I actually learned about Cyborg through the cartoon shows, and I think that’s how most people learn about Cyborg. Ray Fisher Read Quote
Sometimes you’re talking to a tennis ball on a stick, and you have to imagine what is supposed to be there and trust that the editors and the animators are going to make it all convincing to the audience. You have to pull a lot from within. Ray Fisher Read Quote
Those early Cyborg comics were very politically charged, and he was very aware of being a black superhero. Ray Fisher Read Quote
I was really able to integrate into a diverse school and learn to get along with all different types of people. Ray Fisher Read Quote
I’ve had lots of fans who come out and say, ‘Listen, I can relate to Cyborg because I lost a limb,’ or ‘I have this cochlear implant.’ It’s one of those things when you actually start seeing it, when you actually start hearing about it, that made Cyborg more relevant to me than I think he ever had been up until that point. Ray Fisher Read Quote
The world is yearning for more inclusion, because we’re not living in 1930 where we’ve got X amount of superheroes and X amount of representation. Ray Fisher Read Quote
I was huge fan of most of the animated series growing up in the golden era of ’90s superhero animation. I didn’t care who was producing – it was much more about the specific heroes that I connected with. Ray Fisher Read Quote
It wasn’t until I booked the role of Cyborg that I was sent literally everything Cyborg-related from DC comics. Ray Fisher Read Quote