A-List Actress Stuns at GLAAD Awards with Misgendering Outburst.

Cynthia Erivo's inspiring GLAAD Awards speech in full | CNNActress and singer Cynthia Erivo spoke candidly about personal challenges regarding gender identity and pronoun use during her acceptance speech at the 2024 GLAAD Media Awards.

Erivo, who starred in the upcoming film Wicked, was honored with the Stephen F. Kolzak Award, which recognizes an openly queer individual in entertainment or media for efforts to eliminate homophobia.

Erivo used her moment on stage to reflect on the difficulties she has faced being open about her identity and asking others to use her preferred pronouns.

“This has been a wild, wild ride and I’ve been deeply grateful for every second of it,” she said in her speech.

“More than anything that I have seen and felt, how open-armed my community has been.”

Erivo said she often speaks about the importance of authenticity and being one’s “whole self,” but acknowledged the personal difficulty that can come with it.

“I have spoken about being your whole self and your true self. I speak about the prizes that come from being you against the odds, but rarely do I acknowledge how hard that can be,” she said. “It isn’t easy. None of it is.”

Actress and singer Cynthia Erivo spoke candidly about personal challenges regarding gender identity and pronoun use during her acceptance speech at the 2024 GLAAD Media Awards.

Erivo, who starred in the upcoming film Wicked, was honored with the Stephen F. Kolzak Award, which recognizes an openly queer individual in entertainment or media for efforts to eliminate homophobia.

Erivo used her moment on stage to reflect on the difficulties she has faced being open about her identity and asking others to use her preferred pronouns.

“This has been a wild, wild ride and I’ve been deeply grateful for every second of it,” she said in her speech.

“More than anything that I have seen and felt, how open-armed my community has been.”

Erivo said she often speaks about the importance of authenticity and being one’s “whole self,” but acknowledged the personal difficulty that can come with it.

“I have spoken about being your whole self and your true self. I speak about the prizes that come from being you against the odds, but rarely do I acknowledge how hard that can be,” she said. “It isn’t easy. None of it is.”

She shared that navigating public and private spaces while trying to live authentically has involved frustration and emotional labor, particularly in asking others to use the pronouns “they” and “them.”

“Waking up and choosing to be yourself, proclaiming a space belongs to you when you don’t feel welcomed, teaching people on a daily basis how to address you and dealing with the frustration of re-teaching people a word that has been in the human vocabulary since the dawn of time,” Erivo said.

“They, them. Words used to describe pedantically two or more people, (and) poetically a person who is simply more,” she added.

Erivo continued by discussing dignity and the emotional toll of repeatedly asking for it.

“It isn’t easy to ask people to treat you with dignity, since you should just have it, because it’s a given. It isn’t easy to learn to grow who you are if the world around you is knocking at your door, telling you to stay inside,” she said.

Using a metaphor to describe the journey of self-discovery, she said, “Some flowers bloom against all the odds, like the peony, but most flowers need to be tended to and cared for before they brave the light and open up their petals to the sun.”

Erivo emphasized the challenges faced by many in the LGBTQ community, stating that not everyone has had the same path.

“Here in this room, we’ve all been the recipients of a gift that is the opportunity to be more. I doubt that it has come easy to any of us, but more for some, the road has not been one paved with yellow bricks but instead paved with bumps and potholes − whichever road you have traveled, how beautiful it is that you’ve had a road to travel on at all. There are the invisible ones who have had no road at all.”

She concluded her speech by calling on those in attendance to use their influence to help others.

“We are all visible,” Erivo said.

The GLAAD Media Awards were held in Los Angeles and celebrate media portrayals that promote fair, accurate, and inclusive representations of LGBTQ individuals and issues.

Related Posts

The Walter Ranch Is BURNING Down — Jackie’s Season 3 Shock Twist Is the Most Savage Yet! 😱🔥💔

Somewhere in the middle of the newly released Season 3 trailer for My Life with the Walter Boys, Jackie Howard looks directly into a face we are…

The Season 3 Trailer Just Blew Up the Fandom—Did Jackie Choose Cole, Alex… or Herself?

You thought the Season 2 finale was savage with its back-to-back “I love you” gut punches? Darling, that was just the warm-up. The official Season 3 trailer…

Jimmy Kimmel Just Auctioned Off His Future Grandchild’s Name Live on Stage at Disney Upfronts – and the Bids Hit Seven Figures Before He Even Finished the Sentence.

In what historians will one day record as the single most unhinged five minutes in advertising history, Jimmy Kimmel strolled onto the stage at the Disney Upfront…

Jimmy Kimmel Just Posted a Photo of His Oldest Son That’s So Identical People Are Screaming “Time Travel Exists”.

If you thought celebrity kids only inherited fame and trust funds, think again. Jimmy Kimmel just detonated the internet with one single Instagram post that has half…

Jon Stewart Just Dropped a Bombshell Confession About Stephen Colbert That Will Make You Rethink Everything You Know About Late-Night TV.

For years, the late-night television landscape has been painted as a cutthroat battlefield where only one host can wear the crown. Ratings wars, viral monologues, and endless…

🔥🕵️‍♀️ The Beast in Me Season 2 Bombshell Drops on Netflix — A Wave of Twists, Secrets, and Psychological Chaos Is Officially on the Horizon 😱👀

In the shadowy underbelly of Netflix’s ever-expanding library of psychological thrillers, few series have clawed their way into the collective psyche quite like The Beast in Me….