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'We need to see queer creatives making decisions to show we're here'

'We need to see queer creatives making decisions to show we're here'

Yahoo06-03-2025
Cherrelle Skeete speaks to Yahoo UK for Queer Voices, sharing her story, representation, and reflecting on her new play Alterations.
She is an actor, writer and co-founder of Blacktress UK known for Hanna, Black Cake, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child, and for voicing Orisa in Overwatch.
Alterations is in production now at the National Theatre, and it is running until 5 April.
I think we're seeing more representation in front of the camera but I think we need to see queer creatives in the room, with commissioners and the people who are getting to decide how things are being made so we can get platforms to be able to make more work. The more we can see reflections of a variety of people, of different parts of society, the better it is. What we're here to do is to tell stories about people, and we need all people involved to be able to effectively do that.
People seeing some of my plays or some of the characters that I'm playing that are both visibly queer and out and proud or questioning, I think, is really important.
It's important to add to that canon of work of previous people who have represented queer roles, or who are queer themselves, because otherwise we can look back on this time and we can believe that we weren't here, and that we didn't make a contribution, and we have impacted the huge positive parts of our culture and society.
In terms of art, culture, food, music, we are everywhere. How we take care of children, how we take care of ourselves, we are everywhere. And as it becomes more hostile we have to remember that and affirm ourselves, and I think through characters, through story, it can be affirming.
To be part of this production of Alterations, it feels really ancestral. I've been using the words past, present, and future, every existence is happening all at once with this production because it feels like we're getting to honour Michael [Abbensetts], the writer, this Guyanese writer who's a really important part of Black British playwriting in this country.
But also to be Darlene, the one female character in the play, we've been able to have a fresh look at her with the additional material that we've created with Trish [Cooke, writer] and Lynette [Linton, director] and I feel really honoured. So it feels like I'm working with and conjuring and channelling the spirits of my grandma, my grandmothers actually, my aunties, women that I've probably felt in my waters but never met. And I hope that they, specifically the older generation, feel represented and seen through Darlene.
The theatre is a safe space for queer people because it's about community. I feel like theatre is a space where we can imagine, it's a vision-building space. I suppose the big difference as a performer that you have within screen and theatre is you have time, so over that period of time you are cultivating a village, your theatre family.
There is no hiding in theatre and I think that's the beauty of it, the hope is that people can be themselves and that's what I love about about theatre — the hope is that we're creating more spaces where people can be themselves and feel safe.
In the musical Fun Home I played Joan. There's this song [in it] Ring of Keys and in that song the main character sees this butch lesbian walk in with a ring of keys. They're just walking in with their dungarees but this little girl sees, somehow, a version of herself in this person, and it's so beautifully encapsulated.
Jeanine Tesori, who wrote this song came and explained the song to us and we all broke down and cried because there is something so powerful about a child seeing themselves, affirming themselves in the world and saying 'I exist, I am here and I am important and I contribute'. When there is so much signalling in the world that says the opposite that is what story can do, that is what all mediums of storytelling —whether through video games, film, TV, theatre, music— can do, it is affirming us.
I run Blacktress UK with my lovely partner Shiloh Coke, and in terms of it being a space — it was inspired by Audre Lorde, and she speaks a lot about community being a force of liberation and I feel like whenever you bring people together intentionally, specifically those that have been on the fringes like Black women or AFAB [assigned female at birth] people, you give the resources and and space and time and it always moves to a place of healing.
That was the first point of call to people who felt isolated, to bring them together, and to have dialogues and specifically intergenerational dialogues, people who are coming into the industry for the first time and those that have been in the industry for many years but maybe haven't been seen or recognised.
In terms of queer people, we've got intergenerational dialogues happening amongst AFAB women who been in our sphere for many years. And there's the younger generation teaching the older generation and the older generation teaching the younger generation, and being able to have those dialogues and conversations, especially through acting as well, is really important.
Some of my queer models, I have to shout out Lady Phyll, who is one of the founders of UK Black Pride. That is a national holiday in our home, we are there every year and just seeing the work that she does with her charity Kaleidoscope globally, going to visit so many different countries advocating on behalf of queer people, being able to just be visible, is incredible.
And even just learning about how UK Black Pride started, literally a group of Black lesbians going to the beach and having a party and now it is one of the biggest Black Prides in the world so I have to shout out Lady Phyll who is a queen. I'm going to say Munroe Bergdorf, who is an incredible model, activist and just how they use their platform and their voice is just so inspiring.
Ted Brown, one of our elders who was there from the beginning in terms of Pride in the UK, he organised the first Gay Pride Rally in 1972 where there was a mass kiss-in which showed just incredible bravery and deep compassion for oneself to just be who you are.
Another queer icon that we should all know about is Pearl Alcock, she was part of the Windrush generation who created spaces for LGBTQ+ people and had parties in a shop that she owned. I think that's really important part of the Windrush generation that we don't get to hear about because they were queer and here too.
She used to host queer parties in Brixton out of a shop that she bought for herself, but it was like 'we're here'. I'm telling the story of the Windrush generation in Alterations, but the queer ones as well they were there. The ones that came over from the Caribbean and for them to have spaces for them to be. themselves and powerful spaces for queer people, especially gay men, in the 1960s, 1970s, I just think that is so radical.
In terms of music there were people who didn't necessarily say they were queer but it was the signalling for me, so I have to shout out Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes from TLC because I was a big TLC fan, I grew up on them. Seeing these women in these baggy clothes who say 'ain't too proud to beg', talking about sexual politics, about love and friendship, was just beautiful and they were just so in your face fun — you wanted to be friends with them.
And I'm a massive Janet Jackson fan, I am an original honorary fan, Missy Elliott as well. These were incredible artists, because I grew up on MTV and I was a music video kid so I watched their music videos and watched what they wore, how they moved, how they did their makeup, how they did their hair, how they were just cool — I was very inspired by these incredible people.
A big film for me was The Colour Purple, that was amazing. Seeing two Black women loving on each other in that way that was just really empowering. Also seeing themselves as being beautiful and seeing beauty in each other, I think that's really important too — especially when we look at what the beauty standard have been. To see beauty in blackness it was delicious.
And also Set It Off, Ursula and Cleo were a hot couple. Who doesn't love an all female heist? That was like the film, and seeing how she spent her money on lingerie for her girlfriend come on. Those are the two big representations, and then of course The L Word as well. That was big, and then obviously from that Generation Q and Orange is the New Black.
I loved Master of None, which had Lena Waithe and Naomi Ackie who were just incredible. That whole storyline between the two of them was beautiful. Also, the Keema Greg storyline in The Wire and her being this incredible detective who is building a life with her wife — I think that storyline is really, really important, seeing this really incredible working Black lesbian, who is also trying to manage married life, and she's kind of failing at it, I think that that's really important because we're messy and complex.
Pose, I'll go back to Pose because it's foundational, I know these are very American centric shows but what I would love to see more is a British representation. Seeing more of those carried over and more investment into Black British, and brown, storylines within the UK. I would love to see more of that.
I think for those struggling with negativity towards the LGBTQ+ community I'd say: you have to go to where love flows. My hope is that, if you struggle to find that love within yourself, you can be in spaces where you can be reminded that you're loved, and that's all different types of love — platonic love with your friendships, community, love with people that don't necessarily know you on a personal level but you can be in a space and just feel that high vibration.
There are spaces for you, even more so now it's important to be in those spaces and to have dialogues with people. I'm from Birmingham, we talk to people on the street, we keep it moving. It has to be love in action, not just a noun, it's a doing word. It's love in action because of the challenges that we're up against.
Being intentional with where we're going, with the words that we speak, because the thing is you can't change someone else's behaviour, you can only change your behaviour. So when there are those things outside that are negative. it's like you have to double down on the love even more.
If there's one negative thing that's out there you best find five loving things, whether that's a poem, listening to a song, contacting someone that you love — be in a space where you can experience love. That's work, but the hope is that it's this nourishing thing, and we can nourish each other.
The biggest lie they have us believe in is that we don't need each other, we do. Community is everything, it's how we nourish ourselves, especially when we feel drained we have to be able to feed each other.
The future of queer storytelling is broad, it's expansive. It's continuous. It is the foundation of our society, we ain't going nowhere, period. We're not going anywhere. I think for those of us that are storytellers, whatever it is that you're doing, continue doing it and share your work.
If you're a bedroom poet, share your poetry. A spoken word artist? Go to open mic, go and just be yourself in spaces. Share your work, especially within the world of art.
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Biblioracle: Hannah Pittard's novel ‘If You Love It, Let It Kill You' lives on its own terms
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Biblioracle: Hannah Pittard's novel ‘If You Love It, Let It Kill You' lives on its own terms

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Harry Potter TV Series Release Date, Cast, Trailer, and Everything We Know
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Harry Potter TV Series Release Date, Cast, Trailer, and Everything We Know

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The Fantastic Four cast leant on unlikely Marvel star for advice
The Fantastic Four cast leant on unlikely Marvel star for advice

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

The Fantastic Four cast leant on unlikely Marvel star for advice

There aren't many people in the world who can relate to being in a Marvel movie, but the Fantastic Four: First Steps cast knew who to turn to when they needed someone to talk to about the unique experience, they tell Yahoo UK. The film introduces Marvel's First Family — Reed Richards (Pedro Pascal), Sue Storm (Vanessa Kirby), Johnny Storm (Joseph Quinn) and Ben Grimm (Ebon Moss-Bachrach) — into the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and follows their battle to protect Earth from dangerous new foes. Julia Garner and Ralph Ineson portray the film's villains, the Silver Surfer and cosmic being Galactus, and both make their debut alongside the Fantastic Four. The pressure of bringing these characters to life on the silver screen felt immense, but given the secrecy around the franchise it wasn't something they could divulge to just anyone — so instead they found the people who would understand. 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They're all creating this amazing film, you've just got to make sure you keep the space to do your bit really truthfully in the middle of all that." Garner had a similar approach when she took on the role of Shalla-Bal, as she adds: "I have friends who have worked in Marvel and they've done motion-capture, they've done all that stuff. I haven't, this was my first time, and there's definitely truth to what [Ralph is] saying, [it's about] just finding something that's going to ground you because in general with movies there's a lot of distractions and there's always reminders that you're in a movie. "This isn't real, whether it's a Marvel movie or it's like a little indie movie, it's still movie. So you have to find things that ground you and make you feel like it's a reality like it's really real. "But also I guess with the motion capture the experience is very different than wearing a costume, going in for hair and makeup every single day and mentally prepping, everything moves much faster because you don't have hair makeup and you don't have a costume." "The rhythm of doing voice work or motion capture work is very exhausting," Ineson adds. "Because you're constantly on, on and on." Taking an exciting new step for Marvel The Fantastic Four have been a regular fixture in cinema, with Marvel's First Family being brought to life twice already in 2005 and 2015, respectively, for very different takes. These were made by 20th Century Fox when the studio owned the rights to the characters, and now it's time for Marvel to have a crack at it and make it feel different and new. If anyone could do it, though, it would be Matt Shakman, who helped catapult the studio's Disney+ era to greatness with the exceptional WandaVision — a bar the studio has struggled to reach ever since. The director had a difficult job on his hands to make the Fantastic Four work, but he tells Yahoo UK how he was given the creative freedom to make something truly his own. "I think what's great about Marvel is they're willing to take risks," the filmmaker says. "Everything from Guardians of the Galaxy to Thor: Ragnarok, to Black Panther to WandaVision. The chance that you can slip this idea of superhero movie but you can go in so many different directions, what makes the Fantastic Four so special is because it's a family. "They're the first family of Marvel, they saved Marvel in the '60s by doing this radical idea of making a comic book about a real family, and I think people have related to it for 60 plus years for that reason." And the movie needed the right cast to make it work, which they found in Pascal, Kirby, Quinn and Moss-Bachrach, he adds: "They're all such brilliant actors and they have such wonderful chemistry together. Each one of them brought humanity to their characters, which I think is the biggest part of it. "I think there needs to be grounded, real, authentic, emotional truth in everything that you do, and the bigger the canvas the more important that authenticity and that emotional grounding is needed. And all four of them are just great actors with incredible range." Facing backlash over female Silver Surfer Part of what has made this Fantastic Four different to what's come before is its take on the Silver Surfer, who has been gender-flipped, or more specifically, an existing female villain has been tapped to be the classic character instead of the expected Norrin Radd. Backlash was rampant when this change was revealed, and Garner shares how difficult it was to face that: "First of all, it's a lot of pressure because you want to respect the fans as well. We were talking about that earlier, but it's different because this is Shalla-Bal, so it's a different Silver Surfer. I was just very excited to play this character, and hopefully it resonates with people. I'm hoping for the best!" The other big bad, pun intended, is Galactus, and Ineson was the only possible candidate for Shakman, he admits: "He's got the greatest voice in movies. I was trying to figure out who should be a 14-billion-year-old space vampire who's 1000 feet tall, and it's Ralph. "We built a suit for him. We shot him practically, we filmed him in a way that you film miniatures with a lot of light and certain optics so that he feels huge, he feels like Mount Rushmore and that's how we approached it." Ineson wasn't surprised by this, as he jokingly adds that he's always been seen as perfect for villain roles rather than heroes: "They look at my face and hear my voice and they're not getting hero." Garner says it was the same with her: "Nobody ever asked me to play a hero, they're like 'ohh villain'. They look at me, they're like 'yeah, villain'. I don't think I've ever been cast as a hero." The challenge was making the world feel unique, but Shakman felt Marvel gave him a good starting point: "What's been so great about this is we've been just creating our own universe. "It's Earth-828, its own universe, they're the only superheroes in it, there's no other Marvel superheroes coming into it that you've seen before. And so it was special, it was our own corner of the MCU that we got to build and develop, and then where they go from here is exciting and you know the future is bright for them." Fantastic Four: First Steps premieres in UK cinemas on Thursday, 24 July.

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