Auli’i Cravalho has no patience with those making fun of Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo’s relationship evil Press tour.
“Being a theater kid was very emotional,” Cravalho Moana star and broadway actress, told vanity fair This week.
as evilThe epic media tour ended last week, with many netizens calling attention to the emotional responses from the show’s two stars, Erivo and Grande, mocking the two actresses for their constant stream of drama and drama about their experiences making the film.
“I need people to understand what it was like to be a theater kid,” Cravalho said. “Stop going behind my back on my daughters Ariana and Cynthia. You know me? You have no idea what it’s like to work on a movie for so long. It’s two hours and forty minutes. If you’re working with someone To have people work together for so long without crying, and the fact that you’re all theater kids and you’re singing live… I’m so passionate about it.
Elsewhere in the interview, the actress talked about her return to Disney Moana Universe, noting that it had been 10 years since she started working on her first film. “I absolutely love this role,” she said. “Her influence continues to amaze me.
Carvalho and Dwayne Johnson reprise their roles as Polynesian wayfinder and demigod Maui in the Disney sequel. “If our last movie was about connecting to the past, this movie is about connecting to the future,” the Hawaiian told us hollywood reporter exist moana 2Premiered in London last weekend. “We have characters in certain situations that push this further. We have Moana’s sister Simia, who is very effective in making our hearts long for her. Whether it’s to stay at home with her or respond to the ancestors’ call?
arrive vanity fairCravalo also noted that she re-recorded the first film in Olelo Hawaiian, a dying native Hawaiian language.
“It has been forbidden to talk about this sentence for generations, and now [Moana] was used as a course to help revitalize the language,” Cravalho said. “Moana It is also one of the most widely translated Disney films, including into Aboriginal languages such as Tere’o Māori, Samoan, Tahitian and Olelo Hawaiian. So she means a lot to me, but she also means a lot to a lot of other people.