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Xochitl Gomez had puffed up cheeks, freshly swollen from having her wisdom teeth extracted, when she and her mom drove hours to a Target earlier this spring so the teenage actor could take stock of an impressive career first under fluorescent lighting.
âI was like, âOh my god, Iâm an action figure!â and within two minutes, I just started crying,â Gomez says. âMy hope is for kids to see themselves in me as an action figure. Something about that is pretty crazy and itâs pretty cool and itâs not lost on me how significant it is. I remember having it in my hand and freaking out â I was just so proud to have her.â
The feat came earlier this year after she joined the Marvel Cinematic Universe with her debut as queer Latina superhero America Chavez in the Benedict Cumberbatch-led âDoctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness.â Itâs a role she didnât think was in her cards. When her mom put her in martial arts classes years ago to add action skills to her resume, Gomez scoffed: âI always told her, âIâm never going to be a superhero, Iâm never going to be in a blockbuster. This is just never going to happen. Itâs never gonna be me.â ... I was so wrong. Itâs just so crazy how much it has changed since then.
âBeing in literally one of the biggest franchises of all time, itâs honestly a dream come true. And with me playing someone queer and Latina in a superhero film, my hope is that kind of representation is going to be normalized. A part of it was a little intimidating, just because I knew there was going to be a lot of pressure on being capitalized as like, âYou are the next big thingâ or âYou are the Latino superhero!â Iâm not the first and Iâm not going to be the last.â
Before joining the film, which has grossed more than $900 million worldwide since its May release, Gomez had mostly appeared in small roles in short films and TV shows such as âGentefiedâ and âRavenâs Homeâ â until getting her big break in 2020 by starring in another fictional universe with a loyal following: âThe Baby-Sitters Club.â
Gomez reflects fondly on her brief time playing Dawn Schafer on Netflixâs adaptation of the beloved book series. But the experience of reinventing the character, who is blond and blue-eyed in the books, opened Gomezâs eyes to the power of what she represented â and the backlash it could provoke.
âThat role meant everything to me,â she says. âIt was something all five of us girls went into together. All of us not really having that big of a credit, weâre all kind of at the same level and doing interviews for the first time, that kind of stuff. And it was just so great that they made Dawn Latina. But I wasnât really expecting all the backlash. It was just kind of crazy to me. I was like, âWe should be celebrating this and instead Iâm getting hate for it?â I remember sitting there and just reading it all. It was just nonstop.â
So how did she deal with it?
âIâll tell you how I dealt with it: I created an account on Twitter and Facebook and I made this [fictional personâs] name like Sarah Parker. I just started typing away, being like: âThis is insane. We should be celebrating this moment.â I was saying that kind of stuff just to make myself feel like there was someone advocating for me. I just needed to have a voice, someone whoâs standing up for me.â
Speaking over Zoom from her home in Echo Park, the 16-year-old shares that sheâs been in student mode in between projects. Sheâs currently reading âAnimal Farmâ as part of her independent study curriculum: âItâs intense.â She becomes more animated when the conversation turns to what she loves about performing.
âI love developing a character and discovering new parts of a character,â she says. âThe kind of projects that Iâve been leaning towards are those kind of independent projects. I just love stories that have layers and characters that surprise you with something completely unexpected and characters that break stereotypes. Iâve been scouted for characters that arenât necessarily like Latino-coded and itâs amazing getting to see more progressive casting that isnât just solely interested in the fact that Iâm a Latina.â
She says she hopes to have the same diversity of projects in her career as Scarlett Johansson or Sebastian Stan.
âTheyâve been in bigger-budget projects, but theyâve also managed to do smaller indie projects too,â she says. âIâd like to follow in those footsteps ... I feel like maybe a period movie could be cool.â
As a precocious child with busy parents â her father works in construction, while her mom is a Hollywood set decorator â Gomezâs energy found an outlet in musical theater beginning at age 5. She appeared in 22 full-length musical productions, beginning with âThe Little Mermaidâ as one of Arielâs sisters, and found a calling as a performer. She began doing on-camera work at age 10.
âA part of me misses musical theater so much,â she says. âAnd I think I would do it again in a heartbeat. But I donât know. I just saw [âStranger Thingsâ] Gaten Matarazzo in âDear Evan Hansenâ and I was talking to him and I was like, âYo, how was it?â He was like, âIt just takes a lot of time and thereâs a lot of energy that you have to devote to it.â I remember having to spend hours rehearsing and doing vocal work. And maintaining that kind of stage energy for two, three hours a night is a lot of work. So, if anything, Iâd probably do an on-screen adaptation of a musical for now.â
Gomezâs Hollywood ambitions extend behind the camera too. Sheâs been building her confidence in the director space by co-directing music videos â she recently completed âRunner Upâ from artist GiaNina Paolantonio, and has plans to begin work on another soon.
The goal, she says, is âbeing in charge of how the stories and the point of views are shaped,â including, she hopes, a short film or even an indie feature.
âThereâs so much more I still want to do,â Gomez says. âActions speak louder than words and just doing it is just how you do it. Nothing is gonna stop you unless youâre stopping yourself. ... Itâs a lot because right now Iâm like, literally behind at school. Iâm like, âI gotta get my priorities [straight],â like two weeks of schoolwork done.â
That doesnât mean homework is her only priority, though. After heading to the White House for a Hispanic Heritage Month event this fall, sheâs lined up the sci-fi thriller âUrsa Major,â where sheâll star opposite Mary Elizabeth Winstead in the tale of a mother and daughter fighting for survival on an Earth-like planet. Production will begin next year in British Columbia: âI love it up there,â she says. âThereâs a few âBaby-Sitters Clubâ friends I have up there. And Iâll be able to spend my weekends having fun, going bowling and stuff, like we used to.â
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.