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Hollywood couple Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors gain Guinean citizenship

Two Hollywood stars, Jonathan Majors, left, and Meagan Good, attend a private ceremony where they were awarded their Guinean citizenship in Conakry, Guinea, Friday, Jan. 9, 2026. (AP Photo/ Fode Toure) (Fode Toure, Copyright 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

CONAKRY – Hollywood couple Meagan Good and Jonathan Majors received Guinean citizenship after tracing their ancestry to the West African country through DNA testing.

The couple was awarded citizenship in a private ceremony in the capital of Conakry on Friday. They are scheduled to tour the country's tourist sites on Sunday.

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ā€œWe think that you are among the worthy sons and daughters of this Guinea. You represent our country, the red-yellow-green flag all over the world,ā€ said Djiba DiakitĆ©, head of the president's cabinet.

Majors seemed destined for the ranks of Hollywood’s A-list before he was arrested following a 2023 altercation with his then-girlfriend. He had won critical accolades for his work in ā€œDa 5 Bloodsā€ and ā€œLovecraft Countryā€ and secured years of future Marvel stardom with his role as Kang the Conqueror. However, after his conviction on assault and harassment charges, Marvel dropped him from future projects, and ā€œMagazine Dreams,ā€ a film once tipped to bring him an Oscar nomination, went on ice until last year.

Good, an actor herself, began dating Majors in 2023, and was a constant presence at his trial in New York. They were engaged in 2024, and wed last year in a small, impromptu ceremony as he promoted ā€œMagazine Dreams.ā€

Guinea is not the first country to award citizenship to descendents of enslaved people. Last year, U.S. singer Ciara became one of the first public figures to become a citizen of Benin.

Ghana last year naturalized 524 African Americans, after President Nana Akufo-Addo invited them to ā€œcome homeā€ in 2019, as part of the 400th anniversary of the arrival of the first enslaved Africans in North America in 1619.

Guinea has been ruled by junta leader Gen. Mamadi Doumbouya since a 2021 coup. Last month, he was declared the winner of the presidential election after clamping down on opposition and dissents, leaving him with no major opponents.