T Nia Miller at the Victoria and Albert Museum Summer Party in 2019 (Keith Mayhew/SOPA/Getty)
T’Nia Miller kept her sexuality hidden until her early 20s, but now that she’s out she’s determined to be seen.
The east-London born actor played the ethereal housekeeper Hannah Grose in Netflix’s
Miller saw nothing like it when she was growing up. As a child she had “no exposure, no knowledge, nada” when it came to LGBT+ issues, let alone her own sexuality.
“I’d never seen a queer person on TV and I didn’t know any queer people at all until I got to college,” she revealed in an interview with
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Better Things, “Listen To The Roosters”
In the year that the comfort watch reigned, I suppose it’s only natural that my favorite episode is also the one I found most restorative. Pamela Adlon wrapped another exceptional season of television with “Listen To The Roosters,” a season finale that’s equally bracing and gracious. The episode comprises three parts with their own narratives and genre: The first is almost a whimsical ghost story, the second is live theater, while the conclusion is nothing less than a spell.
season four was about metabolizing even your anger decades-old and warranted though it may be to make room for something more positive, more beneficial. But Adlon never glossed over the hurt or resentment; as Sam Fox, she’s had to sit with every betrayal, every rejection, every disappointment. And because of that, she couldn’t just churn out a conventional closer to the latest installment of her coming-of-middle-age comedy. In t