Current:Home > ScamsEmma Corrin opens up about 'vitriol' over their gender identity: 'Why am I controversial?' -PrimeWealth Guides
Emma Corrin opens up about 'vitriol' over their gender identity: 'Why am I controversial?'
Poinbank Exchange View
Date:2025-04-11 00:50:17
Emma Corrin has stopped reading online comments due to the hate they receive on social media.
Three years after they announced their preferred use of they and them pronouns, the actor revealed, "The vitriol is worse than I anticipated" in an interview for the June/July issue of Harper's Bazaar, which published online Wednesday.
"Even though we like to think we’re in a progressive society, a lot of what we’re seeing is increasingly a step back," they added.
Corrin, a Cambridge University graduate who broke out in 2020 for portraying Princess Diana in Season 4 of Netflix's "The Crown" and won a Golden Globe for their transformative performance, mused about why people might react the way they do.
"People follow me because they’ve watched something I’m in. They think I’m one kind of person, and then they’ll see who I actually am and how I present," Corrin said. "I will never understand why. Who are you hurting by being yourself? Why am I controversial?"
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
They added, "I think it’s fear. Absolute fear."
Post-"The Crown," Corrin went on to star alongside Harry Styles in "My Policeman" and played lead roles in the Hulu mini-series "A Murder at the End of the World" and Netflix's "Lady Chatterley's Lover." Next, they will play "X-Men" villain Cassandra Nova in Marvel's "Deadpool & Wolverine," out this summer.
"It feels impossible to know where to start to enact the change that needs to be done. But by taking up space, by being visible, that’s something in itself," Corrin said of inclusion in the film industry. "I’m a tiny cog at the moment."
In April 2021, Corrin took to Instagram to publicly come out as queer. Several months later, they shared their experience of using a chest binder soon after changing their pronouns to "shey/they" in their Instagram bio.
Read more:How youth are finding queer heroes on TV
Emma Corrin called exploring their gender identity 'an ongoing journey'
Later that year, Corrin opened up about their gender identity in an interview with ITV's Granada Reports.
"My journey's been a long one and has still got a (long) way to go," Corrin said. "I think that, you know, we're so used to defining ourselves — and that's the way, sadly, society works — is within these binaries and it's taken me a long time to realize that I exist somewhere in between, and I'm still not sure where that is yet."
"It's going to be an ongoing journey but yeah, I hope that sharing (my truth) helps people," they said.
Corrin added, "When I started posting about it, obviously, it felt very sort of scary and revealing and I wasn't sure whether it was the right thing to do.
"But the feedback I got from other people in the queer community has been wonderful. You know, it's like, great and it's something to be celebrated."
The portion of U.S. adults identifying as LGBTQ+ has climbed in recent years as millennials and members of Generation Z age into adulthood.
More than one in five Gen Z adults (ages 18 to 26) identifies as LGBTQ+, as do nearly 1 in 10 millennials (ages 27 to 42). The percentage falls to less than 5% of Generation X (ages 43-58), 2% of Baby Boomers (ages 59-77) and 1% of the Silent Generation (78 and older).
According to GLAAD's 2023 Studio Responsibility Index, a study of 350 films released by 10 distributors in 2022 showed 292 LGBTQ characters on screen. Of them, 10 were non-binary.
Contributing: Cydney Henderson and Marc Ramirez
veryGood! (18671)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Roland Pattillo helped keep Henrietta Lacks' story alive. It's key to his legacy
- Inmates burn bedsheets during South Carolina jail riot
- Rescue operation to save 40 workers trapped under a collapsed tunnel in north India enters 3rd day
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- South Dakota hotel owner sued for race discrimination to apologize and step down
- Life-saving emergency alerts often come too late or not at all
- 3 dead, 15 injured in crash between charter bus with high schoolers and semi-truck in Ohio
- Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
- Milwaukee Bucks forward Jae Crowder to undergo surgery, miss about 8 weeks
Ranking
- Average rate on 30
- March for Israel draws huge crowd to Washington, D.C.
- Georgia woman charged with felony murder decades after 5-year-old daughter found in container encased in concrete
- South Carolina jumps to No. 1 in the USA TODAY Sports women's basketball poll ahead of Iowa
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Man, 40, is fatally shot during exchange of gunfire with police in southwestern Michigan
- Jim Harbaugh news conference: Everything Michigan coach said, from 'Judge Judy' to chickens
- More than 180,000 march in France against antisemitism amid Israel-Hamas war
Recommendation
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Drake announces new It's All a Blur 2024 concert tour with J. Cole: Tickets, dates, more
Titanic first-class menu and victim's pocket watch each sell at auction for over $100,000
Reports of Russian pullback in Ukraine: a skirmish in the information war
Rolling Loud 2024: Lineup, how to stream the world's largest hip hop music festival
Parents in a Connecticut town worry as After School Satan Club plans meeting
1 in 3 US Asians and Pacific Islanders faced racial abuse this year, AP-NORC/AAPI Data poll shows
Jim Harbaugh news conference: Everything Michigan coach said, from 'Judge Judy' to chickens