New York Daily News

‘Pose’ star Ross set to make B’way history as trans lead

- BY KARU F. DANIELS BY MURI ASSUNÇÃO

LBGTQ history will be made on the Great White Way.

Angelica Ross has been cast as Roxie Hart in “Chicago,” becoming the first openly transgende­r woman to play a leading role on Broadway.

Earlier this year, “A Strange Loop” breakout L Morgan Lee made history as the first openly transgende­r actress to be nominated for a Tony Award.

Producers of Broadway’s longest-running Tony Award-winning musical revival announced Thursday that Ross is scheduled to perform an eight-week limited engagement at the Ambassador Theatre from Sept. 12 though Nov. 6.

“Chicago” marks the “Pose” star’s Broadway debut.

The 41-year-old Kenosha, Wis., native rose to prominence with her breakthrou­gh role in the Ryan Murphy and Steven Canals-produced drama series, which is recognized for featuring the largest cast of transgende­r actors in regular roles, as well as the largest LGBTQ cast for a scripted series.

Ross has since starred in Murphy’s “American Horror Story” series and the short film “Brutal.”

The murderous vaudevilli­an villain Roxie Hart is one of Broadway’s iconic leading roles.

Ann Reinking, who originated the role in the 1996 revival, won a Tony Award for best choreograp­hy. Throughout the past 25 years, a who’s who of actresses have been featured in the 1920s-set Kander & Ebb musical. Among them are, most recently, “Baywatch” idol Pamela Anderson, singer and actress Brandy, former supermodel Christie Brinkley, actress Sofia Vergara, “Real Housewives of Beverly Hills” star Erika Jayne and Lisa Rinna, alongside model Brooke Shields. In 2010, Grammy winner Michelle Williams razzle-dazzled in the role, after making history as the first Black woman to perform the role on London’s West End the year before.

Two-time Oscar winner Renée Zellweger portrayed Roxie Hart in the 2001 film adaptation, which also starred Catherine Zeta Jones.

“Chicago’s’ Roxie Hart is one of the most recognizab­le, iconic and beloved characters in the history of Broadway, and a true talent like Angelica Ross will delight audiences with her impressive acting, singing and performanc­e skills,” said Anthony Allen Ramos, vice president of communicat­ions & talent, GLAAD. “Angelica is also a respected leader in the transgende­r community, and joins L Morgan Lee as trans women of color currently starring on Broadway.”

Darwin Del Fabro is all about queer power.

When the horror film “They/Them” debuts on Peacock on Friday, the 25-yearold Brazilian actor and singer wants viewers to feel empowered by their own “queerness and uniqueness” — and use that feeling to change their lives.

“Take me as an example,” Del Fabro, who stars in the film as the mysterious outsider Gabriel, told the Daily News. “I’ve always wanted to be an actor doing an internatio­nal career here in America, and I’m getting those chances because I’m confident in who I am and [in] my queerness — and that’s my power.”

“They/Them” (pronounced “TheySlash-Them”), the directoria­l debut of three-time Oscar-nominated screenwrit­er John Logan, is a queer homage to ’80s slasher films, in which the scary fictional narrative runs parallel to the very real horror of LGBTQ conversion.

The film — a mix of the slasher classic “Friday the 13th” and the queer classic “But I’m a Cheerleade­r” — features a group of young LGBTQ adults arriving at a Camp Crystal Lake-style site run by Owen Whistler (Kevin Bacon) who promises them a “new sense of freedom” by the end of the week.

Bacon — who played counselor Jack in the original “Friday the 13th” in 1980 — stars alongside six-time Emmy-nominated actress Anna Chlumsky (“Veep”), Emmy-winner Carrie Preston (“The Good Wife”) and a mostly queer cast of young actors.

Working with such seasoned actors was an “amazing” experience for the Brazilian newcomer who’s a “big fan of horror movies,” and who remembers watching Bacon in “Friday the 13th” as a kid. Working alongside him was nothing short of “magical,” he recalled, as well as an incredible learning experience.

“It was just a master class, just seeing [the veteran actors] perform,” Del Fabro told The News, adding that to top it all off, they were all “so nice with everyone in the cast.”

Del Fabro was born in the small city of Santa Maria in Brazil’s southernmo­st state of Rio Grande do Sul, but moved to Rio de Janeiro as a young child to pursue a career in entertainm­ent.

After his first major role in musical theater, at age 13, he quickly built an impressive résumé on the Brazilian stage and also played some memorable characters on television.

However, about four years ago, after deciding that he wanted to take his chances on an internatio­nal career, Del Fabro left everything behind, packed up his suitcases, and moved to New York City.

There was only one minor detail, however: He didn’t speak any English.

His first real contact with the language happened at the Broadway Dance Center, where he’d enrolled in a musical theater program, taking 24 classes per week.

Even though it was challengin­g, the hard work paid off.

In less than five years, Del Fabro, who now lives in Manhattan, became fluent in a second language; performed at New York City’s 54 Below; did some Off-OffBroadwa­y work; released his third album, “Revisiting Jobim,” an homage to a 1969 recording of Bossa Nova legend Antonio Carlos Jobim and Frank Sinatra; and landed his first movie role in the U.S., in a film written and directed by Tony Award winner Logan.

The role of Gabriel, in fact, was written with him in mind, as Del Fabro casually explained.

“I was working with John [Logan] in a play in New York for almost six months, but had to shut it down because of the pandemic,” he recalled. “I was like, ‘Oh my God,’ I lost the opportunit­y to work with John Logan,” he said.

“Then three months later he called me saying ‘I wrote this role for you in a slasher film, and I would love if you’re interested in reading it and playing Gabriel,” Del Fabro said. “So that’s how it happened.”

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 ?? ?? Kevin Bacon runs a “Friday the 13th”-style LGBTQ camp in “They/ Them,” which features (main photo, from left) Carrie Preston, Anna Chlumsky and Boone Platt, as well as Darwin Del Fabro (inset).
Kevin Bacon runs a “Friday the 13th”-style LGBTQ camp in “They/ Them,” which features (main photo, from left) Carrie Preston, Anna Chlumsky and Boone Platt, as well as Darwin Del Fabro (inset).

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