Here We Are
T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine|October 2020
As actors with disabilities are increasingly cast in Broadway plays, Hollywood movies and prestige television shows, they’ve created a new template for the artist-as-activist, challenging their industry and their audiences to reconsider what inclusion really means.
Mark Harris
Here We Are

Ryan O’connell would like you to know that he is tired and pissed off and horny. He is tired of waiting for what he calls “our ‘Transparent’ moment” (some of his fellow actors call it, instead, “our ‘Pose’ moment”), by which he means a single piece of breakthrough pop culture that makes people aware of a heretofore ignored and stereotyped minority, a prizewinning, noisemaking event that kicks open the door to mainstream omnipresence and ultimately to normalisation. He is pissed off that it hasn’t happened yet. “I think about this a lot,” he says. “Why, in this woke-ass culture that we live in, where so much attention is given to marginalised populations, do people with disabilities still largely go ignored?” The actor, who has cerebral palsy, is also, he says, “horny for representation that comes from actual disabled people, because we live in a dark hellscape of a capitalist country. Real power can only be accrued through opportunities, and you need to be given the keys to tell your own story.”

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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T Singapore: The New York Times Style Magazine

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