Let Me Get This Straight
With apparently nothing else to write about, Newsweek complains that gay male actors aren't accepted in heterosexual roles. I doubt there's much to this, but even if there were, the weird thing is the article helps perpetuate the problem:
The revival [of Promises, Promises] hands the lead over to Sean Hayes, best known as the queeny Jack on Will & Grace. Hayes is among Hollywood's best verbal slapstickers, but his sexual orientation is part of who he is, and also part of his charm. [....] But frankly, it's weird seeing Hayes play straight. He comes off as wooden and insincere, like he's trying to hide something, which of course he is.
[....] it's a little hard to know what to make of the latest fabulous player to join Glee: Jonathan Groff, the openly gay Broadway star. In Spring Awakening, he showed us that he was a knockout singer and a heartthrob. But on TV, as the shifty glee captain from another school who steals Rachel's heart, there's something about his performance that feels off. In half his scenes, he scowls—is that a substitute for being straight? When he smiles or giggles, he seems more like your average theater queen, a better romantic match for Kurt than Rachel.
What a weird little piece, complaining about stereotyping while partaking in it.
2 Comments:
And the fact that gay male actors played straight roles for decades without a question or a doubt makes the whole topic strange.
The article's point is that they didn't play them while out of the closet. But I can't imagine 90% of the audience would care at all, so long as they didn't have effeminate mannerisms. I think this is another case of a film critic projecting.
Post a Comment
<< Home