'Tangerine' star Mya Taylor is determined not to be 'that person Hollywood forgets'
Whether she garners any wins this coming awards season, Mya Taylor has already made history. Earlier this month, studio heads at Magnolia Pictures and Duplass Brothers Productions began campaigning for Taylor and fellow actress Kitana Kiki Rodriguez to receive Oscar nominations for their roles in Tangerine—the first time a Hollywood studio has ever launched an Academy Awards campaign in support of a transgender actress.
But there’s a woman behind this Great Moment in Trans History, and I kinda sorta got to meet her over the phone last week. The Mya Taylor I spoke with sounded extremely focused on her work and fully aware, and proud, of how much she’s accomplished in her short time in the business. But the 24-year-old, who lives in cold-ass North Dakota when she’s not working, is also a huge Tamar Braxton fan. She’s also got a soft spot for HGTV, even if she’s too busy at the moment to kick back and watch. She recently wrapped a short, non-whitewashed film about the Stonewall riots called Happy Birthday, Marsha!, and she just started shooting another short, Diane from the Moon, earlier this week.
Taylor said that she works this hard and this often so that she can keep working this hard and this often for years to come. Hollywood does not present trans actors and actresses with many opportunities on which to build their careers, but Taylor is determined to come out on top. “I’m not going to be that person Hollywood forgets,” she told me. “I’m just not.”
This interview has been edited and condensed.
Hi, Mya, how’re you doing?
Fine.
So, I heard you were just cast in the title role of this short film called Diane from the Moon. Can you tell me about the movie?
I’m so excited about this role. I play Diane, a pagan priestess who is being stalked by this other character, Tex, after going through a breakup. I, like a lot of transgender people, have been saying that we want more transgender stories out there, you know? I’m hoping this movie really shows how mean people can be to trans people.
Is Tex one of those “mean” people?
He’s not kind at all. I know a lot of trans people who have had people be really mean to them. I’ve experienced it myself, and it’s not fun. I’m hoping that this movie sends the message that people need to start treating us like human beings. Just because they don’t understand the trans concept, that doesn’t mean they can’t treat us like people.
You also just wrapped shooting another short film in which you play the title role: Happy Birthday, Marsha! What was it like playing Stonewall revolutionary Marsha P. Johnson?
That was so important to me. The movie starts with Marsha throwing a birthday party for herself. She wants all of her friends to come, but none of them show up. So, she goes to Stonewall to have a good time, even though she’s down. The police come and raid the bar, and they’re disrespectful to her and mean and—I don’t want to tell you how it ends, but basically Marsha helps start the riots.
So, this is your first time playing an actual historical figure and not a fictional character, right? How was playing Marsha different than, like, playing Alexandra in Tangerine?
Acting comes naturally to me, so I don’t usually have to do much practice. But since I was playing a real life person, I wanted to make sure it was perfect. I did a whole bunch of research to get this character perfectly on point—I even took voice lessons to sound like Marsha. Some of her friends got to be in the movie, too. They said I sounded just like her, which made me so happy.