Evan Rachel Wood isn’t the only Westworld actress who has finally been promised pay equivalent to her male co-stars. Thandie Newton, who plays fan-favorite host Maeve on the HBO series—which returns for its second season April 22—told Vanity Fair at the New York premiere of Season 2 that she, too, has been in talks to reach an agreement for Season 3 in which she’s paid the same as her male on-screen counterparts.

“They’re all happening right now, and yeah, we’re all equal across the board,” Newton said of the ongoing contract negotiations. “It’s really exciting. It’s unprecedented. It’s—goodness; it shatters so much calcified pain, resentment, frustration. It just shatters it.”

Newton is so enlivened by HBO’s commitment to pay equality, in fact, that she vowed Thursday evening to turn down projects that offer her anything less in the future—meaning that any filmmakers and producers hoping to pay the Maeves of the world less than the Bernards need not apply.

“I wouldn’t do anything if it didn’t. Definitely not,” she said. “Fuck that. It literally sets a precedent, and [HBO is] leading the way, which is amazing.”

In an interview with The Wrap earlier this week, Wood revealed that for the first time in her 25-year career, she will be paid the same as the male actors around her for Westworld Season 3. “I almost got emotional,” she said. “I was like, ‘I have never been paid the same as my male counterparts. . . . This is the first time that somebody made a point of being like, ‘Hey, you’re getting this. And you deserve it.’ And that was nice.”

Speaking at the show’s Tribeca premiere, Wood expanded on the news, saying that she’s “glad, and I hope that it can set an example for other industries and we can start being a part of leading the charge. It was a nice surprise.”

Though she didn’t take a stance as strong as her British co-star’s “fuck you,” Wood did say she’s optimistic that in “leading the charge,” more productions will follow suit.

“It’s an uncomfortable conversation to have, but I think people have to start being more open and talking to each other about it, and peers have to start talking about it,” she continued. “Otherwise, the silence keeps perpetuating it, you know? It makes it easier to do shady dealings. So I think we’re all gonna have to just kind of be uncomfortable for a second so that we can sort it out.”