
‘Rent’s’ Jesse Dutlow Is Ready To Be Your Angel
Jesse Dutlow might still be a little new to the world of musical theatre, but they鈥檝e quickly established themselves a performer to keep your eye on.
When we speak, they鈥檝e just celebrated three years since their professional debut at the Opera House, where they鈥檒l be returning in September for a run of Rent as the ever-endearing Angel, an HIV-positive drag artist with a passion for life in the face of inevitable adversity.
Although they sang Seasons of Love with their church choir growing up, Dutlow hadn鈥檛 actually seen Rent until during the audition process.聽
鈥淚 grew up in a really sheltered Christian environment,鈥 they explained. 鈥淪o it wasn’t accessible to me as a kid or as a teenager.
鈥淲hen the show toured last year, I was doing & Juliet, and we were just in the wrong city at the wrong time. I so desperately wanted to go support mates who were in the show, but just didn’t have a chance.鈥
Dutlow鈥檚 not alone- they tell me some of the other principal cast members are new to the world of musical theatre and were introduced to Rent through the job.聽
The show comes with a weighty legacy. Jonathan Larson鈥檚 1996 rock musical is critically acclaimed, has several Tonys to its name, as well as the Pulitzer Prize for Drama. And for good reason: with its explicitly queer characters and exploration of HIV/AIDS, it sits solidly within the queer canon, introducing audiences to a world many of them didn鈥檛 know anything about.
Dutlow was with with classmates when they got the call from their agent that they鈥檇 booked the gig,聽
鈥淚 was in full body chills and shaking because it just meant so much to me to be able to do this specific role,鈥 they said. 鈥淚 think a lot of the roles I’ve done are so informed by Angel- May in & Juliet, even Saltypringl in Fangirls. I don’t think you would necessarily have that specific kind of representation without roles like Angel. I just felt the weight of that, but also, such joy. So I was screaming. There’s a video somewhere.鈥
Angel is one of the more iconic characters in the musical, with many of the themes Rent tackles being explored through her. Although she鈥檚 written as a drag queen,聽 Angel鈥檚 gender identity is frequently up for interpretation. The language around trans and gender non-conforming people wasn鈥檛 quite nuanced enough at the time. However the other characters see how important her femininity is to her, referring to her using she/her pronouns throughout the show.
鈥淭here’s no label that can really justify her,鈥 Dutlow says. 鈥淚 think the script struggles with that a little bit. There’s pronouns and mistakes people make and question marks, and I kind of love that ambiguity.聽
鈥淚 can really, really engage with that and understand what that’s like. For me, my professional career and my coming out as non binary kind of coincide.”
However, they said that in watching the film, there was a sense of grief in only meeting her for the first time as a 29-year-old.聽
鈥淚f I had known her as a teenager, even in my early 20s- oh, my goodness, it would have opened up so much for me. I think I would have arrived there sooner. And I know that no one really arrives, it’s always a journey. I think young Jessie, really, really, really, would have loved her.鈥
It鈥檚 clear that Dutlow really feels the weight that comes with the role of Angel. For some, the idea that they could be that sort of representation for another young queer person might be overwhelming, but Dutlow balances it well.聽
Off stage, Dutlow is studying to be a teacher, having majored in drama and English teaching, and completed a masters of secondary teaching. They say they鈥檝e always loved engaging with young people, and have been working as a childcare music, sports, and gymnastic coach in Melbourne for the past six months.
鈥淭he only reason I’m on stage and being able to do what I do is because I鈥檝e had great music and drama teachers through high school. So I wanted to kind of give back in that way,鈥 they said.聽
鈥淚 think being on stage is such a bubble, you kind of feel a little bit removed from the rest of the world鈥eaching is kind of my way of connecting back with the rest of the world.鈥
It鈥檚 an auspicious time to be bringing Rent back to Australia. Massively anti-queer legislation is being passed across the globe. Countries are redefining what it means to be a woman to exclude trans people from legally identifying as such, and US same-sex marriage is being challenged after barely a decade.
If anything, it鈥檚 times like this that the show was made for.聽
鈥淚 think the climate now is falling back a little bit, and we as queer folk really have to push it back and say, 鈥榓ctually, no, I’m gonna hold my ground. I’m not gonna shrink back鈥, Dutlow says.聽
鈥淚 think for me, I just feel like a bit of a warrior, like I’m fighting in a positive way, for that representation, for that change, for social access. For young people to be able to come to the Opera House and see this and say, that could be me. That is me.鈥
聽for聽RENT聽at the Sydney Opera House are on sale now.





