'Hamilton' star Leslie Odom Jr. speaks out about one of Broadway's most brutal realities
Leslie Odom Jr. almost quit acting before he landed the pivotal role of Aaron Burr in Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Hamilton. He was 30 years old, a tall, obviously attractive black man, with a voice from the gods and a killer knack for choreography, but he still couldn’t find a job. On the Vogue podcast, hosted by André Leon Talley, Odom explained how his career nearly died before it took off:
Then there’s the times that you book a big show, you book a big pilot and then it doesn’t get picked up. The phone’s not ringing. I just got tired of—how do you ever grow up? How do you ever raise a family? How do you become an adult if it can just be stripped away like that at every moment?
It’s terrifying to think that American culture might have been deprived of a rising star because the industry hasn’t made room for black actors to get roles that can launch their careers. Odom isn’t quite a household name, but Hamilton has been such a hit that it’s hard to imagine him ever being placed back in the same situation today. Success, we’ve been led to believe, only reaps success. But for Odom, that isn’t and can’t be the case. As it stands, there just isn’t space for him in the incredibly white space of the theater. And in The Hollywood Reporter‘s Tonys Actor Roundtable, published this morning, Odom explains that he is essentially stuck in the same position he was before Hamilton.