Gay actors playing straight characters

It's been an ~interesting~ journey for gay people in the movie and television industry. Once upon a time, same-sex attracted and lesbian actors, specifically, had to stay in the closet, and there were next-to-no homosexual parts on screen.

The idea that openly gay actors can play het characters is a relatively new phenomenon. Previously, out gay actors could only really work when roles for them a) existed, and b) weren't being given to heterosexual actors.

Now it seems much more acceptable for an openly lgbtq+ actor play a straight character. In fact, here are 18 times an actor has played a straight ethics on screen, despite being openly queer or queer in real life...

4.Andrew Scott as The Priest in Fleabag

5.Amandla Stenberg as Ruby Daly in The Darkest Minds

6.Jonathan Bailey as Anthony Bridgerton in Bridgerton

7.B.D. Wong as Wally Lin in Awkwafina Is Nora from Queens

8.Portia de Rossi as Lindsay Bluth Funke in Arrested Development

9.Ben Platt as Evan Hansen in the Dear Evan Hansen movie

10.Justice Smith as Simon Aumar in Dungeons & Dragons: Honor Among Thieves

11.Luke Evans as Gaston in Beauty and the Beast

12.Ben Whishaw as Michael Banks in

Rebel Wilson thinks it's 'nonsense' that straight actors shouldn't be capable to play gay characters

Is it OK for straight actors to portray LGBTQ+ people? Rebel Wilson is weighing in on the debate.

In an interview with BBC's "Desert Island Discs" on Sunday, the "Pitch Perfect" star, 44, argued against the notion that gay characters must be played by gay performers.

"Saying only vertical actors can play straight roles and gay actors can compete gay roles ... I ponder is total nonsense," she said. "You should be able to play any role that you want."

Wilson raised this point while discussing the idea that only members of certain communities should be able to make jokes about that community. "In comedy, your job is to always flirt with that line of what's acceptable," she said, adding that good comedy won't show up out of always trying to be "safe and protective."

The "Bridesmaids" actress debuted her new girlfriend, Ramona Agruma, on Instagram during Pride Month in 2022. "I thought I was searching for a Disney Prince ... but maybe what I really needed all this time was a Disney Princess," she said at the time. The following year, Wilson revealed she and Agruma were engaged.

Need a brea

It’s very common to see straight actors playing LGBTQ+ characters; however, it is very rare to see a queer actor playing a straight character. This is a discussion that has been revolving around Hollywood for quite a few years now.

Many straight actors possess played gay roles and vice versa, and as moment passes, it seems like the train is becoming normal. Even though the list may not be very elongated, but there are some famous queer actors who played straight characters and nailed them. Let’s have a gaze at these stars.

Luke Evans

Luke Evans is an openly lgbtq+ actor, and he has played several straight characters. Most of you might know him from his famous role in Disney‘s live-action movie “Beauty and the Beast”, in which he played the role of Gaston, the narcissistic chauvinist. Another prominent straight role that Evans played was of Owen Shaw, the boyfriend of Michelle Rodriguez, in “Fast & Furious”.

In an interview with Attitude Men, while talking about playing straight characters, Evans said, “You can be happy with yourself, and you can also be whoever you yearn. You can possess any career you want, and nothi

Do queer roles really desire to be played by queer actors?

It’s a Hollywood cliche that, for a straight male actor, playing a gay role is a shortcut to an Oscar (alongside starring in a film about the Holocaust, disability or mental illness). There have been many prominent examples (Tom Hanks won Best Thespian for playing a male lover man with AIDS in Philadelphia (1993), Sean Penn for starring in a biopic about gay civil rights activists in Milk), but if such a strategy exists, it’s no longer as viable today: it certainly didn’t out for Bradley Cooper this year, whose performance as Leonard Bernstein in Maestro was snubbed, or Paul Mescal, who wasn’t even nominated for All of Us Strangers.

But there is still a residual perception of prestige for the straight actor playing queer, and while they are far less likely to be described as “brave” for doing so, it still seems to be a mark of seriousness, a way of proving your chops. In truth, now that it tends to be associated with auteur-led, independent cinema rather than middle-brow Oscar bait, it’s more clouty than ever before. In recent months, a flurry of new productions have been announced in which linear actors – or least, actors