Frontmezzjunkies reports: Broadway’s Hit Musical, Six, Condemns Bullying and Defends Its Cast
By Ross
When Broadway’s Six announced that Dylan Mulvaney would be joining the company as Anne Boleyn, the response was swift, and predictably ugly in some corners of the internet. What mattered far more than the backlash, though, was the production’s response to it. Rather than hedge or retreat, the producers of Six issued a clear, unequivocal statement condemning bullying and reaffirming that the safety and support of their cast comes first. In doing so, they didn’t just defend one performer; they upheld the very values that have always made Six feel urgent, contemporary, and deeply human.
From the moment it returned to Broadway after the long pandemic shutdown, Six announced itself as an act of joy and defiance. Seeing it again in 2021, I felt that the show was “just pure fun and effervescence,” a glittering pop concert celebration that felt blissfully unburdened by cynicism or regret. But beneath the confetti cannons and driving beats, Six has always been doing something more radical: reclaiming space for its characters. Its six queens step forward not to compete for pity, but to rewrite the narratives that once reduced them to tragic footnotes and quips.
That reclamation is central to the show’s identity. Six gifts its characters voice, agency, and power, allowing them to “demand that they not be erased from history.” It’s a thesis that resonates far beyond Tudor England, and one that makes the producers’ defense of Mulvaney feel not reactive, but inevitable. A show built on refusing erasure cannot suddenly look the other way when a cast member becomes the target of it.

The contrast with other high-profile corporate responses to trans visibility could not be clearer. Where some brands have folded under pressure, issuing vague statements about neutrality and “bringing people together,” Six chose clarity. The producers limited access to the show’s X account after comments crossed into abuse, stating plainly that threatening or demeaning language is “never acceptable.” That decisiveness matters, especially in a cultural moment when trans performers are so often left to absorb hostility alone.
When Six reopened on Broadway, it felt, to many of us returning to theatres for the first time, like “a beacon of light.” It was loud, communal, and unapologetically alive; proof that theatre could still be a place of connection after so much darkness. That light dims when productions prioritize appeasement over people. It brightens when they remember that inclusion isn’t a branding exercise, but a responsibility.
What makes this moment especially fitting is that Six has never pretended to be neutral. The show struts forward with confidence, “demanding to be taken seriously” even as it revels in pop spectacle. It celebrates difference, survivorship, and self-definition, values that naturally extend to gender diversity and trans inclusion. Standing by Mulvaney isn’t a deviation from the show’s message; it’s a continuation of it.
In defending their cast and condemning bullying without qualification, the Six producers have reminded us why this musical still feels so alive. These queens were never meant to be silent, compliant, or easy to swallow. They take the stage, claim their stories, and insist on dignity. In 2025, that insistence matters more than ever, onstage and off.








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