Dakota Johnson recently revealed she lost an acting job because her polite attempt to introduce herself at an audition was seen as “cocky” and “pompous.” The Fifty Shades of Grey and Splitsville actress, who is 35, shared this experience during an interview, explaining that it happened during a callback, meaning she had already made it to the second round of auditions.
Johnson described what happened: “I had an audition once, and it was a callback, and I went into the room, and I shook everyone’s hand and introduced myself.” According to The Hollywood Reporter, she then performed her scene and left, expecting normal feedback on her acting. Instead, she was told something very different.
“The feedback I got [afterward] was that because I had gone and introduced myself and shook everyone’s hand, that I was ‘pompous,’ that I was ‘schmoozing’ and that I was full of myself.” Johnson summed up her reaction: “And I was like, ‘Well, what?’ I didn’t get the job because they said that I was ‘cocky.’ But I just had manners. It was pretty crazy.”
Basic politeness cost her the role, but Johnson has since built her career on her own terms
Johnson is currently promoting the UK release of her new film, Splitsville, which first premiered at the Cannes Film Festival last year. This indie comedy is a project she not only stars in but also produced through TeaTime Pictures, the production company she co-founded with Ro Donnelly. The film also stars Adria Arjona, Kyle Marvin, and director Michael Angelo Covino, who co-wrote the film with Marvin. If you’re in the US, the film is available to stream on Hulu.
Splitsville explores the chaos that follows a divorce announcement, focusing on two couples and the consequences of an open marriage. Critics have praised it, with one review calling it “the rare indie comedy in which style matters as much as substance.” This comes at a time when Hollywood’s relationship with political power is under scrutiny, making independent productions like this one all the more significant.
Johnson launched TeaTime Pictures because she wanted “more from this industry” and “more from my experience as an artist.” She also explained, “I felt so thirsty for more conversation and more creativity and more collaboration.”
Part of this came from a frustrating experience she had faced more than once, showing up to a film premiere and seeing the finished product for the first time, only to think, “Woah. That is not what I thought we were making.” She called that “such a weird thing to do.”
Through TeaTime Pictures, Johnson focuses on keeping a positive environment on set. She described their approach as “vibe based. Energy based. It’s very much a no ahole policy.” She also makes sure everyone on the crew understands what they are making, so that each person feels involved in the project.
Her focus on artist-first values reflects a broader conversation about putting people’s concerns ahead of industry interests that is playing out in many fields right now. Johnson acknowledged that working in film is tough, saying “the hours are long and it’s gruelling. It’s not comfortable. It’s not nice.”
But she believes that “when you feel like you’re genuinely invested in something, people are happier and they work better.” It is a clear shift from the kind of dismissive treatment she experienced early in her career during that audition.
Published: Mar 31, 2026 05:45 pm