Top 44 Quotes & Sayings by Jessica Henwick

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an English actress Jessica Henwick.
Last updated on September 18, 2024.
Jessica Henwick

Jessica Yu-Li Henwick is a British actress and writer. She is known for her roles as Nymeria Sand in the HBO series Game of Thrones (2015–2017), X-wing pilot Jessika Pava in Star Wars: The Force Awakens (2015), the character Colleen Wing in Marvel's Netflix television series (2017–2018) and her role as Bugs in The Matrix Resurrections (2021).

I went snorkeling between tectonic plates in Iceland's Silfra fissure in the winter. You have to wear thermal layers and a wet suit and what's called a 'teddy-bear suit' so you don't die of hypothermia. My lips still went blue. That was an experience that I will carry with me for the rest of my life - so beautiful and so quiet.
I think, back in the day, the ultimate trifecta was considered 'Harry Potter,' 'Lord of the Rings,' and maybe 'Star Trek.'
'The Joy Luck Club' is not a perfect film. But, I distinctly remember watching it with my mom - and bursting into tears after the screening! — © Jessica Henwick
'The Joy Luck Club' is not a perfect film. But, I distinctly remember watching it with my mom - and bursting into tears after the screening!
I would love to see an Asian American superhero.
I've always made a point to play roles that aren't specified by their ethnicity.
I've shied away from playing Asian characters. if you look back, I'm playing characters that have no relevance to my ethnicity.
I learned more on 'Spirit Warriors' than I think I have on any other job.
Honestly, it was just tiring going straight from one show to the other. I filmed 'Iron Fist,' and then I had a two week break, and I went straight into 'The Defenders.'
I think I was just constantly seeking mental stimulation from anything I could get.
My agent and I are very clear on what kind of roles I'm interested in, and I don't want to perpetuate any stereotypes.
One stereotype I get a lot as an Asian actress is that you're playing the model minority - that Asians are the best, that they're perfect and positively moral all the time.
I was a real wild kid, spending much more time outdoors than I ever did indoors.
The seafood in England is sad. — © Jessica Henwick
The seafood in England is sad.
As a female actress - I've been doing this since I was a teenager - I often got approached with the ingenue roles: naive and wide-eyed and childlike.
As soon as you start looking into roles which are specifically Asian, Black, or Latina, you start looking at stereotypes. That's the issue minority actors face - it's not that we don't want to play our ethnicities; it's that, often, the role that's written for our ethnicity is a stereotype.
I have a T-shirt that says Game of Stones, which has the Flintstones dressed as 'Game of Thrones' characters on it.
I really struggle to fight and say lines at the same time. It's hard.
There's nowhere in London where you can use a whip without getting too much attention.
It's always fun playing a villain, I do have to say.
I've been extremely lucky in that I've been able to play roles that are not defined by their ethnicity. But that's not a common thing for people of ethnic minorities.
In Singapore, I'd spend the majority of my time at hawker centres because the food there is incredible.
When I came on to 'Iron Fist,' it was really Colleen Wing that sold it for me. I thought it was a good opportunity to see a really strong female Asian American.
I'm not a good katana user, bo staff user.
I turned down a lot of parts, and I ate a lot of canned tuna for dinner because I was just like, 'No, I don't want to do that; no, that's awful.' But sticking to my guns paid off, and I can look back now and be proud that I refused to take any stereotypical Asian parts.
What I'm known for - 'Game of Thrones,' 'Star Wars' - they film in England, but they're American productions. Because American productions are willing to see Asian actors.
I was a real overachiever.
It's very hard as an Asian actress to get seen for anything which isn't specifically Asian in England.
I don't want to perpetuate a stereotype. I don't want to take Asian representation backwards two steps. I don't want to be part of the problem.
When you use the whip, it makes the loudest crack. It's a very, very difficult weapon to use.
I was always going back and forth between Singapore and the U.K. — © Jessica Henwick
I was always going back and forth between Singapore and the U.K.
Asian food is amazing. I love a good Milo Dinosaur, bubble tea, and things like that.
The state of the industry is much like the state of politics. It's too middle-aged, white, and male.
I grew up in the English countryside, raising ducks and chickens.
The U.K. and the U.S. are in different places. Don't get me wrong - I am there for the U.K. industry, and I am always searching for more roles to play there, but it's sparse.
When I'm traveling, I like extremes. It's nice for me to go to Canada in the mountains where it's snowing or to Cambodia where it's stifling.
It's tough, because I come to Singapore, and people say I'm not Singaporean, and I go to England, and people say I'm not English. It's really hard to find your place, not just in the entertainment industry, but in life.
I want to continue to broaden expectations of what an Asian can be.
I had been in talks with Marvel prior to 'Iron Fist,' and I had researched all the prominent female roles that I was interested in. Colleen Wing came up really early in the process, and I had a strange feeling.
For me, I really liked the idea of playing a non-superhero on a superhero show.
I'm Asian, and I'm an actress, and I've been doing this since I was a teenager, so if anyone understands the conversation about misrepresentation and underrepresentation, it's me. I live and breathe it; this is my life.
I turned down a lot of work. I didn't want to ever feel defined by my ethnicity. — © Jessica Henwick
I turned down a lot of work. I didn't want to ever feel defined by my ethnicity.
Becoming an actress was just about being in the right place at the right time.
There's something about fantasy and sci-fi that seems more welcoming of different ethnicities.
In British TV, if there is an Asian character, there usually has to be a reason for them to be Asian, whereas in America, you have a lot more roles where the person just happens to be Asian.
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