The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Study finds more racial diversity in LGBTQ film characters

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NEW YORK >> The year 2020 saw welcome growth in racial diversity of LBGTQ characters in films released by major studios, according to a new study by the advocacy group GLAAD.

But for the fourth year in a row there were no transgende­r or non-binary characters in those films.

The study, released Thursday, also found no LGBTQ characters in those films living with HIV, or with disabiliti­es.

GLAAD looked at 44 films released in theaters by major studios in 2020, a limited number due to the pandemic.

Of those films, 10 (22.7%) contained LGBTQ characters. The films included “Kajilliona­ire,” “Like a Boss,” “The Broken Hearts Gallery,” “Fantasy Island,” “Valley Girl,” “Freaky,” “The New Mutants” and “Birds of Prey.”

It was an increase of 4.1% from the previous year, but a decrease of 12 films overall (last year’s study looked at 118 films.)

GLAAD counted 20 LGBTQ characters in those films, a decrease from 50 in last year’s report (again, attributab­le to the reduced sample size of films released in 2020). Of the 20 characters, 11 were women and 9 men, making this the first time GLAAD’s tracking found more women than men in those roles.

Especially concerning, GLAAD noted, was that for the fourth year in a row, there were zero transgende­r and/or non-binary characters counted.

The group renewed its call for increased transgende­r and non-binary representa­tion and storytelli­ng, “especially in a political climate with anti-transgende­r legislatio­n moving forward at a record pace.”

The report came two days after Mj Rodriguez of TV’s “Pose” became the first transgende­r performer nominated for a major acting Emmy, a developmen­t hailed by GLAAD.

 ??  ?? Gina Rodriguez as Melanie, left, Richard Jenkins as Robert Dyne and Evan Rachel Wood as Old Dolio Dyne in a scene from director Miranda July’s “Kajilliona­ire.”
Gina Rodriguez as Melanie, left, Richard Jenkins as Robert Dyne and Evan Rachel Wood as Old Dolio Dyne in a scene from director Miranda July’s “Kajilliona­ire.”

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