Column: The in-your-face politics behind Billy Porter’s perfect Oscar night tuxedo gown - Los Angeles Times
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Column: The in-your-face politics behind Billy Porter’s perfect Oscar night tuxedo gown

The actor and singer Billy Porter arrives at the Oscars on Feb. 24 in a striking tuxedo ball gown designed by Christian Siriano.
(Jay L. Clendenin / Los Angeles Times)
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The only person who turned my head on the red carpet the other night was Billy Porter, the Broadway star whose black velvet tuxedo gown was as beautiful as it was transgressive.

When I saw Porter, with that voluminous ball gown skirt trailing behind him, I felt as if I were seeing the contemporary equivalent of the mythical centaur — a proud man’s head and torso appended to an unexpected but perfect bottom half.

“My goal is to be a walking piece of political art every time I show up,” he told Vogue magazine. “I’ve always wanted to wear a ballgown. I just didn’t know when.”

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The outfit won him the Oscar-watching world’s attention. Early Sunday evening, he was trending on Twitter. On Monday, he spent most of the day in interviews.

When I finally reached him Monday evening, his husky voice was ragged from all the talking.

He and his husband, Adam Porter-Smith, were about to leave Los Angeles for Bora Bora, where they would join a South Pacific cruise that was already underway. “Sounds glamorous, doesn’t it?” he said with a chuckle. “I’ll be performing.”

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READ MORE: Gender-bending fashion scores on the Oscars red carpet »

In 2013, Porter won a Tony for his portrayal of the drag queen Lola in the musical “Kinky Boots.” He’s getting ready to shoot the second season of Ryan Murphy’s FX show, “Pose,” about the demimonde of competitive drag queens in 1980s New York as the AIDS crisis was peaking.

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He plays Pray Tell, the hilariously bitchy ballroom emcee and volcano of compliments and insults as the queens strut their (usually homemade) stuff: “I don’t know of a princess or a queen who gets their clothes from… Casual Corner!”

His work in “Pose” has put him on the awards shows red carpets this year. His first attention-grabbing outfit – an embroidered suit and matching full-length cape with hot pink lining – was a step toward the Oscars night ball gown.

“I have subjugated this instinct in myself for years,” he said. “It’s the very thing I have run from my whole life. When you are black and gay and you grow up in the church in the African American culture, it’s like your masculinity is in question at every turn. But what does that mean, to be masculine? To be strong and powerful? Women wear pants all the time, and nobody bats an eye, but a man puts on a dress and that’s disgusting?”

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Just like the fashion runways of the world, the Oscars red carpet is a fashion fantasy land. For the fantasy to work, everyone must buy in. But every once in a while, someone refuses to play along. Or bends the rules. A Frances McDormand, say, whose sack-like dresses, Birkenstocks and bare face constitute an aggressive rejection of Hollywood’s artifice (and a metaphor for her career).

Or a Billy Porter, who offers a different kind of truth; that men can be comfortable outside the “masculine” norms that guide most men’s runway choices.

That Jason Momoa can wear a pale pink scrunchie on his wrist and be considered transgressive is all you need to know about the narrow range of acceptable male fashion expression.

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“It’s truly about authenticity,” Porter told me. “It’s easy to be who you are when who you are is popular. How can you be authentic when everything you are is reviled?”

He’s not wrong. Among the first nasty reactions to his gown was the insufferable Piers Morgan, who tweeted, “Am I allowed to say this looks absolutely ridiculous? #BillyPorter.”

This is the more benign expression of a serious problem. Despite all the recent gains for LGBTQ civil rights, there’s a relentless pushback from the Christian right, and a willingness on the part of the Trump administration to shore up a shrinking base by attempting to reverse progress.

Porter’s outfit was an unflinching refutation of that, and reminded me of the old gay-rights slogan: We’re here, we’re queer, get used to it.

Porter’s gown was created by the designer Christian Siriano, a “Project Runway” winner who went on to rescue Leslie Jones, who tweeted that no one wanted to dress her for the premiere of “Ghostbusters” in 2016.

Siriano stepped forward and created an off-shoulder, body skimming red gown that became an instant bestseller for him. Since then, he’s become something of a patron saint to the Not-Size-Zero crowd.

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When Porter asked him to make a gown, Siriano did not hesitate.

The first time he tried it on, Porter told Vogue, “I felt alive. I felt free. And open, and radiant. And beautiful! Which has not always been the case for me. I haven’t always felt so good about myself. It really is astonishing how much of an effect clothes have on your spirit.”

On Oscar night, he told me, the feeling was even more intense.

“I felt like I can float on air,” he said. “I can conquer the world.”

And so he did.

Tony-winning actor and singer Billy Porter at the 76th Golden Globe Awards at the Beverly Hilton Hotel on Jan. 6 in Beverly Hills. His embroidered suit and matching cape were designed by Randi Rahm.
(Frazer Harrison / Getty Images)

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Twitter: @AbcarianLAT

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