Gina Carano On Pursuing Freedom In A World That Demands Conformity

Gina Carano On Pursuing Freedom In A World That Demands Conformity

Waking up. Speaking out. Getting canceled. Battling depression. Finding freedom. Reinventing herself. For Gina Carano, the past year has been a trial by fire.

A place that has reinvented itself over the past century seems like a fitting place to photograph Gina. In the heart of Coral Gables, Florida, we enter the Biltmore Hotel, an iconic oasis built in the Roaring Twenties. First a hotel, then a VA hospital during the Second World War, and later a university before being restored to its former glory as a hotel. It's seen golf tournaments and beauty pageants, mobsters and movie stars. Not only does it feel like you’re stepping back in time, but it feels like you’re in a far off country. The hotel staff has seen their fair share of celebrities, Dwayne Johnson being the latest. But as one friendly server admits as he brings a dirty martini into the dimly lit lower lounge Gina’s, their favorite.

Gina enters in a long black dress and red lips, a cross between a femme fatale of the silver screen and an American spy from a 1940s comic, the alluring kind soldiers painted on the wings of their fighter planes.

“I’ve never really fit into Hollywood,“ she says as she muses at the photos of old Hollywood legends grinning at her from their places on the walls. “I’ve had so many actors tell me, ‘Gina, you are too nice for this business!’ And I’m like, ‘I can be vicious, I promise!’” She laughs. “I know you can," I joke. "I’ve seen you in the ring.”

Gina rose to fame in the fighting world as a mixed martial artist with a 7-1 record. She was a pioneer in the brutal, mostly male-dominated sport, regarded by fans and the industry at large as “the face of women’s MMA," a title she rejected. Despite her MMA background, and what I doubt many people know, is that Gina in normal life is quite the introvert. She’s gentle and soft-spoken, although you wouldn’t think that from watching her on the screen.

When she retired from the ring, she set her sights on Hollywood, starring as the lead in Stephen, Soderbergh‘s action-thriller Haywire opposite Channing Tatum, Michael Douglas, Antonio Banderas, Michael Fassbender, and Ewan McGregor. She appeared in The Fast and the Furious, kicked (metal) ass and Ryan Reynolds' box office sensation Deadpool, and eventually landed the biggest job of her career that took her to a galaxy far, far away: the role of fan favorite Cara Dune in Disney’s The Mandalorian.

The first season was a massive success, scoring 1.34 billion minutes and viewing time. But as Gina's star was rising, she began to generate another kind of buzz. The kind that’s not often found in Hollywood.

She was honest.

To read Gina Carano's exclusive interview, purchase Evie's first limited edition print magazine here.