He may have never starred in a Disney movie, but Edward Norton has been revealed to have biological ties with one historical figure forever immortalized in its films,Pocahontas, as shown in the PBS showFinding Your Roots.

The talentedGlass Onion: A Knives Out Mysterystar was born in Boston, Massachusetts, and since the mid-90s, his performances inmovies likeFight Club,American History XandBirdmanhave won him countless praise. However, this TV appearance was a little different.Finding Your Rootshas aired on PBS since 2012, putting on a show that, through extensive research, has its genealogists find the ancestors of guest celebrities from diverse backgrounds.

Pocahontas uses her powers in Pocahontas

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In Norton’s case, as reported byThe Guardian, despite his relatively standard Episcopalian upbringing, researchers were able to dig up a paper trail linking the actor to his 12th great-generation of grandparents, historical figures John Rolfe and Pocahontas, who married in the 17th century and had a son named Thomas Rolfe. However, in the same episode, Norton was handed sourer news when told his third great-grandfather, John Winstead, was a slave owner. “The short answer is these things are uncomfortable […] when you read ‘slave aged eight’, you just want to die,” Norton commented.

Pocahontas was the first Native American figure celebrated on an official American stamp in 1907. Many historians credit her with saving the life of English colonist John Smith from her own tribe and overall living a pretty extraordinary life for those times. Norton reflected on the positive side of his heritage, saying it made him “realize what a small piece of the human story you are.”

Disney released its animated version ofPocahontasin 1995, with this fictionalized version of a Powhatan princess being the medium that made many people familiar with the real Pocahontas in the first place. Nevertheless, it bears saying that Disney’sPocahontashas always been met with a lot of skepticism from history connoisseurs who derided the movie for its many inaccuracies, as there is no credible source that even suggests she ever had a relationship with Smith, among many other creative liberties assumed by the studio.

Regardless, it’s beyond discussion that Disney’s animated hit helped many become interested in learning about Pocahontas' real life and what she represented as a tiny piece of human history, as Norton would say.As one of Disney’s strongest princesses, Pocahontas became a cultural icon to the extent that her name is the first one that comes to mind when trying to find proper analogies to describe James Cameron’sAvatar, which says a lot.

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mysteryis now available on Netflix.

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