In their own words, actors on being black and (openly) gay in Hollywood
Diversity has been the buzzword in Hollywood for the better part of the last year. With Viola Davisâ recent historic Emmy win for âHow to Get Away With Murderâ (and the equally historic co-nomination of âEmpireâsâ Taraji P. Henson) and the continual sprinkling of LGBT people and characters on screens large and small, Tinseltown paints itself as a progressive paragon in a world not yet there.
But true progress in Hollywood has yet to trickle down for those at the intersection of their non-white race and non-heterosexual identity.
In an effort to chronicle the experiences of openly gay black actors in Hollywood, I reached out to all those that I could think of, a relatively small list. Though many of the more well-known actors were not available or declined to be interviewed (Wanda Sykes, Raven-SymonĂŠ, Jussie Smollett, Samira Wiley, Tituss Burgess), I was able to speak to a number of people eager to discuss their thoughts on the industry.
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Below are six openly gay (or bisexual) black people who have been in front of and/or behind the camera, in their own words:
Dalila Ali Rajah
"The Young and the Restless," "Pretty Tough" and "Grey's Anatomy."
On choosing to openly express her bisexuality:
âA lot of other actors said it was a bad idea [to be out]. I think they thought it would cause a lot of problems with me getting work, but to do that didnât feel authentically myself. I told them, âIâm not choosing that path for myself. Iâm just going to be who I am and people are going to have to deal with it.â But it also meant that I had to create my own content because there werenât a lot of roles for me.â
On casting:
âPeople go with what they know and a lot of the people who are in casting and positions of power at networks, their world vision is surrounded by a lot of white people. For them, New York looks white. Look at âFriends,â which never had a black person for most of its run. It shows you people's perceptions. They donât see people of color. When theyâre going to cast, it doesnât occur to them -- we donât occur to them.â
On the gay black best friend role:
âOf people of color who are queer, I think there is a major lacking of [roles] and I'm not sure of the reason other than perhaps theyâve [already] got the stereotypical black gay best friend, the evolution of Sapphire. Itâs very safe for people. It keeps them away from the brutal black man thatâs going to steal their women. It adds all the comedy and the edge of buffoonery, in some of it, without the dangerous stuff, so itâs safe.â
On LGBT diversity in Hollywood:
âThereâs been a watershed moment, but itâs mostly been for white people.â
Julian Walker
"Blackbird
On playing a gay character in his first Hollywood role:
âI never thought about that until we started doing promotion for the film and people started asking me. The only thing I can say is the film is so honest and it tells the truth about what people actually deal with [when growing up gay in a religious home]. Iâm not afraid or nervous [of how this will affect my career]. I feel like [my performance] in the film will speak for itself.â
On straight roles in the future:
âWith being an actor, you should be able to step out of yourself. Given the opportunity, I will be able to perform whatever the role calls for.â
Alex Newell
"Glee" and "Geography Club"
On gay characters on television:
âHollywood will accept gays and put them on TV, but there's usually a sense of masculinity [to the character]. Thatâs why you have straight men playing gay characters.â
On straight actors playing gay roles:
âYouâve got to know your limitations. You don't see Meryl Streep playing black roles. She knows her limitations. The conversation is always about what is your life experience. Itâs one thing to change your whole persona and body to play a role and another to have someone literally transition into a truth theyâre familiar with. The question should be, âDo you know what itâs like to live through this?ââ
On casting:
âItâs always a role where a panel of Caucasian people are looking at me determining if I'm black enough or not. Iâm often told Iâm not black enough, or gay enough. âYouâre not the gay we want.â But gay is gay. There is no specific [type] of gay. Sometimes Iâm too too big or not big enough... Itâs always about something, in my experience, [dealing with] where I am in life.â
Patrik-Ian Polk
Director of "Punks," "Noah's Arc," and "Blackbird"
On the impact of âNoahâs Arcâ and other black gay characters on television:
âIf anyone appreciates your work, it's a good feeling. But in some ways, it makes me sad because the fact that so many people go back to âNoahâs Arc,â itâs evidence of the reality that weâve had nothing like it since then. We have isolated characters here and there, but theyâre not the main focus of anything, whether it's reality TV where theyâre the fabulous sidekicks for the Real Housewives of wherever or weâre supporting characters on a scripted TV show⌠All of the gay characters of color on TV, especially the men, have white partners. People donât think about these things, but it makes a difference for young black gay people to never see fully rounded versions of themselves on movies or TV. Obviously that's why my work has resonated with so many people.â
On young black talent in Hollywood:
âHollywood is doing a really horrible job of cultivating younger black talent. Theyâre always developing a slew of white actors and actresses that youâll see in a few months on the cover of Vanity Fair in the new Young Hollywood issue. Itâs a shallow pool [of black actors] to begin with then actors always express a fear, a reluctance [of playing gay] because theyâll get stereotyped and they wonât get other roles.â
On openly gay black actors:
âI enjoy casting gay actors in gay roles. The problem still is we don't have enough out black celebrities, or actors, for that to matter. The handful of ones that are out there donât want to be associated with it. Theyâre sort of trying to run from it. Itâs unfortunate.â
On diversity on television:
âThe problem is, on the one hand, television has moved to this place of being more diverse, but what that ends up looking like is that you have an ensemble TV show and theyâll make sure there's some diversity. And if you have a black gay character, itâs a twofer. But what ends up happening is you have these diverse characters existing in this world that doesnât look like them.â
Blake Young-Fountain
"The Skinny," "Griot's Lament" and "Hit the Wall"
On being a gay black actor:
âBeing just a black actor, we have to work 10 times harder just to be [on par] with white actors. And youâre gay? In my mind, maybe because of pressure thatâs been put on me, here's the black straight actor and Iâve got to put in some more to be [on par] with them too.â
On defining himself:
âIâm just an actor who happens to be gay and black. I try not to put myself in boxes because I know when I walk into certain worlds, someone has already put me in that box.â
On gay actors playing gay and straight roles:
âI think itâs important for black gay actors to continue to play the gay role, but because we have the label of actor, we also need to show âthemâ that we can do just as much, if not more, even playing the straight roles.â
Darryl Stephens
"Noah's Arc," "DTLA" and "Survivor's Remorse"
On being a gay black actor:
âYou can be one or the other. You can be black or you can be gay. You canât be both. We canât confuse America. Thatâs too much for them to stomach. So, the progress of the LGBT movement in Hollywood can be moved along as long as the face of the gay movement is white men.â
On turning down stereotypical roles:
âI was so offended that they thought this was a worthwhile role to introduce the first black gay character to their lily-white show because all he was doing was chasing this white boy around. There are things that I am not going to do. I will not represent that for you. Because, no.â
On straight black actors not playing gay:
âThereâs the assumption that black folks are more homophobic than other folks. I donât think thatâs true, but I think we are aware of limits this culture places on us as black men. We have 15 seconds to get our foot in the door and if we don't,â weâre in the dark forever. Black actors are very aware that they have to work hard at remaining commercially viable.
âIn order to be appealing as a black man, we have to maintain this hypermasculinity. Itâs a matter of our own cultural hangups [both black culture and American culture] as well as lack of access to varied roles that keeps us locked in this fear of presenting anything that is not hypermasculine.â
On the importance of seeing oneself reflected on TV:
âItâs so important for marginalized communities to see themselves on TV because weâre so used to being invisible and not understanding our place in the world because all weâre seeing is the images that white supremacy is presenting to us. We need to begin to see black people presented more honestly. We can't be marginalized in life and then marginalized on TV as well.â
On the future of diversity in Hollywood:
âI do think that as Hollywoodâs and Americaâs view of gays and understanding continues to evolve, we all will be given the opportunity to play so many different characters. Weâve already seen it happen with the white actors like Neil Patrick Harris and Matt Bomer. I think it's a question of when will the black faces be invited to that party.â
Get your life! Follow me on Twitter: @TrevellAnderson.
MORE:
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