Fast Company

“I JUST WANTED TO GET IN THE ROOM”

Actress and activist Laverne Cox, who plays Sophia Burset on Orange Is the New Black, has put transgender issues front and center in television and in politics. She talks about being a role model, election-season scapegoating, and how an alien transvestite helped her find her voice.
Breakout artist Cox is using her platform to battle misinformation and create new narratives for the transgender community.

This month, you’re starring in the TV remake of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. What drew you to the role of Dr. Frank-N-Furter, the “sweet transvestite from Transsexual, Transylvania,” which Tim Curry memorably played in the original? I became obsessed with Rocky Horror when I was in college. I connected deeply to the message of the film; the song “Don’t Dream It, Be It” became a personal mantra. And Tim Curry’s iconic performance just transformed me. At the time, I was gender-nonconforming: I had a shaved head, and I wore false eyelashes and makeup, but I didn’t identify as female yet. So this movie and its gender fluidity were everything to me.

There’s a lot of singing in this role. How did you prepare for it? I really started working on my [lower-range] chest voice again. For a long time, after I

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