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But have things really changed for gay actors? Just because time has allowed gay issues to come more to the forefront of our culture, do changes toward equality actually extend into the entertainment industry?
Some would say yes. Any kind of exposure (be it Rosie’s position on The View, Ellen’s hosting of The Academy Awards, Isaiah Washington flinging the f-word
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I think I’m giving Hollywood too much credit here. I don’t think they can be honored for being so progressive. It can pride itself as a place where homosexuals are not only accepted but employed in gross numbers, but the unwritten rule is that an actor never comes out of the closet. Playing a gay character is one thing, but admitting to being gay is another. Furthermore, it is considered heroic or challenging for a straight actor to play a gay actor, but pretty much unheard of for a gay actor to play a straight character (which, in my opinion, is probably more challenging). Since Tom Hank’s Oscar-winning performance as a man living with AIDS in Philadelphia, gay roles have been sought after by straight actors because they are looked at as disadvantaged, and actors want to play underprivileged characters, no matter what their disability may be (one article that I read recently actually classified homosexuality along with physical or mental disorders in terms of an actor wanting to tackle a challenging role). There seems to be some stigma that an actor coming out of the closet kills the success of one’s imagination, with characters often serving as an outlet for viewers to imagine their own romantic fantasies and thus have the need to think of them as strictly heterosexual. Don’t we as human beings deserve more credit for our intelligence?
There are gay actors who play straight roles in Hollywood. Jack Plotnick plays a womanizer in Lovespring, International, and Broadway actor plays a “straight” man in The Class. But these roles are SO supporting and SO minor that they are hardly being reported on in The Advocate or reported on Access Hollywood. For the most part, fear continues to dominate the psyches of closeted gay actors in The Wood, unsure if being out and open about who they are will break their career.
George O’Malley and Barney Stinson are possible exceptions. Since the actors playing these characters were forced out of the closet after their shows became huge successes, they do not seem to have suffered from this sort of stigma where a gay actor can play a straight role without
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1 comment:
I love both George O'Malley and Neil Patrick Harris (yes, I'm aware that one is a character name and one is the actor's name), whether they are gay or not--although their gayness does mean I will never be with them. Oh the sadness. Just thought I'd put that out there.
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