Sun FM Gossip
Michelle Yeoh, the star of Everything Everywhere All at Once, has confirmed that there are no plans for a sequel to the Oscar-winning film. In an interview with Variety at the Cannes film festival, Yeoh stated that making a sequel would simply entail repeating the same story.
Everything Everywhere All at Once, a multiverse adventure, featured Yeoh alongside Ke Huy Quan, Stephanie Hsu, and Jamie Lee Curtis. The film achieved great success, winning the Best Picture award at the Academy Awards. Yeoh, Curtis, and Quan also received individual accolades for their performances, including Best Actress, Best Supporting Actress, and Best Supporting Actor, respectively.
While fans may be disappointed by the absence of a sequel, they can still look forward to seeing Yeoh in various upcoming projects. The actress will reunite with Quan and Hsu in the Disney+ series American Born Chinese, based on Gene Luen Yang's graphic novel. The series follows high-school student Jin as he becomes entangled in a battle with Chinese mythological gods after meeting an exchange student.
Yeoh will also reprise her role as Emperor Philippa Georgiou in the new Star Trek film, Section 31. Additionally, she has secured a significant role in the upcoming Wicked movies and will star alongside Kenneth Branagh in a new Agatha Christie adaptation titled A Haunting in Venice.
Yeoh expressed gratitude for receiving scripts that don't define characters based on their ethnicity. She stated, "The best thing that has happened is I receive a script that doesn't describe the character as a Chinese or Asian-looking person. We are actors. We are supposed to act. We are supposed to step into roles that are given to us and do our job as best we can. That, for me, is the biggest step forward."








