Cable channel FX said on Wednesday it had green-lit Glee creator Ryan Murphy's Pose, a dance-musical series featuring the largest transgender regular cast in US television history.
The series will star Evan Peters (American Horror Story) and Kate Mara (The Martian, House of Cards) as a New Jersey couple who get sucked into the glamour and intrigue of New York City in the 1980s.
Through
their story, the series will chronicle life and society in New York,
the rise of the "luxury Trump-era universe" and the downtown social and
literary scene, FX said.
Murphy said in a statement he
expected the show to be "a game changer" about the "universal quest for
identity, family and respect," adding that it would also feature 50-plus
LGBTQ characters –- another record.
"I can't wait for people to see this incredibly talented, passionate cast," he said.
The series will be co-written and produced by Murphy, his
longtime collaborator Brad Falchuk and relative newcomer Steven Canals,
with Murphy directing the first two episodes.
The 52-year-old is best known as the multiple Emmy Award-winning creator, producer or writer of numerous hit shows including Glee, Nip/Tuck, American Horror Story, American Crime Story and Feud.
FX did not reveal how many transgender actors would appear in Pose but did say they included MJ Rodriguez (Nurse Jackie), Dominique Jackson (Strut), Indya Moore (Saturday Church), Hailie Sahar (Mr. Robot) and Angelica Ross (Transparent).
"In
the 15 years we've worked with Ryan, he has demonstrated time and again
that every person's story is joyful, illuminating, and must to be
told," said FX chief John Landgraf.
"With Pose,
Ryan and his producing partners... introduce us to a new group of
characters whose talent, life force, and self-made community is greater
than the daunting obstacles created by a society that can be threatened
by their native identities."
FX has ordered eight
episodes for season one, which is scheduled to begin production in
February in New York and premiere on FX, which is carried in 91 million
homes, next summer.