Why Casting Cis Actors for Trans Roles Is an Issue | Teen Ink

Why Casting Cis Actors for Trans Roles Is an Issue

July 11, 2018
By Anonymous

I absolutely do not support ScarJo playing a trans man. I will not ever support a cis actor in a trans role, but I will not support her playing that role and dismissing it on the grounds that other actors have done the same. 

I have very little experience in acting, but what I’ve done I’ve enjoyed immensely, but by being transgender, I know acting to the extent I would like to won’t happen. Why? Because I will not be given the opportunity to. Well, you may say, what about actors like Elliot Fletcher, or actresses like Laverne Cox, who are transgender and successful? They- you may notice- have only ever played trans characters, and there aren’t many of those. Transgender actors are only ever hired to play trans characters, which raised two huge issues.

1: Trans actors are given trans roles, but so are cis actors; trans character for some reason does not automatically mean a trans actor should be used.

2: Trans actors aren’t given cis roles; this is an issue because it means that trans characters and trans actors are still being viewed first and foremost by their gender identity, by that qualifier “trans”

On top of this, in representing the story of a transgender person, it is important to understand all aspects of the transgender experience. And for me personally, community is essential to the trans experience. What I mean by this is that solidarity and awareness in the entire queer community, but particularly the trans community is what drives positivity and the closeness that has provided me and many others like me the security and freedom to come out and know there are places we are accepted. So, by hiring a cis actor to ply a trans role, that sense of community is entirely erased, the ability to provide representation for an actor and community is erased. There is no togetherness or solidarity in having a cis woman play a transgender man, there is an extent to which she will never understand the experiences of said man or any other trans man and therefore it is disrespectful and I would go so far as to say a farce to cast her. 

It has been mentioned that she was cast for her skill in acting, and that her job as an actor is to embrace what she, as a cis woman, would not naturally understand, and to act out the character. Of course, that makes sense, but we don’t expect a white person to act out the black experience, we don’t expect a cis man to act out a cis woman’s experience, because we can understand that that actor would not fit that role. And that is not said in any way to compare the experiences of transphobia to sexism or racism, but to compare to a similar lack of representation in media that has changed over time. Whole days could be spent drawing similar parallels, on the inability of an actor to fit certain demographics, which is the reason why we evolved past medieval casting- not every actor is a white man because not every character is a white man. Yes, maybe ScarJo will perform well in this film, but that’s not what’s being addressed, her experience in that role will mean significantly less to her than to a trans actor given the same opportunity. She does not share the same history with the character she’s representing, she does not share the same community, and cis white women are not lacking in Hollywood representation. Maybe ScarJo will be able to act as a man, but that phrase “act as a man” is one that has, in many phrasings but always the same meaning, been used to ridicule the trans community, claiming trans individuals are just “acting” as the opposite gender. I have been told I am trying to be someone else, and the man that I am making myself into has been compared to a character when it is my reality, my past, present, and future. Having any cis woman play a trans man allows, to some extent, for the “acting as a man” to become a representation of what trans men are doing, which is why the casting is so inappropriate, it reflects on how society views and is allowed to view trans individuals as a whole. 


The author's comments:

I am a transgender man, who has been out and comfortable in my identity for four years, and have been acting for two. No, my experience is not the ultimate one for comparison or perspective on this matter, but the issue of trans representation in Hollywood needs to be addressed. Seeing Scarlett Johansson cast as a trans man infuriates me, but seeing her dismiss critics is even worse. A negligence of actors to understand their role and influence is what allows bigotry like this to flourish. 


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