The Telegram (St. John's)

Gay performers shine with several wins

- ALEX DOBUZINSKI­S

LOS ANGELES — Gay performers shined at the Emmy Awards on Sunday with wins in several categories including best actor in a drama series, which went to “Pose” star Billy Porter as the first openly gay black man to take home the honour.

“Once again, we witness history unfold, the Emmy goes to Billy Porter,” actress Kerry Washington said before Porter strode on stage in platform shoes, a black suit with glittery stripes and a hat with a brim extending to one side like a wing.

“The category is love, y’all, love!” Porter told the audience, before quoting the late author

James Baldwin and thanking his husband.

Porter, a veteran of the Broadway stage, plays the emcee of a LGBTQ fashion ball in the television drama “Pose.”

Backstage after his win, Porter, who turned 50 the day before claiming his Emmy, told reporters he was grateful to have “lived long enough” to win as his “true, authentic self.”

“I was told that who and what

I am would never be successful, period,” Porter said. “That’s what I was told. I did not believe them.”

Other moments at the show also underscore­d the strides that the Emmy awards — Hollywood’s top honours in television — have made toward greater diversity.

Jharrel Jerome, who is black, won for best actor for a limited series for his role in the drama “When They See Us,” which chronicles the fight for justice of five men wrongly convicted of raping a jogger in New York’s Central Park in 1989.

The five black and Latino men, who were known as the “Central Park Five” and spent years in prison before their conviction­s were overturned, celebrated in the audience as Jerome dedicated the award to the “exonerated five.”

Openly gay actor Ben Whishaw of “A Very English Scandal” won for best supporting actor in a limited series, “Rupaul’s Drag Race,” which features drag performer Rupaul, won for best competitio­n program, and Peter Dinklage was awarded his fourth career Emmy for his role in “Game of Thrones.”

“I count myself so fortunate to be a member of a community that is nothing but all about tolerance and diversity because no other place could I be standing on a stage like this,” Dinklage said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada