John Davidson breaks silence on 2026 BAFTA Awards racial slur.
John Davidson gets candid about his firestorm controversy at the 2026 BAFTA Awards

John Davidson sparked much uproar over his involuntary shouting the N-word – a racial slur – towards the 2026 BAFTA stage where Michael B. Jordan and Delroy Lindo were presenting a Best Effect Visuals award.

The racial slur was part of several outbursts, explained by Davidson, that occurred at the star-studded night due to his Tourette syndrome. 

Breaking his silence over the controversy, he offers a glimpse into what happened inside when he blurted out the offensive words.

“Initially, my tics were noises and movements, but the more nervous I got, the more my tics ramped up. When my coprolalia tics came out, my stomach just dropped.”

“As always, I felt a wave of shame and embarrassment hit me all at once. You want the floor to swallow you up. I wanted to disappear. I wanted to hide — just get away from all the eyes.”

Davidson, who was at the 2026 BAFTA for the film I Swear – loosely inspired by his life – shares that when he shouted the N-word, his stomach churned.

” I was hoping people would understand. My mind was saying: These people have seen the film. They will know I can’t help this. They will know it’s not me. This is exactly why we are here. I was saying in my head, “Please don’t judge me.” Please understand this isn’t who I am.”

The Tourette activist, on his part, diffused the tension in opting out of the venue.

“I was trying to calm myself down, to breathe, but ultimately, I made the decision to leave to not cause any more upset. BAFTA found a private room with a monitor where I watched the rest of the awards.”

Davidson, elsewhere in the interview, also revealed that he personally approached Warner Bros – the studio behind the Sinners – in a bid to apologise directly to Jordan and Lindo.