But there was something else he needed to do, too.
On a Monday in April he decided to record a lock- down-themed EP, by Tuesday night he was recording the first songs, by Friday the whole thing was finished, and four days later the Quarantine Queen EP was streaming world- wide. โPeople tell me they see it as work ethic,โ he says, โbut I see it as passion. I wake up, and the only thing I want to do is create.โ
None of which might have seemed likely a few decades ago in the tiny Texas town of Plainview; a beautiful little place, Todrick remembers, if not a locale well known for its over-abundance of liberal views.
โBack then there was no YouTube, no social media, no nothing,โ he remembers. โI be- came creative out of pure boredom.โ
โI can still remember the feeling of my heart beating,โ he says of his first big performance. โIt was the biggest adrenaline rush. I could not believe Iโd done it. It was a feeling Iโd never felt before. I felt like Iโd ridden the biggest rollercoaster in the world and in that moment I knew: I want to feel like this forever, no matter what.โ
Despite all that ambition, young Todrick would never have predicted the moment a couple of decades later when in the summer of 2019 he took to the stage at the VMAs with his friend (!) Taylor Swift, to accept the Video For Good award in recognition of his role in bringing the “You Need To Calm Down” video to life.
โPeople I idolise were sitting feet away from me โ it was the most insane thing ever,โ he remembers. โTaylor putting that song on the radio is a huge part of the reason little gay kids who didnโt have anyone to look up to, and whose families tell them every day that theyโre strange, can have three minutes where they feel like theyโre OK, and theyโre not crazy or weird, and they can be alive. Being a small part of that is so magical that I canโt even express it.โ
The MTV Moonperson from that night is currently in Todrickโs front room, visible but just slightly out of reach of visitors.
โPeople love to touch it but honestly, between you and I, itโs not the most well constructed award Iโve ever received,โ he confides. โIt could easily be broken, but what it represents is really important to me.โ
In fairness that wobbly Moonperson isnโt the first time Todrickโs had to confront the fragility of success. Upon leaving “American Idol” in 2009 (after reaching the semi-finals, having initially auditioned with a song heโd written himself), he put his Broadway career on pause and moved to L.A., reasoning that it was there that he could raise his profile high enough to return to Broadway and land bigger roles. It was, he says, like playing chess: having to think at least three steps ahead, not to mention protecting the queen at all costs.
โYou have to find ways to be strategic about how youโre going to get to your end goal,โ he says, โand my end goal is EGOT. Moving to LA was the only way I knew how to be able to come back to Broadway as a star.โ
In the short term things werenโt looking good.
โI was super, super broke,โ he remembers, adding that his saving grace was a song heโd recorded called It Gets Better which each month sold well enough to pay his rent. (Needless to say, this was before streaming took hold.) โI was performing in regional theatre, dancing at peopleโs birthdays and weddings, any- thing I could do in entertainment. Any money I could make on the side, Iโd use to throw a video together.โ
Some of Todrickโs weekly YouTube videos gained traction although, in fairness, others didnโt.
โI learned very quickly that when you have a viral moment those moments are very, very short-lived,โ he recalls. โIโd allow myself to be excited for six hours and then Iโd think: right, what are we doing next?โ
But there was always something next. There was his own MTV show, “Todrick.” It ran for precisely one season, but then thereโd be albums like Straight Outta Oz, Forbidden or Haus Parties 1 and 2, or a tour, or a scene-stealing “Drag Race” appearance. Eventually successes began to outweigh failures and in turn failures didnโt really seem like failures at all. They were just parts of the journey.
โSometimes when people fall or hit a roadblock they strut with a little bit less confidence, and with their chest not quite as far out, and with their head held not quite so high,โ Todrick says. โBut right now Iโm celebrating falling on my face and making huge mistakes โ and Iโm celebrating realising itโs okay to get right back up again.โ
Itโs no coincidence that Todrick has become one of the planetโs most inspiring LBGTQ+ role models โ and heโs seen first hand how powerful such a popcultural presence can be for those growing up like he once did, surrounded by people who didnโt understand him.
โSometimes a fan will meet me after a show and theyโll whisper: โIโm here, but my family doesnโt know Iโm gay,โโ he begins. โThe next year Iโll meet them and theyโre out of the closet. A year on theyโll have their first boyfriend, then theyโre engaged, then theyโre married, then theyโre adopting kids. Iโve been doing this for ten years and Iโve seen it happen again, and again, and again. Iโve watched people grow. I feel so privileged to see their entire auras change.โ
โIt took me such a long time to say, as a kid from Texas: โIโm a proud gay man, Iโm African-American: this is meโ,โ he adds. โItโs not always accepted in the Bible belt where Iโm from but now Iโm so proud of all that, and I try to infuse those messages of self love and positivity and fierceness and feeling fabulous and being proud of who you are in every single thing I do. I donโt want to go around giving Miss America acceptance speeches but I really try to talk to people about real life. I want to give people the real tea.โ
Fame in the modern era is notoriously hard to define but whichever way you frame it, fame right now looks and sounds a lot like Todrick Hall.
โThe only time in my life I feel completely understood is when Iโm performing,โ he reasons. โWhen Iโm making people smile and laugh itโs my food, my energy, my fuel, my drug, my everything.โ
And the next few years?
You probably know Todrick well enough to realise you should never rule anything out, but he says his current goals involve a kids TV show, a Netflix extravaganza, and his own Broadway production. Heโll make it up as he goes along, of course, and the results โ spontaneous, joyous, real โ will be all the better for it.
โWhen youโre younger you think youโre going to have it all figured out at some point,โ he smiles. โThese days Iโm realising, you donโt need to have anything figured out. If you did, thereโs be no point in living.โ
This article appears in May 26 – Jun 1, 2022.

