logo
Cynthia Erivo's new album makes her feel "totally naked"

Cynthia Erivo's new album makes her feel "totally naked"

CBC06-06-2025

Cynthia Erivo is feeling vulnerable. She's a musical theatre veteran and the star of last year's film adaptation of Wicked, but putting out her album I Forgive You feels completely different.
"Whilst it is scary, I think that's also the most exciting thing," Erivo tells Q 's Tom Power. "I get to give people a part of myself that I haven't really given before.… This feels totally naked."
WATCH | Cynthia Erivo's full interview with Tom Power:
From mourning a bitter break up in her single Worst Of Me, to acknowledging her abandonment issues in her song Replay, Erivo's 20 track album I Forgive You is filled with reflections on her life's traumas. One of her biggest epiphanies is that she needs to heal from the pain of her fractured relationship with her father. Erivo says her desire for his approval was causing her to overwork herself.
"After that split [from my father], it starts to become about, 'I wanna prove to you that I am lovable,'" Erivo says. "And that's when it started becoming like, 'I'm going to do well every single time, because you're going to realize that you've lost something.'... This last couple of years has definitely been about letting [my younger self] let go of that kind of anger."
WATCH | Official visualizer for Replay:
I Forgive You is a pop record, but Cynthia Erivo's background as a strong soprano still comes through. In addition to starring in the hit movie Wicked opposite Ariana Grande, she also spent a decade performing in London's West End and on Broadway.
"I did a tour of Sister Act in the UK…. That changed everything." says Erivo. "Then The Color Purple happened.… I remember being in the room and singing with the [musical director], and by the end, they were in tears.… Then whilst we were doing the show in London, I get called into the office, and they're like, 'Hey, [The Color Purple] is going to Broadway. We're gonna take you with it.' That changed my life.… And it just keeps going on."
Even though she has a top notch musical theatre resume, Erivo says that she went through the same audition process for Wicked as everyone else. She had meetings with director Jon M. Chu, then a long audition day with acting out scenes, performing songs, and trying chemistry tests with other actors. It was an intense process — especially because she was also juggling other high-stakes jobs around the same time.
"[The audition] was the day after I'd sung at the [Walt Disney Concert] Hall with the L.A. Philharmonic," Erivo explains. "It was like this weird juxtaposition of things happening at the same time. So, 'Go and do this giant gig, this giant moment with the Philharmonic… and then come in the next day, and be ready to be Elphaba'.… And then I was in London shooting [ Luther: The Fallen Sun ] with Idris Elba. Again, very wild for me."
Cynthia Erivo's life runs at a non-stop pace, and she can barely take in all her success. Like her character Elphaba in Wicked, she always felt different than everyone else — to this day, she still feels like she doesn't fit in. It's hard for her to wrap her head around being popular.
"My life has been like a constant sort of ticking over of things that keep surprising me," Erivo says. "I'm endlessly grateful for the fact that life keeps bringing me wonderful surprises. I just have to be open to it, really."
The full interview with Cynthia Erivo is

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Davie Village Pride Festival returning this summer after 6-year hiatus
Davie Village Pride Festival returning this summer after 6-year hiatus

CTV News

time5 hours ago

  • CTV News

Davie Village Pride Festival returning this summer after 6-year hiatus

A street party in Vancouver's Davie Village is returning for Pride season this year for the first time since the pandemic. Revellers will be able to descend on Davie Street immediately following the Pride Parade on Aug. 3. The road will close between Burrard and Jervis streets and fill with DJs, vendors and drag performers. There will also be crafts and live music in Nelson Park, which was the starting point of Vancouver's first official Pride Parade in 1981. Zac Remple, managing director of Vancouver Pride Society, says the city's queer community is excited to have an official event in the neighbourhood again, which has been a 2SLGBTQ+ gathering place for decades. 'This season is really about a sense of homecoming for folks who hold a lot of meaning to Davie Village,' he told CTV News. 'Pride is so, so important and it's really about that feeling of coming together, being together, celebrating together, and there's no place to do that better than Davie.' The festival is a collaboration between the Vancouver Pride Society, the West End BIA and QMUNITY. Teri Smith, the executive director of the business association, said local merchants are eager for Pride traffic to return to the street. 'Businesses have been hit really hard over these past few years, it feels like layer after layer of things, and so being able to celebrate and have a joyful moment with our community and with our queer community is really important,' she told CTV News. The Davie Village Pride Festival will run from 2 p.m. to 10 p.m. on Sunday, Aug. 3.

Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia
Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia

National Post

time10 hours ago

  • National Post

Amy Hamm: The rabbit rescue that refused to be cancelled for alleged transphobia

It's June: the western world's Holy Month of Pride, and, as such, we must all be on our best behaviour so as not to offend the delicate sensibilities of gender activists — you know, the ones that occupy the latter half of the expanding LGBTQ2S+ acronym. Article content Unfortunately, the United Kingdom's Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue somehow missed this memo. The registered charity drew the ire of Irish comedian and transgender rights activist Aidan Comerford this week, following an online attack by anonymous activists whose work caught Comerford's attention. Comerford, whose X bio notes that he 'generally tweets about what transphobia looks like,' astutely observed that the charity was committing the cardinal sin of following unapproved social media accounts on X. Article content The accounts in question, noticed Comerford on June 14, were gender critical — the horror! — and allegedly included one 'recent detransitioner in the USA.' But wait, it gets even more dire. The charity also named a rabbit after comedian Ricky Gervais — that terrible funny man who offended millions with his profane jokes, including about transwomen — and then had the audacity to interact with X founder Elon Musk. Article content Article content One can surely sympathize with Comerford, whose valuable work defending the LGBT community from, umm, a rabbit charity, has landed him the unfortunate nickname ' Watership Clown.' Article content 'There's a registered British rabbit rescue charity, of all things, that is currently marketing itself based on the criticism it is getting for following and courting the support of the anti-trans movement. You do have to wonder about humanity,' Comerford posted to X on Tuesday, once he realized that his smear campaign against the animal rescue workers had stunningly backfired. Article content Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue, whose X bio notes that it exists 'for the sole purpose of saving rabbits,' has more than tripled its social media following after Comerford's attempt to ignite an online furor. Donations are flowing, and even J.K. Rowling, the most famous gender-critical woman in the world, got involved. Article content 'We should all chip in to get one of the rabbits named Magdalen Berns. (Comerford's) head would burst open like a microwaved egg,' Rowling posted to X on Monday. Berns is the late, fondly remembered, British woman- and lesbian-rights advocate who died of brain cancer in 2019. Article content A day later, Carrot Cottage Rabbit Rescue named two delightfully cute bunnies 'Joanne' and 'Kathleen,' sparking rumours about their namesakes' identities (J.K. Rowling and Kathleen Stock, two more prominent 'transphobic' women's rights advocates in the U.K.). Will this charity ever stop doing evil? Article content For its actions, attempts have been made to punish the rescue. On June 13, it announced: 'We have just received official correspondence from the charity commission stating that they have received a number of complaints 'ALLEGING' that we are engaging in transphobia, following transphobic accounts and that we are posting antisemitism posts on the social media platform X. It's time to take legal advice as these allegations are false and intended to damage the charity, ultimately putting bunnies at risk. What a sad world we live in.'

‘Experience in the park'; International Food Festival showcases London's diversity
‘Experience in the park'; International Food Festival showcases London's diversity

CTV News

time11 hours ago

  • CTV News

‘Experience in the park'; International Food Festival showcases London's diversity

Vikan Patel of The Sugar Cane Project makes juice from sugar cane at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) You only have to walk a few steps in Victoria Park to get a mix of cuisine from around the globe. The annual London International Food and Drink Festival shows off London's diversity. 'We are making a fresh sugar cane juice,' said Vidhi Sevak, of the Sugar Cane Project. Having immigrated from India, Sevak says the juice is a natural source of sugar. 'Everyone is amazed because they are they are seeing it for the very first time that I'm making a juice out of a sugar cane juice. They think that it's bamboo, but it's not a bamboo, it's a sugar cane.' They are just one example of a hidden success story in the Forest City. 'We brought in all kinds of different kinds of food from around the Caribbean, from Africa, India, it is all represented here,' said Doug Hillier, the festival organizer. 062225 Fresh Tacos from Taco Loco on the grill at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) 'What you can really expect in a show like this is culture. You're going to see all kinds of culture represented and their food. What we really want to do is have a real experience in the park.' With musicians playing on stage all weekend, the drinks were flowing, and patrons were taking refuge in the shade in the summer heat. Back in the food row, it was impossible to ignore the smell of fresh barbeque from Bikongs Express. 062225 Bikongs Express, a Filipino restaurant in London, Ont. makes some BBQ at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) 'We're mainly Filipino food and barbecue is like a staple for us,' says Miguel Gianan who is part of the family business. 'We all feel really honoured to be here. To know that there are people from other countries who want to try our food, it warms my heart to be like seeing all these different cultures or like different backgrounds.' The business located in east London was voted Best Food in 2024 at the festival. 'Seeing my parents like built this business from the ground up,' says Gianan. 'We were just making bread from our house and to come in here being part of a festival. Everyone knows our name and we're starting to build something.' The festival runs until 9 p.m. Sunday. 062225 Go Gonzalez BBQ slaps sauce on their award-winning ribs at the 2025 International Food and Drink Festival in London, Ont. (Brent Lale/CTV News London) 'We have great culture here in London and we are so well mixed,' says Hillier of Family Shows Canada, which also runs London Ribfest. 'We've have had such a great immigration of people that have come to this country and created their own foods and then brought it to us. We didn't have to go there; they brought it to us right here in Victoria Park.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store