The ‘Thor: Love and Thunder’ actress admits she never imagined she’d become a movie star and seeing fans’ enthusiasm for her character is ‘beyond anything I could have ever dreamed that I would get to be a part of.’

AceShowbizTessa Thompson never imagined she’d become a movie star. Currently one of the most sought-after stars in Hollywood, the 38-year-old actress admitted to surpassing her own expectations in the film industry.

Speaking about the recent premiere of “Thor: Love and Thunder“, the Valkyrie depicter in the Marvel Cinematic Universe explained on the “Just for Variety” podcast, “I grew up in Los Angeles. I grew up in Hollywood on those very streets. I never thought I would be an actor.”

“There were no actors in my family. I didn’t know anybody on television or on a screen,” she elaborated further. “But my dad, sometimes, or my mom would take me as a treat to go to Mann’s Chinese or to the El Capitan Theatre across the street.”

“And so then to be in a film, to see children dressed as a character that I play in a film, to remember my childhood self walking on those streets in Hollywood, going to see a film and be transported by it, I felt really overwhelmed actually seeing all of the kids especially, but the adults, everyone in costume and how enthusiastic they were,” she added. “It’s like beyond anything I could have ever dreamed that I would get to be a part of.”

Meanwhile, Tessa recently revealed that Valkyrie’s sexuality was a “big topic of conversation” among the makers of “Thor: Love and Thunder”. The actress confirmed that her character’s sexuality was a major point of discussion before and during the shoot.

Tessa, who is attracted to both men and women, but chooses not to label herself bisexual, shared, “We talked about it a lot, it was big topic of conversation. Because I think rightfully there’s this real want in audiences to see characters be very clearly queer or LGBTQIA inside these spaces. And I think it’s hugely important to have representation.”

“And also, as humans, I think that we are not defined by our sexuality, and by who we love. And so sometimes I think to hang a narrative completely on that is a way of actually diminishing the humanity of the character,” she went on sharing her views. “Because you don’t allow them to be anything else.”

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