role at first and I did it and it was fun. But the second time around it was a little more respectful.”

He continued: “From time to time, they themselves make the point of saying: ‘We should give him more, he’s a little underappreciated.’ I think they recognise that themselves. Hey, it’s the struggle I have to overcome!”

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