What It Feels Like For A Girl. Courtesy BBCFilm & TV / NewsFilm & TV / News‘It’s a rallying cry’: Ellis Howard on What It Feels Like for a GirlThe 28-year-old actor speaks to Dazed about the importance of his new show, his favourite books and what advice he’d give his teenage self todayShareLink copied ✔️July 7, 2025July 7, 2025TextDazed Digital What It Feels Like for a Girl has been the television show on everyone’s minds (and hearts) since its release in June. Based on Paris Lees’ coming-of-age memoir of the same name, the show has been described as “deeply disturbing and totally fearless”, as it follows 15-year-old Byron (played by Ellis Howard) who lives in Hucknall, Nottinghamshire who is trying to figure out his identity and desperate to escape his home town. While he faces trouble along the way, he also finds comfort in a rowdy gang of trans and queer friends who help him find his footing. “I hope that what this show says is that trans people have been here forever and will continue to be here beyond this very precarious political moment,” Howard tells Dazed. Hailing from Liverpool, the 28-year-old breakout star, who has also starred in Red Rose, Romeo & Juliet and Catherine the Great, feels an enormous sense of pride in the show. “What this show can do hopefully is stand on the shoulders of amazing shows like It’s A Sin, Queer as Folk and Pose.” Below, we speak with Howard about how he prepared for the show, why the story is so important, and what advice he’d give his teenage self today. Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MOREKristen Stewart: ‘Women often operate from a place of shame’100 Nights of Hero: The story behind Julia Jackman’s lo-fi queer fantasyThe North FaceWhat went down at The North Face’s Red Box event with Loyle Carner Akinola Davies Jr on his atmospheric debut, My Father’s ShadowThe 2026 Sundance films we can’t stop thinking aboutTwinless: A tragicomic drama about loneliness, grief and queer friendshipDazed x MUBI Cinema Club returns with a screening of My Father’s ShadowNo Other Choice: Park Chan-wook’s bleak, bloody takedown of capitalismGetting to the bottom of the Heated Rivalry discourseMarty Supreme and the cost of ‘dreaming big’Ben Whishaw on the power of Peter Hujar’s photography: ‘It feels alive’Atropia: An absurdist love story set in a mock Iraqi military villageEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy