Skip to content
  • Essence GU
  • Beautycon
  • NaturallyCurly
  • Afropunk
  • Essence Studios
  • Soko Mrkt
  • Ese Funds
  • Refinery29
  • 2025 ESSENCE Festival Of Culture
  • Celebrity
    • 2024 Sexiest Men Of the Moment
    • Of The Essence
    • Celebrity News
    • If Not For My Girls
    • The State Of R&B
    • Time Of Essence
  • Fashion
    • 2024 ESSENCE FASHION HOUSE
    • SSENSE X ESSENCE
    • 2023 Best In Black Fashion Awards
    • Red Carpet
    • Fashion News
    • Accessories
  • Beauty
    • 2025 Best In Beauty Awards
    • Skin
    • Makeup
    • Nails
    • In The Chair
    • Couple-Care
    • Hair
      • Hair News
      • Natural
      • Relaxed
      • Transitioning
      • Weave
      • 4C
  • Lifestyle
    • 2024 Travel Awards
    • Love
    • Parenting
    • Relationships
    • Bridal Bliss
    • Lifestyle News
    • Health & Wellness
    • ESSENCE Eats
    • Travel
    • Food & Drink
  • Entrepreneurship
    • 2024 Power 40
    • Money & Career
    • SOKO MRKT
  • News
    • State of the People 
    • 2025 Black Futures
    • Latest News
    • 2024 HBCU X ESSENCE
    • Paint The Polls Black
    • Culture
    • Politics
  • Shopping
    • 2024 Holiday Gift Guide
  • Video
  • Events
    • 2025 Hollywood House
    • 2025 Black Women In Hollywood
    • 2024 ESSENCE Fashion House
    • 2024 ESSENCE Film Festival
    • 2023 Wellness House
  • Subscribe
    • Magazine
    • Newsletter
Home • Entertainment

Regé Jean-Page Credits Code-Switching With Making Him A Great Actor

The English actor says bending himself to fit in white spaces gave him the skills to become the Duke of Hastings.
Regé Jean-Page Credits Code-Switching With Making Him A Great Actor
By Rivea Ruff · Updated September 8, 2021

Regé Jean-Page has exploded as Hollywood’s new it-guy in the nine months since Bridgerton’s Christmas 2020 premiere on Netflix, where his turn as the smoldering Duke of Hastings solidified him as both a household name and a housewife’s fantasy.

Now, in the latest edition of British GQ, Jean-Page reveals that his upbringing in Zimbabwe and later as an immigrant to the UK provided him with the skills to make him a standout star on the hit show.

“It was very valuable as an artist to grow up outside one of the centers of the world,” he told the magazine, reflecting on growing up with only two television stations that played a near-random mishmash of European sports and soap operas.

Regé Jean-Page Credits Code-Switching With Making Him A Great Actor

Always an inquisitive child bursting with personality, Jean-Page was in for a culture shock when he relocated to London in his teens to attend high school.

“I was a loud kid,” he tells GQ. “So I’ve always been expressive and I would think to myself, ‘Why am I weird once I’ve come to the UK? What’s different about me?’”

Instead of accepting his status as a societal outcast, Jean-Page dissected what was perceived as odd about him in his new environment and worked to adapt and mask it as needed to grant him acceptance in different rooms.

Article continues after video.

“If I was this guy, I’d get access here; if I was this guy, people will accept me in this way… It’s code-switching, but then taken into subcultures.”

That skill, all too familiar for many African Americans, gave him the ability to try on many hats of personality. Something that, alongside his heart-throbbingly good looks, now has Hollywood knocking down his door with roles in the upcoming Netflix mega-budget thriller “The Gray Man,” an upcoming “Dungeons & Dragons” film, and even whispering about him as the new James Bond — another role not traditionally viewed as a station for a Black actor.

Regé Jean-Page Credits Code-Switching With Making Him A Great Actor
BRIDGERTON (L to R) ADJOA ANDOH as LADY DANBURY and REGƒ-JEAN PAGE as SIMON BASSET in episode 108 of BRIDGERTON Cr. LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX © 2020

One thing he admired about becoming Hastings on Bridgerton was the manner in which the portrayal was often “literally lifting people into a position of aspiration, power, possibility, and agency that they’ve not been afforded before.”

But Jean-Page is quick to point out that simply because we haven’t seen Black people in these roles on screen, doesn’t mean that they weren’t in these positions in real life. Portrayals of our people in positions of power and status in history is not the pandering move some would like to make it seem. It’s a light course correction for a history of erasure. 

“The reason you think history is white is because you’ve been lied to. It’s not that we’re being politically correct. It’s that we’ve been, very deliberately, politically incorrect.”

TOPICS:  Bridgerton

Read More

Saul Williams On The Resonance Of ‘Sinners,’ And How History Helped Him Embody The Black Preacher
Entertainment
Saul Williams On The Resonance Of ‘Sinners,’ And How His...
Channeling Nostalgia With This Celebrity Look: Janet Jackson
Fashion
Channeling Nostalgia With This Celebrity Look: Janet Jackson
In The Chair With: Vernon François
Beauty
In The Chair With: Vernon François
Denim Tears Honors Bodega Culture With New "Sweet Corner" Drop
Fashion
Denim Tears Honors Bodega Culture With New "Sweet Corner" Drop
Spring Style Outfit Inspiration Good Enough To Copy
Shop
Spring Style Outfit Inspiration Good Enough To Copy
COMPANY INFORMATION
  • Our Company
  • Customer Service
  • Essence Ventures
  • Change Your Address
  • Contact Us
  • Job Opportunities
  • Internships
  • Media Kit
  • tag
SUBSCRIBE
  • Newsletters
  • Give a Gift of ESSENCE
  • Print & Digital App
FOLLOW US
MORE ON ESSENCE
  • Home
  • Love
  • Celebrity
  • Beauty
  • Hair
  • Fashion
  • ESSENCE Festival of Culture

ESSENCE.com is part of ESSENCE Communications, Inc.

Essence may receive compensation for some links to products and services on this website. Offers may be subject to change without notice.

©2024 ESSENCE Communications Inc. All Rights Reserved. | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Essence.com Advertising Terms

Get The ESSENCE Newsletter and
Special Offers delivered to your inbox

By clicking Sign Up, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

Get The ESSENCE Magazine
by subscribing below
subscribe now
  • 2025 ESSENCE Festival Of Culture
  • Celebrity
    • 2024 Sexiest Men Of the Moment
    • Of The Essence
    • Celebrity News
    • If Not For My Girls
    • The State Of R&B
    • Time Of Essence
  • Fashion
    • 2024 ESSENCE FASHION HOUSE
    • SSENSE X ESSENCE
    • 2023 Best In Black Fashion Awards
    • Red Carpet
    • Fashion News
    • Accessories
  • Beauty
    • 2025 Best In Beauty Awards
    • Skin
    • Makeup
    • Nails
    • In The Chair
    • Couple-Care
    • Hair
  • Lifestyle
    • 2024 Travel Awards
    • Love
    • Parenting
    • Relationships
    • Bridal Bliss
    • Lifestyle News
    • Health & Wellness
    • ESSENCE Eats
    • Travel
    • Food & Drink
  • Entrepreneurship
    • 2024 Power 40
    • Money & Career
    • SOKO MRKT
  • News
    • State of the People 
    • 2025 Black Futures
    • Latest News
    • 2024 HBCU X ESSENCE
    • Paint The Polls Black
    • Culture
    • Politics
  • Shopping
    • 2024 Holiday Gift Guide
  • Video
  • Events
    • 2025 Hollywood House
    • 2025 Black Women In Hollywood
    • 2024 ESSENCE Fashion House
    • 2024 ESSENCE Film Festival
    • 2023 Wellness House
  • Subscribe
    • Magazine
    • Newsletter
  • Entertainment
    • Of The Essence
    • Celebrity News
    • If not for my Girls
    • The State of R&B
  • Black Women In
    • Girls United Beautiful Possibilities
    • 2025 Best in Beauty Awards
    • Skin
    • Makeup
    • Nails
    • Hair
  • Style
    • Love
    • Parenting
    • Relationships
    • Bridal Bliss
    • Lifestyle News
    • Health and Wellness
    • Travel
    • Food and Drink
  • Culture
    • 2023 BEST IN BLACK FASHION AWARDS
    • 2024 ESSENCE FASHION HOUSE
    • Red Carpet
    • Fashion News
    • Accessories
  • Business
    • Power 40
  • Festival
    • Latest News
    • Paint the Polls Black
    • Culture
    • Politics
  • Sign In
  • Subscribe
    • MAGAZINE
    • NEWSLETTER
  • Search
  • Login
  • Subscribe
    • Magazine
    • Newsletter
  • Search

WHERE BLACK CULTURE, COMMUNITY AND CONSCIOUSNESS MEET

Sign up for ESSENCE Newsletters to see more of Black Women’s Boundlessness

Your email is required.
Your email is in invalid format.
Confirm email is required.
Email did not match.
Select the newsletters you'd like to receive:
Please select at least one option.
Essence

Thank you for subscribing. Unlock VIP access! Join our SMS list for exclusive offers you won’t find anywhere else.

Your phone number is required
Please enter a new one and try again.
Invalid phone number
Please enter a new one and try again.