Tag: Laverne Cox

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  • BLACK HISTORY MONTH | LGBT+ Icons: Laverne Cox

    BLACK HISTORY MONTH | LGBT+ Icons: Laverne Cox

    October 19th Laverne Cox

    Laverne Cox is today’s black LGBT+ icon. She is an American actress and LGBT+ activist, probably best known for her role in Orange Is the New Black. She was the first openly trans person to be nominated for a Primetime Emmy Award in any acting category.

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  • Mila Jam releases beautiful video celebrating just how diverse our community is

    Transgender star Mila Jam has just released an emotional music video which shows just how gorgeous we all are.

    The powerful video features a “rainbow” of LGBT+ faces and TV stars, Tituss Burgess, Laverne Cox and Candis Cayne.

     

    Gorgeous, just gorgeous.

    You can download the single here

     

  • Which way are LGBT celebrities voting: Trump or Clinton?

    Which way are LGBT celebrities voting: Trump or Clinton?

    So with less than a week away from the US election where either Clinton or Trump will become America’s Next Top President… we’re wondering where some LGBT celebs stand politically speaking…

    donald-or-clinton

    So which way are the world’s most popular LGBT celebrities voting? We’ve been checking what they’ve been saying and the hints they’ve been dropping.

    Chris Colfer


    Clinton

    Former Glee star Chris Colfer is a proud Clinton supported. he stated in an Instagram post that he “was with her first”.

    NEXT: Laverne Cox

  • 9 Of The Best LGBT Characters On TV

    Just how well are us LGBTs portrayed on television & film? Here are 9 of our favourite TV characters.

    So I’m going to list my 9 best examples of LGBT characters based on their iconic status or accurate portrayal. For this list I’m using the characters sexuality and identity only, not the actors who portray them.

    1. Maura Pfefferman (Jeffrey Tambor)

    Transparent. A sensitive and moving portrait of a trans-woman struggling to come to terms with her gender identity and having to come out to her family as transgender. Transparent depicts the struggles that families go through when a loved one comes out with a secret like this. Luckily the series doesn’t sensationalise the issue, nor does it become offensive of the portrayal of Maura, who says the most wonderful line “All my life, my whole life I’ve been dressing up like a man, this is me” Definitely worth a watch.

    2. Ellen Morgan (Ellen DeGeneres)

    Ellen. In 1997 The Puppy Episode the character of Ellen loudly announced to a whole airport terminal she was gay and made television history in the process. DeGeneres herself came out on the same day to Oprah (who had guest starred in the episode) and the show took a light-hearted comedic approach to the character who’s sexuality had always been a source of speculation. However, after the episode aired ratings started to decline and criticisms were aimed at the writers for concentrating too much on the gay aspect of a character and the show was cancelled a year later.


     

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  • Laverne Cox gets her own wax work

    Orange Is the New Black star Laverne Cox will not only have her very own wax figure at Madame Tussauds’ but she will also be the first transgender celebrity to have such an honour.

    One small snag for is that it will be be in their San Francisco Museum.

    Cox’s figure will be revealed during a San Francisco Pride press conference on June 26 and will be on display at the exhibit in Fisherman’s Wharf.

    In a statement from the San Jose Mecury News, Cox expressed a great deal of gratitude when talking about her achievement saying,

    “I am so deeply honoured to have been asked to be a part of the Madame Tussauds legacy…I hope that this will be a source of inspiration for everyone who encounters it to believe that their dreams matter and are possible.”

  • Laverne Cox Second Only To The Pope In Popularity

    According to an interview with Laverne Cox, Time magazine have named the trans-actor the 2nd most popular cover of all time.

    During an interview on CBS This Morning, Laverne Cox learned that she was the 2nd most popular cover story online according to Time Magazine editor Nancy Gibbs. The Pope was the most popular.

    There was a moment in which Laverne corrected Gayle King when the presenter said that the Orange Is The New Black star had been ‘born a boy’.

    Laverne was quick to correct her saying, ”I was assigned male at birth is the way I like to put it, because I think we’re born who we are and the gender thing is something someone imposes on you. And so I was assigned male at birth but I always felt like I was a girl.’

  • Laverne Cox To Star In Trans Documentary

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, Laverne Cox will produce a documentary film about transgender changes.

    The groundbreaking documentary will focus on four transgender people aged 14 to 24. They will share their experiences and discuss how they deal with intolerance and their own gender identity. Laverne Cox has teamed up with Logo and MTV for the documentary that will be called: Trans Teen.

    The documentary will also investigate the medical hurdles that trans people can face during their life.

    Last year TheGayUK interview Laverne Cox, read the exclusive chat here. Cox talked about the lack of trans visibility on mainstream television saying:

    ‘The reality is we don’t get enough trans people on television, enough transgender stories told and so I think we have a long way to go before we have more of those representatives like Sophia, but I would like to think we are moving in the right direction.’

    Cox is also starring in the new series of Orange Is The New Black, which comes back on Netflix on the 6th June.

  • INTERVIEW | Laverne Cox

    INTERVIEW | Laverne Cox

    ‘Hello, New York calling!’ We’ve just been put through to one of our favourite women on television right now and I’m just bursting with questions. The dazzling Laverne Cox who plays in-prisoned hairdresser Sophia Burset in the hit Netflix series Orange Is The New Black is on the phone.

    Asking how she felt to be the object of everyones desires, through much laughter I’m informed in her delicate Southern Belle accent ‘Well, I’m still single’.

    Yet behind the laughter is a deeper message where the reality of her situation was quickly offered.

    ‘I just did the Thomas Roberts Show this morning and I said, I’m not supposed to be here. Black trans women from a working class background in America aren’t supposed to be promoting hit TV shows on national television.’

    In an industry which has become strongly focused on ticking boxes it would seem that Laverne ticks a lot and yet Laverne is far from a ticked box.

    ‘I didn’t have any expectations. I hoped that people would like the show [Orange Is The New Black]. I was like, ok, Netflix have a lot of folks. A lot of people will see this show and it may lead to some more acting work.

    ‘I loved the part and was thinking this is great, people can get to see what I can do as an actress.’

    Laverne Cox hails from Mobile Alabama, deep in the Bible belt of the United States, lodged between Georgia and Mississippi. Her first television appearance was on Law & Order in 2008, but it wasn’t until 2010 that Laverne’s true television credentials would be proved, when she became the first African American transgender woman to produce and star in her own TV show TRANSform Me on VH1

    Laverne’s current project Orange Is The Next Black is fast becoming a landmark show for Netflix, I asked why Laverne thought the show had been so popular?

    ‘There are stories we don’t get to hear a lot in our culture. We don’t hear from women who are incarcerated, especially diverse women of colour.

    ‘In America we have 5% of the world’s population and a large proportion of it are in prison. It represents what’s wrong with our culture.

    ‘Most of the time it’s because the system has failed them as people, they are not humanised.

    ‘We’re not programmed to think of them as human beings and our show makes these women profoundly human.’

    Laverne is one of the most regarded if not the most visible activist for the transgender community, which being a famous face must bring about a lot of extra pressures.

    ‘I would love to just have one day without having to talk about transgender but the reality is that so many trans people are impaled in their lives. Such as that story in Jamaica about the trans kid Dwayne Jones who was brutally murdered’

    ‘I would love to not talk about it, but the problem is people aren’t talking about trans issues, about transphobia so somebody’s got to talk about it and that talk has to lead to action.’

    n action group here at home Trans Media Watch were also keen to put a question to Laverne asking what her perception was on how trans people are represented on TV and if she thinks it is starting to change.

    ‘The reality is we don’t get enough trans people on television, enough transgender stories told and so I think we have a long way to go before we have more of those representatives like Sophia, but I would like to think we are moving in the right direction.’

    I wondered how the transgender community has reacted to Laverne since she’s become so much more visible now,

    ‘There has been a lot of love and support, the biggest was when trans kids write to say that I’ve inspired them to go for their dreams.’

    I asked if there were any role models in her life,

    ‘My idol was Leontyne Price the African-American opera singer who was the first international black opera sensation and she’s a huge inspiration for me.’

    As September is our Coming Out month we wondered if coming out was little by little for Laverne or a big blaze of glory?

    ‘It’s weird the words coming out. The only person I ever came out to was my mother. I thought I was gay and joined an LGBT organisation on campus in university.

    ‘I then realised I was trans. The interesting thing for trans people that’s different for gays or lesbians, who often have to come out to different people in many parts of their lives, I don’t have to as people generally know or suspect and if not they google me.

    ‘As a trans women it was a really slow process and was really about accepting myself, starting my medical transition and then changing my name.

    ‘It was all very gradual and all very much about accepting myself.’

    Not everyone in this world is switched on to the many differences in life so I wondered how Laverne coped when people realised she was trans. Did she see the change in their eyes or the thoughts of what should or shouldn’t I ask?

    ‘For most part if people are gonna have a problem with me that’s pretty obvious because they’re going to steer clear of me. Which is the best thing about being out and proud.

    ‘I don’t draw bad energy to me. When I’m myself then people are cool with me.’

    I asked whether it was easy to come or to accept the realisation that you’re transgender, Laverne has a very simple formula;

    ‘It depends where you live, how much money you have, on race, your support networks’.

    Although we had focused on a lot of serious questions I had just one more to ask. In Orange is the new Black, Sophia had amazing hair in prison. Does she think she’d keep up the look if she was locked up?

    ‘Oh God, I don’t think I’d personally care that much’ she laughed.

    So what would be the worse fear about going to prison?

    ‘All of it’ was the quick answer. ‘Often trans people don’t end up in women’s prisons so that leads us to become targets of sexual violence, so I would be terrified of that’.

    It seems even the light hearted questions have this harsh reality of real life behind them and the work style to be done for trans recognition.

    I couldn’t leave it there. If you could smuggle one thing into prison and be allowed to keep it, what would you take. ‘Moisturiser’

    We both started laughing.

    If you want to read more about Trans issues or are looking for support then do check out:http://www.transmediawatch.org