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"Orphan Black" Is Very Queer, But It's Not Trying To Make A Political Statement

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The showrunners of Orphan Black and their science adviser really don’t give a fig what you think about their LGBT characters.

Évelyne Brochu as Delphine and Tatiana Maslany as Cosima on Orphan Black.

BBC America

Since its premiere in 2013, Orphan Black has always been pretty queer.

And its stars have celebrated that. Two years ago, Jordan Gavaris, who plays the exuberantly gay Felix on the sci-fi clone thriller, was applauded for defending the character's flamboyance. "You cannot collectively as a society decide that you are only going to represent one part of a minority," he said. Tatiana Maslany, who plays all the female clones on the series, said, "We sort of embrace the idea of every human having the potential to be anything, and I think that opens the door for all kinds of dialogue about sexuality and about gender."

But though three of the people behind Orphan Black — science adviser Cosima Herter and showrunners John Fawcett and Graeme Manson — have thought about their LGBT characters consciously (they are serious about representing diversity, they all said in phone interviews with BuzzFeed News), they see diversity as quotidian, in a way. The key characters Cosima (played by Maslany and named after Herter), Felix, Delphine (Évelyne Brochu), and Tony (also Maslany) are all queer, and the writers don't mean much by it.

Jordan Gavaris as Felix on Orphan Black.

BBC America

It only stands out because they've resisted television tropes — "a loving atomized family that has a son and a daughter and a dog," Herter gave as an example. In fact, their show looks more like the real world than its painstakingly heterosexual TV counterparts. "It's less spectacular than it is actually a mundane fact of life," Herter said.

The fictional Cosima says early on in Orphan Black that her sexuality is not the most interesting thing about her. She and the other characters represent a spectrum of visible queerness, from the almost straight Delphine to the trans Tony to the flamingly gay Felix. As Herter put it, "whether you are an effectively functioning reproductive machine" is not a question the show concerns itself with.

Biology, Herter said, has always been used for political ends, to regulate "what's a good body and what's a bad body" — science is far from neutral. For example, she continued, it has been proven by science that women are inferior to men. And once it's established through science that female bodies are biologically inferior to male bodies, "we can legitimize how we police them," she said. It's happened with women, and it's happened with queer people. (See any discussion of a "gay gene.")

But Cosima and Delphine, in particular, are characters who complicate the "born this way" biological narrative that's popularly used to justify queer existence: Cosima, though she's genetically identical to her "sisters," is the one lesbian clone (that we know of), while Delphine identifies as straight, until she falls in love with Cosima.

"I can think of three examples in my life that have been like that, that just wanted to be with the right person," Fawcett said. "It's not about questioning your sexuality or not questioning your sexuality — it's about finding your person."


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