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TV Star
Alaqua’s first acting job was as Maya Lopez in Marvel’s Hawkeye.
It was a warm spring day when Alaqua Cox got the text.
She was floating on a raft in a lake near her home in Wisconsin. A friend had sent her a social media post. It said Marvel was looking for a deaf Indigenous woman in her 20s. That woman would play a superhero named Maya Lopez in a new TV series, Hawkeye.
Alaqua was all those things Marvel was looking for: She’s deaf. She’s Indigenous. She’s a woman in her 20s.
But she wasn’t an actress.
Plus, the character wasn’t an amputee like Alaqua. (An amputee is someone who has had an arm or leg removed.)
So at first, Alaqua laughed it off. But then two more friends sent her the same post. After that, something changed. “Let’s go for it,” she remembers thinking. “Why not?”
Four years later, Alaqua is an actress—and not just any actress.
She’s making history as the first deaf and Indigenous Marvel superhero.
It was a spring day. Alaqua Cox got a text.
Alaqua lives in Wisconsin. She was on a raft in a lake near her home. A friend sent her a social media post. It said Marvel was making a new TV series, Hawkeye. It would be about a superhero named Maya Lopez. Marvel was looking for a deaf Indigenous woman in her 20s to play the superhero.
Alaqua is deaf. She’s Indigenous. She’s a woman in her 20s.
But she wasn’t an actress.
Plus, Alaqua is an amputee. (That’s someone who has had an arm or leg removed.) The character wasn’t.
Alaqua laughed it off. But two more friends sent her the same post. “Let’s go for it,” she thought. “Why not?”
Four years later, Alaqua is an actress. And she’s not just any actress.
She’s the first deaf and Indigenous Marvel superhero. She’s making history.
It was a warm spring day when Alaqua Cox got the text.
She was near her home in Wisconsin, floating on a raft in a lake. A friend had sent her a social media post, which said that Marvel was in search of a deaf Indigenous woman in her 20s. That woman would play a superhero named Maya Lopez in a new TV series called Hawkeye.
Alaqua was all those things Marvel was looking for: She’s deaf, Indigenous, and a woman in her 20s.
However, she wasn’t an actress.
In addition, the character wasn’t an amputee like Alaqua. (An amputee is someone who has had an arm or leg removed.)
So at first, Alaqua laughed it off. But then two other friends sent her the same post, and something changed. “Let’s go for it,” she remembers thinking. “Why not?”
Four years later, Alaqua is an actress—but she’s not just any actress.
She’s making history as the first deaf and Indigenous Marvel superhero.