Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

Yep, I’m Gay

Hollywood’s incredible shrinking closet

Out and about: Actor Neil Patrick Harris recently went public about his sexuality. (Stephen Shugerman/Getty Images) Out and about: Actor Neil Patrick Harris recently went public about his sexuality. (Stephen Shugerman/Getty Images)

Creak! Thud! Bang! Did you hear that? It’s the sound of the tightly barricaded closet doors being wrenched open in Hollywood. Following ex-boy-bander Lance Bass’s revelation in July that he has a boyfriend, Grey’s Anatomy cast member T.R. Knight announced that he, too, is gay in an October issue of People magazine. Two weeks later, it was Neil Patrick Harris’s turn to share the happy news.

If there have been mass burnings of Doogie Howser, MD DVDs or 'N Sync CDs, no one’s reporting it. In fact, the response has been refreshingly ho-hum. Ellen DeGeneres’s coming out almost a decade ago made the cover of Time and Rosie O’Donnell’s long-awaited admission merited a Prime Time interview with Diane Sawyer. How times have changed. As Knight said in his statement to People, “I hope the fact I’m gay isn’t the most interesting part of me.” And so far the public doesn’t seem to think it is, either. Sure, the low-key response to the news about Bass, Harris and Knight is in part due to their (sorry, guys!) B-list profiles. Bass might have been in one of the biggest pop acts of the last decade and Knight and Harris are cast members of hit shows, but they aren’t marquee stars like George Clooney or Justin Timberlake. 

Still, this non-reaction reflects a decided shift in social acceptance of gay and lesbian celebrities. DeGeneres and O’Donnell are two of daytime TV’s most popular personalities, and their audiences prove that they have as many fans in the heartland as they do in the Sodom and Gomorrah of New York and Los Angeles. (DeGeneres will even host the Oscars this year, beaming her tomboy, easy-listening comic shtick to millions of viewers around the globe.) The same-sex weddings of Melissa Etheridge and Elton John have been cheerfully reported in the entertainment press, alongside notices of straight unions. And a growing number of out actors find steady work with little concern about their sexuality: there’s character actress Jane Lynch, who’s played everything from a hetero horndog in The 40-Year- Old Virgin to a lady-loving canine trainer in Best in Show. Cynthia Nixon and Nathan Lane have respected careers in television, film and on Broadway. And in a nice – perhaps intentional? – casting twist, lesbian actress Sarah Paulson currently plays a born-again Christian comedian conflicted about gay marriage on the Aaron Sorkin series Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip.

Doris Day and Rock Hudson in the 1961 film Lover Come Back. (Evening Standard/Getty Images)
Doris Day and Rock Hudson in the 1961 film Lover Come Back. (Evening Standard/Getty Images)

This casual openness makes the celebrities still huddled in the closet look like throwbacks to the curdled-with-self-loathing era of Paul Lynde and Rock Hudson. Now, it’s almost quaint to think of a star like Hudson set up in a sham marriage to hide his interest in men from the gossip rags – and unbearably sad to remember that it was the scourge of AIDS that finally brought him out of the closet. And yet, ironically, it’s the traditional entertainment media that have done the most to keep the closet door so firmly shut. Even with the growing tabloidization of our times, closeted celebrities have been mostly spared paparazzi scrutiny. In the last week, for instance, I have read the details of Reese Witherspoon’s divorce papers, learned about Keith Urban’s struggle with alcoholism, and been subjected to the scour-your-retinas-with-Clorox idea of a Britney/K-Fed sex tape. Divorce, addiction, sex – all are private matters, and yet the mainstream entertainment media have no misgivings about reporting them, or speculating on any other personal matter, like the now ubiquitous bump watch that begins every time a female star shows the slightest sign of bloat. But, aside from pure tabloids like the National Enquirer, the traditional media remain hesitant to out an entertainer, or press the question in an interview. This double standard was evident when Diane Sawyer brought up the long-standing gay rumours during an interview earlier this year with American Idol star Clay Aiken. The singer dismissed the question as “rude” and Sawyer dropped the issue. Would a straight celebrity have gotten off so easily when it came to discussing his or her personal life?

A decade or more earlier, when being gay was considered a sure-fire career killer, the press’s reticence might have been spun as a gallant, protective instinct. Certainly when Tom Junod wrote a wink-wink-nudge-nudge story about Kevin Spacey for Esquire in 1997, he was slammed by straights and gays alike for his almost-outing of the actor. These days, though, not raising the question about a closeted star’s sexuality seems more like homophobic collusion than kindly obfuscation. While outing is a controversial, complicated issue, the reluctance of the mainstream press to even ask the question of a closeted star perpetuates the erroneous and hurtful belief that homosexuality is something singularly shameful and best kept a secret.

Singer Lance Bass (left) with boyfriend Reichen Lehmkuhl. (Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images) Singer Lance Bass (left) with boyfriend Reichen Lehmkuhl. (Andrew H. Walker/Getty Images)

But in the age of YouTube, MySpace and reality television, that old-time notion of secrecy seems almost laughable. The line between private and public is speedily being erased by video diaries, the swapping of personal information with thousands of on-line “friends” and the inexplicable desire of average people to make asses of themselves on TV. In this new look-at-me! culture, any celebrities who don’t live their lives fully in the public eye seem suspicious. So much so that when Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes first declined to release pictures of their newborn, it didn’t sound like the reasonable wish of protective parents (and not just because Cruise’s recent behaviour is so many shades of crazy), but instead led to speculations that the child was ugly, an alien or non-existent. Not surprisingly, in this context, living in the closet is nearly impossible.

And unlike the traditional media, the round-the-clock, camera-phone-fuelled blogosphere has almost no qualms about outing famous people. Harris went public after his publicist denied the actor was gay, following a report about Harris’s boyfriend on the site Canada.com. Knight came out after it was widely reported that his Grey’s Anatomy co-star Isaiah Washington uttered an anti-gay slur. And most famously, it was a campaign by Perez Hilton, a popular gossip blogger, that drove Bass out of the closet; Bass’s fame-sucking boyfriend Reichen Lehmkuhl, himself a former reality TV star, is even attempting to extend the pair’s 15 minutes of notoriety by coining the phrase “lanced” to describe this online outing. Now, Perez has vowed to go after other alleged closet cases.

Whether these don’t-ask-don’t-tell celebrities will ultimately blame Perez, or thank him, doesn’t really matter anymore. In this new media climate, the closet’s days are numbered. The only question now is whether stars will bravely step out on their own, or wait to be pushed.

Rachel Giese writes about the arts for CBC.ca.

CBC does not endorse and is not responsible for the content of external sites - links will open in new window.



More from this Author

Rachel Giese

Art in exile
A conversation with Chilean author Isabel Allende
The long view
A new photo exhibit honours Canada's role in the Second World War
The write stuff
An interview with Giller Prize winner Elizabeth Hay
Legends of the fall
A cheat sheet on this year's Canadian book award finalists
Bee warned
Jerry Seinfeld's foray into cartoons is a little flighty
Story Tools: PRINT | Text Size: S M L XL | REPORT TYPO | SEND YOUR FEEDBACK

World »

Passengers rescued from Canadian-owned ship in Antarctic
All passengers and crew members aboard a Canadian-owned cruise ship were rescued Friday after the vessel struck ice in Antarctic waters near Argentina.
November 23, 2007 | 7:44 AM EST
Pakistan denounces Commonwealth suspension as 'unreasonable'
Pakistan's Foreign Ministry is denouncing the Commonwealth's suspension of its membership as "unreasonable and unjustified."
November 23, 2007 | 10:57 AM EST
Uncertainty in Lebanon as opposition boycotts crucial presidential vote
Lebanon teetered towards political crisis Friday, after the country's parliament failed to vote for a leader to replace outgoing president Emile Lahoud, whose term expires at midnight.
November 23, 2007 | 10:15 AM EST
more »

Canada »

Jolted inmate was off medication, wife says
The Nova Scotia man who died the day after he was shocked with a Taser should have been medicated for his mental illness, his wife says.
November 23, 2007 | 9:34 AM EST
Flaherty mulls budget help for manufacturers
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Friday he may be preparing some relief for the country's hard-hit manufacturing sector in the next federal budget.
November 23, 2007 | 10:20 AM EST
Proposed N.S. traffic law calls for cellphone ban
Nova Scotia's government introduced a sweeping road safety bill on Friday that would outlaw the use of handheld cellphones while driving and allow police to use photo radar on a trial basis.
November 23, 2007 | 10:29 AM EST
more »

Health »

Food watchdog recalls more frozen beef burgers
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Ontario-based Cardinal Meat Specialists Ltd. are expanding an earlier recall of frozen beef burgers for possible E. coli contamination to include more products.
November 23, 2007 | 9:20 AM EST
Bromide poisoning sickens 400 in Angola, WHO suspects
Nearly 400 people, most of them children, have become ill in Angola in what medical investigators suspect is an outbreak of bromide poisoning, the World Health Organization (WHO) said Thursday.
November 23, 2007 | 10:11 AM EST
Beijing to provide condoms in hotel rooms after HIV surge
Beijing's health bureau has ordered hotels to stock condoms in every room in response to a spike in new HIV infections in the Chinese capital.
November 23, 2007 | 9:38 AM EST
more »

Arts & Entertainment»

Alluring Elizabeth I portrait fetches more than $5M
An early portrait of Queen Elizabeth I that experts believe was commissioned to advertise the monarch to potential suitors sold for more than $5 million in London on Thursday.
November 23, 2007 | 9:55 AM EST
McGuinty steps up for Confederation Centre
Ontario Premier Dalton McGuinty pledged $200,000 a year for Charlottetown's Confederation Centre of the Arts on Thursday.
November 23, 2007 | 9:36 AM EST
Complaint over fantasy novel spurs school board review
The Halton Catholic school board is reviewing whether to keep copies of the children's fantasy novel The Golden Compass in its elementary school libraries, after receiving one complaint.
November 22, 2007 | 2:08 PM EST
more »

Technology & Science »

Parasite found in every Ontario bee sample
Researchers have found a parasite in every Ontario bee sample they analyzed in part of an effort to prevent a recurrence of the disaster that wiped out a third of the province's honeybee colonies last winter.
November 22, 2007 | 11:58 AM EST
Rival software provides online bridge to Office
The online productivity suite wars are heating up again with the introduction of Indian software company InstaColl's new software earlier this week.
November 23, 2007 | 10:52 AM EST
One Laptop Per Child extends donation program
A promotion in which a customer buying a $188 computer in the U.S. and Canada automatically donates a second one to a child in a developing country was extended until year's end, organizers said Thursday.
November 23, 2007 | 8:48 AM EST
more »

Money »

U.S. cash registers ring on 'Black Friday'
U.S. stores ushered in the start of the holiday shopping season Friday with midnight openings and a blitz of door busters.
November 23, 2007 | 9:17 AM EST
Flaherty mulls budget help for manufacturers
Finance Minister Jim Flaherty said Friday he may be preparing some relief for the country's hard-hit manufacturing sector in the next federal budget.
November 23, 2007 | 10:20 AM EST
Proposed refinery's review won't be expanded: Baird
The federal government has rejected calls for a more comprehensive review of Irving Oil's proposed second refinery in New Brunswick.
November 23, 2007 | 8:02 AM EST
more »

Consumer Life »

U.S. cash registers ring on 'Black Friday'
U.S. stores ushered in the start of the holiday shopping season Friday with midnight openings and a blitz of door busters.
November 23, 2007 | 9:17 AM EST
Proposed N.S. traffic law calls for cellphone ban
Nova Scotia's government introduced a sweeping road safety bill on Friday that would outlaw the use of handheld cellphones while driving and allow police to use photo radar on a trial basis.
November 23, 2007 | 10:29 AM EST
Food watchdog recalls more frozen beef burgers
The Canadian Food Inspection Agency and Ontario-based Cardinal Meat Specialists Ltd. are expanding an earlier recall of frozen beef burgers for possible E. coli contamination to include more products.
November 23, 2007 | 9:20 AM EST
more »

Sports »

Scores: CFL MLB MLS

Joseph named outstanding player
Saskatchewan quarterback Kerry Joseph received the highest CFL individual honour when he was named the league's most outstanding player on Thursday night at Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto.
November 22, 2007 | 11:37 PM EST
Doctor exploring ALS link
A researcher in Montreal is exploring a possible link between the sport of football and the deadly Lou Gehrig's disease.
November 23, 2007 | 8:25 AM EST
Arrival of cold and snow moves Grey Cup festivities indoors
The first blast of winter arrived in Toronto on Thursday, leading Grey Cup organizers to move outdoor activities inside, much to the chagrin of Prairie football fans.
November 23, 2007 | 8:52 AM EST
more »