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Lupita Nyong'o Quotes - IQDb - Internet Quotes Database

Quotes from Lupita Nyong'o


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There's always a sense of newness with acting, because every role, you come to every role fresh.


When I was younger, I was almost too afraid to admit that I wanted to be an actor. I didn't know any successful actors in Kenya, so I felt like I could get away with going to college to study film more easily than I could with saying, 'I want to be an actor.' That's what I did.


My mother talked about the stories I used to spin as a child of three, before I started school. I would tell this story about what school I went to and what uniform I wore and who I talked to at lunchtime and what I ate, and my mother was like, 'This girl does not even go to school.'


Slavery is something that is all too often swept under the carpet.


Part of being an artist is that you are always concerned you don't have what it takes. It... keeps us honest.


I give myself homework when I have an audition. I give myself goals, and that's how I check how I'm doing. It can be something simple like 'listen,' or 'find your feet.' And then afterward it's an assessment, so in a way it's not about booking the job or not. It's about what I learned as an actor about that character.


Growing up, I had really bad skin. I had a skin disorder. Yes, I did. And my mother went to great lengths to try to find something to remedy it. I remember she took a trip to Madagascar and came back with all these alternative, medicinal herbs and stuff. They didn't smell so good, but I think they worked some magic.


I never, in my wildest dreams, could I have thought that the first role I get out of school would lead to an Oscar nomination.


Personally, I don't ever want to depend on makeup to feel beautiful.


Home is where my family is.


What's becoming very obvious to me is that fashion is art.


It's so funny, you go to acting school thinking you're going to learn how to be other people, but really it taught me how to be myself. Because it's in understanding yourself deeply that you can lend yourself to another person's circumstances and another person's experience.


I grew up in Nairobi, which is the capital of Kenya, so it's hustle and bustle, and there's always something going on.


I didn't know any successful actors in Kenya, so I felt like I could get away with going to college to study film more easily than I could with saying, 'I want to be an actor.' That's what I did.


As human beings, we aren't as individual as we'd like to believe we are. And I think that's what makes acting possible. Despite the fact that I have not experienced something, I have it in my human capacity to imagine it and to put myself in someone else's shoes, and to take someone else's circumstances personally.


In the madness, you have to find calm.


I have a very ostrich mentality. I feel like I have my head in the sand so no one can see me.


I come from a very close class. I lucked out because drama schools are often very competitive... I have fourteen classmates.


My father was a professor of political science and also a young politician fighting for democracy in Kenya, and when things got ugly, he went into political exile in Mexico. Then I moved back to Kenya shortly after I turned one, and I grew up in Kenya.


I thought I was going to school to be other people, but really, what I learned was to be myself - accepting myself, my strengths and weaknesses.