ReneƩ Rapp Is Hitting All the Right Notes
The Sex Lives of College Girls star is ready to take over your playlists.
ReneĆ© Rapp never expected starring in a hit HBO Max series to feel like an āextra little bonusā in her career, but as we sit down to chat just weeks ahead of the second seasonās premiere ā where our conversation drifts away from The Sex Lives of Colleges Girls and towards the upcoming release of her debut EP, Everything to Everyone (out now) more often than not ā the 22-year-old canāt help but admit thatās precisely her reality: Her heart is in her music.
Thatās not to say that the Gen Z actress isnāt incredibly grateful for the opportunity to reprise her role as Leighton Murray, a preppy, closeted lesbian whose seldom without a witty one-liner (or a matching tweed set), in Mindy Kalingās The Sex Lives of College Girls (returning to the streamer Nov. 17), because she is very, very grateful. But after nearly two years since she filmed the showās premiere season back in 2020, Rapp is finally in the position to pursue her true life-long dream of making music alongside her budding acting career ā a balancing act she credits as āthe coolest fucking thingā sheās ever done.
āTo be honest, I spent so much of season one just worrying that I was going to get fired every day, because I didn't think that I was cut out for the job,ā Rapp admits. āBut I think I was really dropped in this season in the sense that I wasn't really worried about how I was doing, I was just doing it.ā
The biggest difference between this season and last? āIām doing music now. That's what I love,ā she explains. āI felt less pressure mentally, because Iām literally doing the thing now that I have always wanted to do in my life. And while I feel very lucky to also be able to get to show up to a TV set every day, I found a huge part of myself that Iād been chasing since I can remember.ā
While this transition from actor to actor-singer may seem like serendipity in its purest form, itās important to note that Rappās ascent to true multi-hyphenate status (thatās right ā she can dance, too) didnāt happen overnight. After winning a national high school theater competition in 2018 that would lead her to the role of Regina George (you know, the Rachel McAdams character) in Tina Feyās Mean Girls on Broadway, the newcomer capitalized on a growing social media presence to work her way up from at-home songwriting sessions to recording studio slots with Andrew "Pop" Wansel, the producer of one of her favorite Ariana Grande songs, āFake Smile,ā one viral TikTok at a time.
āI got signed off of a TikTok, and I was very afraid, because this is something that I've been scheming for and plotting for years,ā she shares. āThat's the reason I started acting, so that I could try and build myself a platform to get people to pay attention to me so I could get signed.ā
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And people are paying attention. Whether binging, streaming, or scrolling, it wonāt take long for the unacquainted to stumble upon at least one of Rappās projects or posts in the coming months ā and odds are, it takes even less time for them to fall in love with her pure authenticity when they do.
As for what ReneĆ© thinks about her whirlwind year and growing audience? Sheās just happy to have friends along for the ride as she continues honing her passions publicly. āI feel like people who have been following me, or are now, or choose to not, are growing up with me in a sense,ā Rapp says. āI have a lot of growing to do, but it feels good. I try to just do what it is that I do, and if anybody likes it, then fuck yeah. If they hate it, thatās fine.ā
InStyle spoke to Rapp about what she really thinks about Leightonās wardrobe, her favorite single (so far), and the pop culture moment that altered her brain chemistry.
Because your career really took off when you were finishing up high school, what's it been like to get a glimpse of the traditional college experience through Sex Lives of College Girls?
I think itās made me realize college is not for everybody. Iām not cut out for college, because Iām literally not strong enough. There is no way that I could have gone and had enough discipline to go to classes after going out the night before. There's just no way. I could barely get up to my alarm this week. So, it's really just made me a bit grateful that I didn't go just because I also am a very socially anxious person. As much as I have a very social and open-to-perception job, I feel like college would've scared the shit out of me.
While Leighton spent most of the first season hiding her sexuality, we get to see her come into her own a bit more in season 2. Were there any aspects of her coming out journey that related to your own?
I've been out for a long time now, but having this show be so public I feel like I've come out all over again ā and not in a bad way. I was very afraid, too, to be quite honest. But I love it in the way that I think Leighton, for the first time, is sort of claiming who she is to herself. Everything is an internal struggle with her, but you really see her start to like herself and like that part of her. I think this is probably the first year of my life that Iāve felt that way about myself even, and Iāve been out for so long. Itās been eight years, but I genuinely think this is the first time that I'm even starting to be like, "Wait. I love this about myself."
I also think that has to do with the fact I'm on a public show that accepts that part of me with open arms. And it wasn't that I didn't have a lot of that directly, but I didn't have a lot of that directly. A lot of people don't. So, I also know that itās a huge fucking blessing to be able to have this experience and to be so accepted on such a public level because not everyone has afforded that opportunity.
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As someone with a large social media presence, how do you think this public acceptance of yourself has strengthened your relationship with your followers?
I feel like the reason that I started doing music and now acting is literally just because I wanted to make friends ā I feel like I'm fans of my fans. We all just have this connective tissue in a way. Whether they're queer or not, there's something that we all just see each other on.
And I think, for me, I try to be very open about the fact that Iām imperfect, but not in the sense that people are like, "Social media is all perfect and frou-frou. Don't believe everything." No. The things I fucking preach are things I also need to be preaching to myself. I can be so publicly queer and so publicly not give a fuck. But those are also things I need to be doing in practice.
Out of the four SLCG roommates, who do you think you'd be closest to in real life?
One of my favorite parts of this season is Alyah [Chanelle Scott], who plays Whitney. She's my best friend in real life ā we are Thing One and Thing Two ā and this season, not only did we play into that, but also our writers played into that. There are a lot more little moments that the two of us share, which is really, really, really special to me as a human being, but also as a person on the show.
I do think that there's so much about Whitney that isn't even really her character. It's just how Alyah carries herself in the role. She just walks with a very specific self-awareness and confidence even when she's insecure, and I think that's something that Leighton probably loves. At least something that I have chosen that Leighton loves, because I think it's also something that ReneƩ loves about Alyah. That's my bitch. That's my best friend.
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On the show, Leighton has a very distinct, preppy sense of style. How closely would you say her aesthetic relates to yours?
There could be not more stark of a fucking difference between Leighton and myself. There is no single piece of clothing or anything that I would want from Leighton's closet. That bitch is not dressing the way I want to dress. Literally, burn it.
No, but I think this has been an internal conversation with me for a while because clothes are something that are personal to everybody, but for me specifically, they're very, very, very important. Iāve struggled with eating disorders my whole life and I feel very comfortable talking about it, and clothes have always either been a protective mechanism or something that makes me feel like myself because obviously they're a way of expression and the way that youāre physically perceived head-to-toe.
But oh my god, sometimes when I would put on Leighton's shit, I would be like, āOh, Jesus Christ.ā I have to remember that I'm playing a character. It would give me the most crisis sort of feeling in the whole wide world. It's a jump scare.
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Between singing and acting, is there one you prefer over the other?
Music is the only thing Iāve ever wanted to do. My two biggest insecurities growing up were, I thought I was a horrible songwriter and I thought I was a terrible actor. So, I don't think I ever thought about acting as being a feasible thing for me, really, so it wasn't really in my view. I thought, āOK, I'm going to have a music career and then hopefully it'll blow up and then one day I might do a movie.ā
But music has always been the only thing that I love like that, so I don't even know if it's a preference. It's just more so what I am supposed to be doing and I'm very fortunate to also be able to act in that regard.
Which of your singles has been your favorite to release?
āIn the Kitchen.ā And it was also the one that I was most nervous for ā¦ my first song, āTattoos,ā had pre-saves already and had numbers and had done things that felt at least metaphorically tangible for myself and people in music, but I was really nervous for āIn The Kitchen,ā because it was my second single, and it didnāt have the same gusto around it online that āTattoosā did, and I was genuinely fucking terrified of that.
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But luckily, āIn The Kitchenā is my most streamed song now. It's also the song that's so special and important to me because it's one of ā I've said this so many times before, but I really still mean it just the same ā that's the song that baby ReneĆ© wished she could have written. It just has every facet of music that I love in it. It's really bittersweet lyrics that don't really lean too much into lending away power or power to the relationship, but it's just this very sweet, "OK, got it. Fuck you."
Between SLCG, Mean Girls on Broadway, and your music career, where do people most often recognize you from?
I do feel like I get recognized from Mean Girls a lot, because I feel like those fans are die-hards. But I will say, whenever people recognize me for my music, that's the greatest compliment anyone can literally ever give me. I will never forget the first time that that happened to me. Somebody was like, āOh my god, I love your songs,ā and it was when āTattoosā and āIn the Kitchenā were out, and I almost cried.
I didn't say anything to this person, but I was like, āHoly shit.ā You have no idea what you just did for me emotionally, mentally, career-wise, because that's like my everything. So, to now have that be a part of my life publicly is so important. And I hope that it becomes my entire life publicly.
Small Talk
Who was your first celebrity crush?
BeyoncĆ©. This is also how I figured out that I was a little bit gay, because I said to my mom one day ā this is how I came out to my mom, by the way ā I was like, "Do you ever just look at BeyoncĆ©'s ass?" And she was like, "What?" I was like, āWell, donāt you do that, too?ā And she was like, āNo.ā
So, immediately I'm thinking two things. A. You're a fucking liar. B. OK, I think I do like women.
Are you into astrology?
I'm so knee-deep into astrology, it's disgusting. I'm a Capricorn and I'm a Pisces moon and I'm a Gemini rising, so I know no peace.
What was your last binge-watch?
House of the Dragon.
What is your biggest guilty pleasure?
It's not a guilty pleasure, but it sort of is, because I'm obsessed. I go to Pilates every single day.
You can only have one: TikTok, Twitter, or Instagram?
I'm definitely going Twitter, because I love Twitter.
Is there a pop culture moment that first sparked your interest in Hollywood?
Yeah, I mean the Lady Gaga āPaparazziā Grammys performance altered my life and still does to this day. And it's also recently made a resurgence on the internet, and so I'm like, āOK, the gays are standing.ā
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