#i wish so bad i could go to the halloween show at hollywood bowl :( the jealous rage i am going to be experiencing cannot be overstated
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boygenius are doing something so important for lesbians (umbrella term) rn and i just wanna thank them again and again and again
#getting very emotional over that cool about it performance...#boygenius are just By Us For Us and it feels SO fucking good to see queer women thriving and winning for being who they are#they are really the moment rn. so many gays i know from college went to all things go last weekend and to the munagenius show at msg#and it just warms my goddamn heart that we all get to be alive at the same time as them and be a part of this#they are so special and important and talented and interesting and fun and gay and i just LOOVE LOVE LOOOOVE TO SEE IT#i wish so bad i could go to the halloween show at hollywood bowl :( the jealous rage i am going to be experiencing cannot be overstated#as a queer woman who lives in california it's genuinely FUCKED i can't be there š#also i'm still thinking abt hoziergenius constantly. it hasn't left my mind for a second#but yea. just really grateful to be gay and alive rn š«¶#boygenius
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Allison Janney Talks Tonya Hardingās Queerness, Girl Crushes
Allison Janney shares many of your concerns,Ā like, whatās up with the presidentās wild contradictions and flat-out lies? And what will happen to the LGBTQ community under his administration? And, of course, something weāve all wondered from time to time, and an issue she definitely plans on addressing with her agent soon, because itās high time: āWhere are all my lesbian roles?ā
Though her latest turn in I, Tonya is not queer by definition ā but, as infamous figure-skating icon Tonya Hardingās mother (Harding is played by actress Margot Robbie), one of her very best and most Oscar-buzzy roles, so all is obviously forgiven āĀ the chameleonic 58-year-old actress has delightedly dipped into some impressive gay fare both onstage and in film.
Here, the beloved and soon-to-be-lesbian-somewhere Emmy winner discusses Harding as a queer icon, identifying with the LGBTQ community as an āoutsiderā herself and kissing āa lot of cool women.ā
LGBTQ people ā we are all Tonya. Right? Everyone identifies with her.
Everyone can identify with Tonya because sheās struggling to have a voice, and the powers that be deemed that she was not worthy of having a voice in the figure skating world, didnāt think she fit in. Itās so classic. And then the press vilified her and we were all told what to believe about her, and we kind of believed it, because it was the advent of the 24-hour news cycle. Just spoon-fed to us every day: Tonya, bad; Nancy āĀ princess, good.
So, to do this movie and to see all the different things that were at play in her life makes you have so much more empathy for her. And I was so excited to meet her at the premiere. She was there! I just wanted to hug her and hold her. Sometimes Iām not great with words, and I just wanted to hug her.
You play her disapproving monster of a mother, LaVona Golden, which will strike a chord with many people in the LGBTQ community who have experienced parental disapproval because of their sexuality.
Oh, sure!
Tonya has been called a gay icon. Do you see her as a gay icon?
I never have thought about it before, but now that youāre saying it, I understand the reasons why she would be.
She wanted to be loved for who she was.
Wanting to be loved for who she was! Absolutely, I can see why it would resonate with the gay community ā with women too. With anyone who has felt like an underdog or not felt like they had a voice.
As I talk about this movie more and more to people like yourself, Iām learning more about it and why itās resonating right now. Itās also the concept of truth and what that is, and you know, the media told us what to believe was true and we did, and now in this time that weāre living in with the president (being) wildly contradictory āĀ itās phenomenal to me whatās going on in the country and in our discourse, and (sighs) I just feel itās one of the most divisive, scary times Iāve ever experienced in my lifetime, certainly.
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You mentioned Tonya as the āunderdog,ā a word you have also used to describe yourself.
Yeah.
Do you think that has anything to do with why youāve attracted a doting LGBTQ following?
Maybe thatās it! I was always just told I was too tall to act and told I wasnāt pretty enough, that I didnāt have enough edge. Didnāt have this, that. Everyone in the business told me that, and it was heartbreaking to me; and yet I tried to find other things to do, but this was really the only thing I was really meant to be, this time āround (laughs).
I think it might also just be the characters that I get to play. Some of them speak to the community because they are that underdog character āĀ now Iām trying to make up a theory out of something I havenāt thought about (laughs). But I also think itās that I love to bring the humanity to every character I play.
Iām sure that your gay fans also appreciate that you seem to enjoy randomly kissing women.
I do! (Laughs) Oh my gosh, I donāt know if youāve seen my kiss with Cloris Leachman but that is, like, the best kiss.
Better than Kate Winslet even?
How about that moment?! That floored me. And I just thought, āDid she just say my name?ā (Winslet gushed about Janney at the Hollywood Film Awards in November.) It was one of the funniest moments for me, and I thought, āHow can I not just go up and kiss her?ā I mean, Meryl Streep, Kate Winslet āĀ Iāve kissed a lot of cool women, and men!
In our 2016 interview, Meryl Streep told me kissing you was a real āperk.ā
She said āperkā? I love her!
Is that what all the women say about kissing you?
I donāt know! Meryl is the only one Iāve gotten feedback on. Actually, no, Rosie! I got to kiss Rosie. Rosie said I was a good kisser. And Rosie OāDonnell is a great kisser, I have to say. Sheās a very good kisser. On (the CBS sitcom) Mom, she plays a woman that I used to have a relationship with and thereās one episode where I kiss her a couple of times and it was really āĀ sheās a good kisser! (Laughs)
What was the moment in your career you knew you had an LGBTQ following?
I feel like (1999ās) Drop Dead Gorgeous was the start of that for me. And it was a slow dawning, awakening, realization that was happening, and I thought that was the highest show of honor to be embraced by the gay community. It was like, āOK, you guys know.ā
To me, itās a high honor to be recognized and embraced by the gay community. I donāt want to say something stereotypical, but a lot of the men that I know, who are my dear friends have a real appreciation for women who are strong and powerful and kickass. They really, really love strong women. Theyāre not afraid of women the way that some heterosexual men are. But they love a strong dame. They love a dame! So, thatās high praise. Itās high praise coming from the gays. So I am thrilled that I am in that club.
Of the lesbian characters youāve played, from Sally in The Hours to your lesbian roles in stage productions like Eve Enslerās Ladies and Alan Ballās Five Women Wearing the Same Dress,Ā which do you wish you couldāve gotten to know more?
Probably my character in The Hours with Meryl. I wouldāve liked to have gotten to know Sally and really explored that relationship. You know, my famous story with her with that kiss is that she gave me a facelift. She didnāt like the way we were lit in the scene and she said, āIām gonna do you a favor, honey.ā So she placed her hands on the side of my face and lifted it ever so gently. When you watch it next, look at that āĀ itās pretty great. A little Meryl lift. I got a little lift from Meryl. It was fantastic.
If you were to play another lesbian role, who would be your ideal co-star?
Whoa. Well, I kind of have a girl crush on Margot Robbie right now! (Laughs) She is so talented and so frigginā beautiful ā itās kind of remarkable. I just find myself staring at her, like, how can anything be that beautiful? And sheās a really good actress, and you know, why not? Margot is on my mind right now, so Iām saying Margot.
There have been Tonya Harding impersonators, and after this film, I fully expect a few LaVona Golden queens.
Oh my god, do you really?
Her name alone is made for the stage at some gay bar, donāt you think?
It is a great name: LaVona! There was already someone on Halloween who dressed as LaVona. It was on Twitter and it made me laugh. It was a guy who dressed as LaVona, with the bowl haircut and the bird and the fur coat. Itās a real unique look.
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Allison Janney as LaVona Golden in I, Tonya
Does looking the part help you get into character?
Oh god, yes. With that, especially. It was three hours of hair and makeup getting that look with the bird, and it was really liberating too. I thought I was gonna be horrified and not be able to look at myself in the mirror, and it was fascinating ā I wanted to look at myself all the time! I was like, āGod, this is so cool!ā It felt just so different, and I didnāt see myself. I felt really confident in doing what I had to do. The look was so perfect and so great, and it made me excited to do my scenes.
I hope you got to keep a piece of LaVona.
I didnāt! But I was thinking about seeing if that bird could be adopted because I kind of fell in love with him. He lives in southern Georgia and heās so lovely. But I do have three dogs and I donāt want there to be an unfortunate situation there.
Yeah, maybe give it to somebody who doesnāt have an animal that will eat it.
Yes! Thatās always something to think about before you get a bird. (Laughs)
Youāve said you like to use your platform and acting to support important causes, which youāve done in projects like 2009ās Funny or Dieās Prop 8 ā The Musical. Do you recall the point in your life or career when you became passionate about queer issues?
I have so many gay friends in my world, and having such close friends in the gay community made me more aware of different issues. So, Iād naturally get involved through my friends. It happened when I came out to L.A. and I was doing West Wing. Once you start becoming someone āĀ you know, a celebrity person āĀ you realize, āActually, I could help just by showing up there and by doing this.ā It was a wonderful thing to realize, that I could use my name for something good other than the acting.
Does it feel even more important right now to take on projects that can make a difference?
Yes, yes! It really does. And I donāt know what Iām gonna be asked to do next, but I hope that I will be able to contribute.
I think now is the right time for another lesbian role, just sayinā.
OK, alright. Iām gonna start looking for one. Will you start looking for one for me? Should I do a biopic of āĀ Iām trying to think, what lesbian should I play? I think itās gotta be a character thatās not written yet.
Considering your trove of lesbian parts, Iām surprised lesbian roles arenāt just rolling in for you.
I donāt know āĀ I donāt think so! Iām gonna have to call my agent: āWhere are all my lesbian roles?ā Oh, a pioneering lesbian! Amelia Earhart. I donāt know if she was. Iām gonna get on that though. Iām gonna start looking. Thatās a good thing to put in my head.
from Hotspots! Magazine https://hotspotsmagazine.com/2018/01/04/allison-janney-talks-tonya-hardings-queerness-girl-crushes/ from Hot Spots Magazine https://hotspotsmagazine.tumblr.com/post/169309383195
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