Chris Evans Reveals Why He Hesitated Before Taking Captain America Role
Captain America: The First Avenger gave Chris Evans an iconic part to play, but the actor hesitated to pick up the shield.

“I can do this all day.” The first time Captain America‘s mighty shield, Evans proved that he could play the famously upright character without any cheesiness.
But Evans initially stalled taking the part after realizing he wouldn’t just be doing this all day. He’d be doing it as long as Marvel wanted him, which resulted in eleven film appearances (including a cameo in Thor: The Dark World) between 2011 and 2019.
In a recent breakdown of his most important roles, Evans told GQ that he knew about Marvel’s “big plans, that the goal was to create this tapestry and integrate these worlds in a way that really hadn’t been done prior.” Because of those plans, and the decades of comics that preceded the films, it gave Evans pause before accepting the part. “It wasn’t about where the character would end up,” he said of his hesitance. “It was more about the burden of trying to create this universe.”
Of course, Evans realized that it fell more on Robert Downey Jr. to create the MCU. Instead, he had to embody a character who had thousands of fans before the movie even hit theaters. To play a character like that, “You want to see him how the fans see him,” Evans explained. “So the first step [to playing that type of character] is to try to understand why other people like him and honor it as best you can.”
By the time Evans stepped away with Iron Man, Evans chose the traditional Cap. He honored the best Captain America stories of the past, while creating his own take, making a hero who fit inside of the MCU.
Thanks to that firm foundation, Marvel has been able to keep telling Captain America stories, even without Evans. As seen in fourth Captain America film. None of that would have been possible if Evans didn’t find a way to understand the appeal of Captain America and place him in a cinematic universe that continues to expand. He didn’t do it all day, but he did it long enough.