NEW YORK, NY.- Scottish actor Alan Cumming has returned an honor from Britains government and monarchy, he announced on Instagram on Friday, writing in a post that he did not want to be associated with the toxicity of empire.
Cumming, the host of the American version of the reality competition show The Traitors, joins a tradition of people rejecting the Officer of the Order of the British Empire, or OBE, and similar honors, such as knighthoods or damehoods.
The order is given to reward people for their achievements and contributions in a variety of fields. A committee of civil servants and people who do not work in the government recommends people for the honor. The committees recommendations are given to the prime minister, who then gives the list to the king, who awards the honors.
Cumming was awarded his OBE in 2009, and he wrote in an Instagram post marking his 58th birthday on Friday that he had recently returned the honor. He said that he was incredibly grateful to have received the honor because it recognized his gay rights activism in the United States, where he is a citizen, in addition to his work as an actor, which has included film, television and stage roles.
He said that the death of Queen Elizabeth II in September, and the conversations it provoked about the role of the monarchy, had prompted him to reconsider the honor. The end of the queens seven-decade reign reignited discussions about the legacy of British colonialism and the monarchys role in the slave trade.
The Queens death and the ensuing conversations about the role of monarchy and especially the way the British Empire profited at the expense (and death) of Indigenous peoples across the world really opened my eyes, Cumming wrote. Also, thankfully, times and laws in the U.S. have changed, and the great good the award brought to the LGBTQ+ cause back in 2009 is now less potent than the misgivings I have being associated with the toxicity of empire.
Cumming, who was recently in the television series Schmigadoon! and The Good Fight, said that when he had returned the honor, he had explained himself and reiterated my great gratitude for being given it in the first place.
People routinely reject the OBE and similar honors when they are first offered, including the higher honors of knighthoods and damehoods, which allow people to use the title Sir or Dame. Far fewer people have accepted, then later rejected, the distinctions.
In November 1969, John Lennon returned his Member of the Order of the British Empire, or MBE, to protest Britains role in the Nigerian civil war and British political support for the Vietnam War. Lennon said that he had been mulling returning the award for several years and had been waiting for an event to tie up with it.
In 2012, the British government released a list of 277 people who had rejected a British honor between 1951 and 1999, including authors Roald Dahl and Aldous Huxley and artist Lucian Freud. (The list appeared to be partial.) People who have turned down these honors have provided reasons including opposition to the empires legacy of colonialism, the monarchy in general or the governments policies.
David Bowie turned down an award naming him a Commander of the Order of the British Empire, or CBE, in 2000 because, he explained, I seriously dont know what its for.
Late-night television host John Oliver said in an interview on the NBC show Late Night with Seth Meyers that he had rejected the OBE because it was loaded. Oliver said: The BE part of that is a hell of a thing to want after your surname.
This article originally appeared in
The New York Times.