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Canadian actor has been shaking up gender stereotype­s on the big screen for years, Alyssa Rosenberg writes.

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With a Dec. 1 letter announcing his new name and pronouns,

The Umbrella Academy star and Oscar nominee Elliot Page became one of the highest-profile actors to come out as transgende­r. In that missive, Page expressed deep gratitude to the trans people who have inspired him and pledged to “offer whatever support I can and continue to strive for a more loving and equal society.”

Page should give himself some credit for what he's done already. Before he came out, Page's female characters regularly broke Hollywood's rigid gender mould, providing a more expansive, fluid sense of what it means to be a woman than movies and television normally offer.

Take Juno, the 2007 romantic comedy that establishe­d Page as a star. The movie, which stars Page as the titular pregnant teenager, is full of dialogue that is only dubiously adolescent.

But Juno does look like a kind of teenage girl who is hardly ever represente­d on screen. Her hair is tied back rather than immaculate­ly blown-out; she wears loose jeans rather than skinny-cut ones and layers flannels and sweatshirt­s over T-shirts. Juno sits with her legs apart and chomps on a pipe for effect; she's a slightly odd kid, a mode in which Page seemed completely natural.

The result is a movie that, in deviating from an airbrushed view of girlhood and a sanitized vision of pregnancy, actually ends up feeling truer than it would have otherwise. Pregnancy and childbirth may be, for the most part, things women experience, but the best way to capture the nature of that shared passage isn't to coat it in a Barbie-pink gloss, or to pretend that anyone manages to look at all put-together after hours of contractio­ns. Discomfort, sweatiness and voluminous cursing while waiting for an epidural can all be part of being female.

Two of Page's best supporting roles were also as women who were defined by their talents and ideologica­l commitment­s, rather than their relationsh­ip status or sex appeal.

In Christophe­r Nolan's 2010 heist movie Inception, Page portrays Ariadne, a gifted young architect tasked with designing the elaborate dreamscape­s that master thief Dom Cobb (Leonardo Dicaprio) uses to infiltrate the minds of his targets. In addition to the role Ariadne plays in the scheme, she and Dom develop a kind of relationsh­ip that's fairly unusual in a Hollywood movie.

Ariadne becomes Dom's confidante as he struggles with intrusive thoughts of his ex-wife, and ultimately plays a key role

in helping him vanquish those distorted memories. But Nolan's film doesn't try to make Ariadne's character conform to some of the gendered expectatio­ns that might follow such a set-up. Ariadne and Dom don't become romantical­ly involved. And while Ariadne's final confrontat­ion with Dom's memories requires her to act courageous­ly, her strength isn't dressed up, per the Hollywood norm, in hyper-femininity.

Page gives audiences a character whose beliefs are her most important characteri­stic in The East, Zal Batmanglij's 2013 thriller about a corporate-espionage agent who infiltrate­s a radical environmen­talist group. As Izzy, the daughter of an executive whose company pollutes water

ways with toxic chemicals, Page uses physical slightness in surprising ways. Izzy may be small, even delicate, but her conviction and her rage are not: The sight of such an unimposing person as a rigid ideologica­l enforcer communicat­es the depth of the anarchists' commitment.

And in Netflix's 2019 Tales of the City miniseries, Page plays Shawna Hawkins, a profession­ally aimless, sexually swashbuckl­ing member of a multi-generation­al chosen family. Shawna is simultaneo­usly boyish and vulnerable, adventures­ome and unworldly.

Certainly, Page may have reason to wonder how the movie industry will look at him going forward. While actors and directors such as Laverne Cox and

Janet Mock have developed viable careers, they did so after they transition­ed: The famously riskaverse movie and TV businesses didn't have to consider how audiences might react to seeing stars they knew in one context in very different roles.

Page will continue with his most recent role, playing the female character Vanya on The Umbrella Academy. As he and Hollywood look forward to what he might do next, the industry should remember that Page has already excelled at pushing back against Hollywood's notions of gender norms.

Movie lovers will be lucky to see what he can do next. On-screen masculinit­y is due for a shakeup.

 ?? FOX SEARCHLIGH­T ?? In his breakout role as the title character in 2007's Juno, Elliot Page played a slightly odd teen.
FOX SEARCHLIGH­T In his breakout role as the title character in 2007's Juno, Elliot Page played a slightly odd teen.

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