24 Apr 15 Quotes That Remind Us, Viola Davis Has Always Been A Queen
Viola Davis is pure Black Girl Magic. The regal beauty and scene-stealing legend is never one to shy from speaking the truth and is beloved as much for her star turns as her empowering words of wisdom.
Regardless of if she is accepting an overdue award for her her acting skills, doing an interview with top-tier media or calling out the history of racism, sexism, and ageism in Hollywood, the “How to Get Away With Murder” icon never fails to represent for herself and Black women everywhere!
This diva has been unapologetically, rocking her crown for years and the world is finally paying its respect.
Here are 15 quotes that remind us that Viola Davis has always been a queen inspiring us to let our inner queens shine too.

Photo Credit: Featureflash Photo Agency/Shutterstock.com
“The one thing I feel is lacking in Hollywood today is an understanding of the beauty, the power, the sexuality, the uniqueness, the humor of being a regular Black woman.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: S_bukley/Shutterstock.com
“You can’t be hesitant about who you are.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: S_bukley/Shutterstock.com
“Do not live someone else’s life and someone else’s idea of what womanhood is. Womanhood is you. Womanhood is everything that’s inside of you.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: DFree/Shutterstock.com
“I don’t have any time to stay up all night worrying about what someone who doesn’t love me has to say about me.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock.com
“The only thing that separates women of color from anyone else is opportunity.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Featureflash Photo Agency/Shutterstock.com
“Even when I get the fried chicken special of the day, I have to dig into it like it’s filet mignon.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Joe Seer/Shutterstock.com
“You can’t shine if you have two lines in the background as a bus driver. You can only shine if you’re included in the narrative, and narratives start when you put pen to paper and you use your imagination. You just tell a story. That’s all you do. You tell a story. You don’t put any boundaries on it. It’s infinite and that’s the only way we can do what we do is that people use their imaginations so that we can be included in it.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Ga Fullner/Shutterstock.com
“I believe that the privilege of a lifetime is being who you are, truly being who you are. And I’ve spent far too long apologizing for that—my age, my color, my lack of classical beauty—that now at the age of, well, at the age of 46, I’m very proud to be Viola Davis, for whatever it’s worth.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Joe Seer/Shutterstock.com
“As Black women, we’re always given these seemingly devastating experiences—experiences that could absolutely break us. But what the caterpillar calls the end of the world, the master calls the butterfly. What we do as Black women is take the worst situations and create from that point.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock.com
“They say to serve is to love. I think to serve is to heal, too.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Featureflash Photo Agency/Shutterstock.com
“I see a lot of sexy women who are hard, cold, look like they have windswept hair and lip gloss and light makeup when they say it’s no makeup. I work out five days a week, and I’m still not a size 2. So I wanted to see a real woman on TV. I wanted to see who we are before we walk out the door in the morning and put on the mask of acceptability.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: S_bukle/Shutterstock.com
“Vanity destroys your work. That’s the one thing you have to let go of as an actor. I don’t care how sexy or beautiful any woman is. At the end of the day, she has to take her makeup off. At the end of the day, she’s more than just pretty.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Kathy Hutchins / Shutterstock.com
I would tell my younger self just be yourself—that who you are is good enough.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Featureflash Photo Agency/Shutterstock.com
“The internal sexism within womanhood is very predominant in Hollywood, because we all want to be successful. There’s a plug to it: You all have to be skinny! You all have to be pretty! You all have to be likable, because that’s the formula that works. On an executive level. On a power level. And it’s not always the same working with black people, because of the internalized racism. The colorism.” – Viola Davis

Photo Credit: Kathy Hutchins/Shutterstock.com
Sorry, the comment form is closed at this time.