Samira Wiley is many things: black woman, American, actress, activist, wife and breakout star of bona fide hits Orange Is the New Black (OITNB) and The Handmaidโs Tale. She is also an out and proud gay womanโnow. While OINTB is where Wiley met her wife, screenwriter Lauren Morelli, it is also where she was forced into โcoming out,โ as she recently recounted to WNYCโs LGBTQ+-focused Nancy podcast.
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Someone from my cast actually, during the interview they were talking about out gay actors in the castโฆ and they mentioned my name and I saw it in print, and I cried. I cried a lot. โฆ I wasnโt always super open-heartedโฆ but um, yeahโฆ more specifically, thatโs something somebody took from meโฆ You should be able to come out on your own terms โฆ so, that was probably a little deeper โฆ I wasnโt out in the beginning and I think falling in love with Poussey [her character on OITNB], which is a really thing that happened to me, helped me fall in love with myself as wellโฆ
For those of us with hetero identities (or even cis identities), the idea of โcoming outโ may not entirely hit home, even if weโre sympathetic. But 20 years after the hate-fueled murder of 21-year-old gay student Matthew Shepard in Laramie, Wyo., whose death helped give rise to hate crime legislation in America, Wiley gave voice to the ongoing movement in a recent 19th anniversary reading of The Laramie Project. Speaking with WNYC, Wiley discussed where she thinks we are as a country, just in time for National Coming Out Day 2018, on Thursday, Oct. 11. As Wiley told WNYC:
It does have me questioning about likeโฆ where we are then, where we are now, the question of progressโฆ Over and over and over again, we hurt each other and we donโt know how to get out of this cycle. But then thereโs this cycle of trying to repair thatโฆ So, it does, I guess, make me a little wary about like what progress are we making, but it also makes me think of like, Weโre not crazyโฆ. This is who humans are and as humans we have to push through thisโฆ Thatโs where the art comes in. We have to put a salve on our wounds.
Remarkably, despite not always being out herself, Wiley has risen to fame playing characters whose sexuality is transparent. Of that dichotomy, she told WNYC:
I think that if I wasnโt portraying these characters, I wonder how my own journey with my own sexual orientation, how I would embrace that, how I would walk the world, if I wasnโt able to embrace the characters that I have beenโฆ Itโs not a choice but Iโm very, very happy itโs worked out this way ...
I definitely had some ideas in the beginning of my career of like, what I could do and what I couldnโt do because of who I amโฆ One of the things I couldnโt doโฆ if I play gay twiceโฆ Iโm type castโฆ but I have been able to hopefully doโฆ [is to play] completely different, complex characters that are both black and gay but are completely different from each other. And I think thatโs important to show how multi-faceted we all areโฆ Those things helped me embrace all the facets of myselfโฆโ
And while we are definitely seeing more representations of humanity and womanhood in media these days, Wiley impressed upon her hosts that weโre not quite equalโyet.
I think that as long as weโre having the exact same opportunities on our sideโฆ if itโs equal, then sure. But I do think that right now it is not equal, and because it is not equal, it is very important that we tell our own stories. ... Our experience as queer people in this world, in this country, is a very singular thing.
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