Sunday, 29 January 2012

Gay actors shouldn't worry about coming out

[Source]

Gay actors shouldn't worry about coming out

I've never had a problem being frank about my sexuality and never felt I've been turned down for a role because I'm gay





guardian.co.uk, Sunday 29 January 2012 16.00 GMT


Charlie Condou, right, in Coronation Street. Photograph: ITV/Rex Features

For Rupert Everett it was clear cut. Coming out ruined his career. And if an Equity survey published this week is anything to go by, many actors feel the ame.

According to the survey, only 57% of gay actors feel they can be open about their sexuality to their agents. "A previous agent of mine once told me to keep quiet about my sexuality and, though I am out, I do not broadcast it," said one.

I can't relate at all. For my entire career I've never had a problem being frank about my sexuality, never felt I've been turned down for a role on the basis of being gay, and have only played three gay characters in a career that spans 20 years. The idea that keeping your sexuality a secret will win you better and more varied roles is a lame excuse – often the result of internalised homophobia rather than reality. The industry has moved on and it's time actors did as well.

Some of Hollywood's most bankable actors are openly gay. Ian McKellen, for example, starring in some of the highest grossing franchises in cinematic history such as Lord of the Rings and X-Men, had his most commercially successful period as an actor after he came out in 1988. Look at how the career of Russell Tovey, openly gay from the start and one of this country's brightest young prospects, has blossomed. And my co-star on Coronation Street, Jeremy Sheffield, is still very much the housewives' choice and leading-man material – he's been out since he started. So why all the fuss?

I've witnessed it first hand. Years ago I had a brief relationship with an actor who told me he'd never actually lied about his sexuality, more that he just avoided talking about it. Later on I heard him on the radio discussing a fictional girlfriend and how one day he'd like to have children with her. It was painful, and he was mortified after. But now he's in Hollywood working on a huge film. Personally, I doubt whether being frank about who he really was would have changed that.

But for me, this is the point. For those who say that holding it in will do wonders for their career, I ask: what's more important, your career or your life? Isn't it more important to be comfortable with who you really are and to be in a place where you're accepted for that? I'm strongly against the practice of outing people in the public eye – anyone's sexuality is still completely private and personal – but the more actors who are able to express themselves with confidence, surely the less of a big deal it becomes?

And to those who say that it's obvious when a gay man is playing straight, as certain critics have done in the past, I'd say there are many times I watch actors on screen and am not convinced, and this has nothing to do with their sexual predilections. The strength of a performance lies not in your sexuality, but in your talent. That is something that will never change.

Saturday, 28 January 2012

Michael Urie in How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying.

[Source]
PLAYBILL BRIEF ENCOUNTER With How to Succeed and "Ugly Betty" Star Michael Urie
By Michael Gioia
28 Jan 2012

Michael Urie
Michael Urie, also known as Marc St. James from the ABC sitcom "Ugly Betty," takes on his first musical — not to mention, his first Broadway credit — by stepping into the shoes of office brown-noser Bud Frump in How to Succeed In Business Without Really Trying.

At the Al Hirschfeld Theatre, big-name stars have been shuffling in and out of the stage door to take part in the Rob Ashford-directed revival of How to Succeed in Business Without Really Trying. ("Harry Potter" and Equus star Daniel Radcliffe, "Glee" actor Darren Criss, Tony winner John Larroquette, Emmy Award winner Beau Bridges and singer-songwriter Nick Jonas have all been part of the run so far.) A recent new-hire at the World Wide Wicket Corporation is stage and screen actor Michael Urie, who was recently seen in the Off-Broadway production of The Cherry Orchard at Classic Stage Company.

Following his first performance at the Al Hirschfeld on Jan. 24, we caught a few minutes with the musical's newest Bud Frump, the role previously played by Christopher J. Hanke (Cry-Baby, In My Life, Rent). Urie, who was also seen in the Off-Broadway productions of Tony Kusher's Angels in America and Jon Marans' The Temperamentals, chats about the challenges of taking on a musical and rehearsing with Jonas, his newest comrade on and off the stage.

You're making your Broadway debut. Congrats! How does it feel?
Michael Urie: Thank you so much. It feels great, and it was an incredible night. It was so much fun.

How did your first performance go?
MU: I felt really good about it. It was the first time doing it full-out for [me and Nick Jonas]. Not that we haven't done a run-through — Nick and I did it on Friday in costume, with all the sets and everything like that — but it's the first time that we've done it with everyone else in costume. It was the first 100-percent show for us, and it was extremely thrilling — not to mention, all of the red things on the other side of the stage were filled with people watching. [Laughs.] Those things that are usually empty suddenly have bodies in them! You learn so much from an audience, especially in a comedy, and they taught me quite a bit tonight. There are a lot of things that I was very happy with, [but there are] things that need a little tweaking or changing, and that's what's amazing about doing a play. I get to do it again — twice — tomorrow.

Urie takes a a first-night bow
photo by Joseph Marzullo/WENN
I know you've done other stage work, but is this your first musical?
MU: First musical. First time on Broadway. I did a musical in community college, but I was terrible in it. It was a pretty good show though — Gypsy. We did Gypsy in my community college.

What role did you play?
MU: They made up a farmboy for me — Omaha.

What are the challenges you face in taking on a musical?
MU: I've mostly done plays, and in plays, you sort of speak when you feel like it. In a musical, you have to speak when you speak or else it derails the rest of the show. I've never done a show that was so regimented like this. There's a lot of freedom within the scenes, and there's a lot of freedom within the interpretation, but the pace is set. The conductor sets it, and you have to go with that. I've never had that before. I just finished doing Chekhov [The Cherry Orchard]. That's like lazy acting — you speak when you feel like it. It's Chekhov! It's all about how you feel. [Laughs.] It's very different.

Did you have the chance to see Christopher J. Hanke's performance as Bud Frump?
MU: Oh, yeah. I saw Christopher a lot.

Did you talk to him? Did he offer any advice?
MU: Well, I got advice about what it's like to be on a big Broadway stage — like, how [to] get to the numbers. I don't know if you know this, but on the lip of the Broadway stage, there are all these numbers. I had never worked with anything like that before. [In rehearsal, I'm told], "Go to 8."… I'm like, "Where's 8? How do I see that?" So, Hanke was really good about helping me learn about that and about what it's like to be in an eight-shows-a-week Broadway show because I've never done anything like that before.

Urie at the first-night party
photo by Joseph Marzullo/WENN
Most times, replacements rehearse by themselves before beginning performances. You had the opportunity to rehearse with Nick Jonas before being put into the show, correct?
MU: That's right.

Can you tell me about the rehearsal process with him?
MU: I'm so relieved that Nick and I were able to rehearse together because everything between us is all ours. We created that together. In the rehearsal room, we were really able to work on [our characters], and we didn't have to be loyal to anything that came before us. It's also… You need a comrade in a rehearsal room. You need somebody to feed off of, and he was bringing such good stuff, and I was able to feed off of him. If I had been alone — if I had been the only actor put-in — it would have just been me and the awesome associate director and the awesome dance captain, but I wouldn't have been able to create something with another actor. I really feel like having Nick in the rehearsal room was quite a boon for us — for both of us.

What new light will you bring to the character of Bud Frump?
MU: What Hanke did was so brilliant, and he really set out this amazing map. I could sort of see the journey of Bud Frump. It made it so easy for me to say, "Okay, this is the perfect journey of Bud Frump, and I'll let my instincts take over." What Hanke does that's hilarious won't necessarily work if I do it. There were little things that I was able to make my own, but if he hadn't already created such a great arc — a strong arc — I would have had to really hustle in three weeks to figure out what I was doing. I definitely stole some stuff, and I definitely took a cue from him and said, "Oh, that's really great. I'm going to try it this way [to make it] my own." I've only done [the show] once now. I've learned a lot tonight. A lot will change over the next few performances. It's very exciting.

 Read Playbill.com's Leading Men column with Jonas, How to Succeed's newest Finch.

Michael Gioia's work frequently appears in the news, feature and video sections of Playbill.com. Write to him at mgioia@playbill.com.

Watch Playbill Video’s interviews with Urie and Jonas following their first performance:

Friday, 27 January 2012

Spoiler: Matt Bomer & Glee

[Source]

Huge "Glee" Spoiler: Matt Bomer To Guest Star As ...
Posted by snicks on January 27, 2012

To the list of famous guest stars that Glee has wrangled over the last three years, we can now add an AE favorite.

TV Line is reporting that White Collar star Matt Bomer is nearing a deal to star in an April episode as Blaine's brother, which will be the first time we'll meet any of Blaine's family.

And yes, he will join his little brother in a musical number.

Obviously this is fantastic news for Matt, whose profile is going to skyrocket this year, thanks to this, his role in Magic Mike, and his casting in the film version of The Normal Heart (and you can read our interview with him here.)

But this is yet another wrench in my belief that Blaine has always been just a figment of Kurt's imagination. Damn.

Tuesday, 24 January 2012

The GAYS Of DAYTIME- The Blog.: GONE, BUT NOT FORGOTTEN...

[Source]

GONE, BUT NOT FORGOTTEN...

Kieron Hobbs (HOLLYOAKS, poisoned)
Kieron came to Hollyoaks as a priest and fell in love with John-Paul - and who could blame him. Basically as soon as the character appeared on screeen, it was known he was set up to die. When the scene finally aired, a lot of people where actually shocked by how much of a let down it ultimately was... Even worse was the aftermath, with John-Paul not being allowed to grief because both James Sutton and Guy Burnet, who played the storyline's endgame lover, Craig, were on a tight schedule...

Ianto Jones (TORCHWOOD, alien virus)
Ianto died in Jack's arms in CHILDREN OF EARTH when Jack refused to give into the 456's demands. The nasty aliens released a virus, which killed both Jack (for a couple of minutes) and Ianto. Ever since, BBC WALES never had to pay for coffee beans again and there are still areas in TV fandom land that series creator Russell T. Davies should avoid after dark...

Jackson Walsh (EMMERDALE, assisted suicide)
Emmerdale has taken it upon itself to make it absolutely clear that you shouldn't expect it to get better EVER. Life is just one long stream of failures, horrible dramas and depressing situations. After Jackson was hit by a train, he couldn't adjust to his new immobile life and asked his mom and lover to help him end it.


Jesus Velasquez (TRUE BLOOD, stabbed)
No character is safe in TRUE BLOOD and none hurt more than Jesus, who was stabbed to death by his boyfriend Lafayette, who was possessed by an evil spirit, at the end of season 4. 


Roman Wild (ALLES WAS ZAEHLT, brain tumor)
After spending years as one half of the gay couple that was ultimately responsible for getting TGoDT started, Dennis Grabosch decided to call it quits and move on. Roman Wild's dramatic death on ice in the arms of his boyfriend was written upon Dennis's request- he wanted no backdoor for his return.


Wow...
There were so many scenes.
In the original blog, there are more episodes. I only chose my favourite scenes.

Thursday, 19 January 2012

Neil Patrick Harris is cover on Out magazine

{Souce]

Neil Patrick Harris and partner grace Out magazine's latest Love Issue cover

Hollywood actor Neil Patrick Harris and his partner, David Burtka, are the cover stars of this month's Out magazine.

Peter Lloyd

Thursday, 19 January 2012

Hollywood actor Neil Patrick Harris and his partner, David Burtka, are the cover stars of this month's Out magazine.

The couple appear together in the title's annual Love Issue, which provides first-person accounts of gay relationships and gay families.

Featuring a stylised black and white photo shoot, the pair are seen kissing, dressing each other and in bed.

“There’s something kinetic about him and his being. He’s classically sexy, yet he’s very much a boy in his energy. It’s a great dynamic,” Harris writes of Burtka.

“When I see people who are equally attractive, they tend to seem quiet and kind of Marlboro Man-y, and David’s the antithesis of that. He’s more like Tigger. I’m, in turn, very introspective–the thinker, rather than the doer. I tend to weigh options before making decisions, and David is the polar opposite of that. We’re hyper similar and also incredibly opposite.”

Of Harris, Burtka similarly scribes: “Without him, I can’t breathe. The biggest thing is that he makes me laugh, but he’s also smart. He can do everything. I’m not kidding; I think he’s half robot. He makes me a little more grounded, and I bring out the wild side in him. Don’t get me wrong–we fight. Our fights last five minutes, then we’re over it. And we’re both Gemini–we have a good twin and a bad twin, and the four of us get along really well.”

Burtka, who joined E! News this month as a correspondent, adds: “I don’t want people to think we’re a perfect couple. Nothing’s perfect. A relationship is work and it changes. It’s more good times than bad, but it’s not always good.

"We have a great recipe for a wonderful relationship, but we don’t want to be the poster boys for gay relationships. We’re not trying to pretend that we are perfect. We’re just trying–in a good, positive, loving way–to life our lives.”

Harris looks forward to the day the two become legally wed. 

“I’m not the biggest fan of the word ‘partner’: It either means that we run a business together or we’re cowboys,” Harris pens.

“‘Boyfriend’ seems fleeting, like maybe we met two weeks ago. I’ve been saying ‘better half’ for as long as I’ve been able to. I think it’s a little self-deprecating and clearly defines that we’re in a relationship, but it would be nice to say ‘my husband.’”

Monday, 16 January 2012

Matt Bomer Interview on AfterElton

[Source]

The AfterElton Interview: Matt Bomer on TV Bromances and "Magic Mike" Thongs & Boundaries
Posted by Jim Halterman, Entertainment Reporter January 16, 2012


If the world doesn’t already know the face and name Matt Bomer from the highly rated USA series White Collar where he plays perfectly coiffed con artist Neal Caffrey, they surely will know him when they see him – a lot of him – in the June film release, Magic Mike or, as it’s come to be known, ‘The Stripper Movie.’

Jaw-dropping photos have been slowly leaking out into the press of a shirtless Bomer alongside his Magic Mike co-stars Channing Tatum, Alex Pettyfer, Joe Manganiello, Adam Rodriguez and Matthew McConaughey but what’s it like to sit down with Bomer in person? The charismatic, genuine and, yes, better-looking-in-person Bomer gave AfterElton some one-on-one time at the recent Television Critics Association (TCA) Winter Press Tour to talk the new episodes of White Collar this week as well as the plusses and minuses, so to speak, of playing a stripper alongside some of the hottest men in the business.

AfterElton.com: One thing that I love about White Collar is you really see how invested Neal is personally in this world with Peter (Tim DeKay) and the CIA and how that constantly challenges him considering who he used to be and who he is now. Do you think he’s just totally moving away from his con artist past? Can he?
Matt Bomer: What makes [series creator] Jeff Eastin a great writer is that the first two seasons Neal’s conflict was always external. ‘Where is Kate? How can I find her? How can I save her?’ And then the second season was all about, ‘How do I avenge her death and get to the bottom of what created all this?’ And this season it’s been an internal conflict. “Do I stay or do I go?” Is it nature or is it nurture? Is it fight or is it flight? And so that’s been really fun to get to play and obviously Jeff Eastin does a great job of just keeping congruity in his themes and just making every episode stay on theme [and] by the end of these six episodes, we definitely get a big cliffhanger in terms of that. He makes a decision. But I think that once Elizabeth (Peter’s wife, played by Tiffani Thiessen) became involved and he realized how personal it was getting and how the fact that he had these personal relationships could cost him in terms of this job and he might even be bringing danger into these people’s live, it made him reconsider things.

AE: And now that he has a chance of losing that ankle bracelet and truly be free I’m guessing that’s a big part of what’s to come.
MB: Yeah, it sort of comes in the vehicle of Beau Bridges, who has very specific plans for Neal’s future and that obviously affects both Neal and Peter in different ways and it sort of influences what kind of decisions he’s going to make.

Bomer with co-star Tim DeKay in a scene from White Collar
AE: Okay. Will Hilarie Burton be back because your characters have such a great chemistry?
MB: Yeah. She comes back in the last two or three and they actually found a really great way to incorporate her into the story line and get her on board for like the big finale. She’s great. She’s gorgeous and a great actress and just jumped right into our world, which is not an easy one to just jump into because it’s fast-paced and we shoot really fast and she was just a blast to get to work with.

AE: Speaking of great chemistry, I think the show works, obviously because it is basically about Peter and Neal. It’s that relationship. It’s a love affair between these two guys. Do you see it that way?
MB: I see it as a really profound relationship between two people who have vastly different backgrounds, completely different skill sets, a completely different outlook on the world, but when they come together those skill sets compliment each other in such a way that they are incredibly effective. And they’re both smart enough people to understand that and respect that in the other. So there’s a mutual admiration, as well. At times it’s father-son, at times it’s big brother-younger brother, at times it’s therapist and patient, and either one of us can play either of those roles for the other. It’s very sort of Butch and Sundance at the heart of it, you know?

AE: In the second of these new episodes (airing January 24) Peter get in on the con when you guys are [undercover] at the Upper West Side school. It showed him a little more of what Neal’s world is like as a con, right?
MB: That to me is quintessential White Collar. When we’re going undercover and Peter catches Neal’s hand in the cookie jar…and instead of putting him in jail says, “Well just one cookie, not five.” That to me is sort of a classic episode of White Collar and that was a really fun one to shoot.

Hot for teacher? In an upcoming White Collar episode, Neal goes undercover as a prep school professor.


Bomer with college pal Joe Manganiello
AE: Joe Manganiello is guesting in an episode (airing January 31st). Which came first? The White Collar role or was it from the movie?
MB: Well, college came first. I’ve known Joe for fifteen years. We went to college together. And then White Collar came next. [The producers] said, “Do you think your friend Joe will do an episode?” And I said, “I hope so.” And he said yes and he did a great job. It’s kind of a Rear Window-themed episode and he was fantastic and that was so fun. And then Magic Mike came after that.

AE: Let’s talk about Magic Mike, which everybody’s really excited about. I mean, I think everybody. [both laugh] What is your character in the movie?
MB: I play Ken, who’s sort of, I guess, a modern day southern hippie who’s really trying to break out of the regional commercial market and get his big break as an actor and break into the national market and balance his sort of hedonistic lifestyle and wanting to kind of get out of it at the same time. I think ultimately what he realizes is he’s probably not going to be going too much farther than that particular club.

AE: And it’s present day or...?
MB: It’s present day.

AE: Now it’s one thing to do a shirtless scene on White Collar but I’m guessing it’s another thing to do a stripping movie.
MB: Yeah.

Bomer (right) in a scene from Magic Mike with Adam Rodriguez (l) and Channing Tatum (center).

AE: So how did you guys prepare? I’m guessing there was training….
MB: It was a lot, actually. I mean, one of my compasses as an actor is when I have the opportunity for a role, does it scare the s**t out of me? And certainly with In Time (last year’s film with Justin Timberlake) it did to have to play a 105-year-old who stopped aging at 25. And then when I heard about this, I thought, “Wow.” My first impulse was sheer terror. And especially when I heard about the other guys involved, I was like, “Well, maybe they need somebody with a swimmer’s build.” [laughs] Life is a spice rack, after all.
But, yeah, it was extensive training and I got to study with this group called The Hollywood Men, who are male dancers in LA who cater to a female crowd. I watched their acts and got to hang out backstage with them, which was very informative to me because that’s a lot of the world that my character lives in the movie.
Then, we had choreography lessons with this great, great choreographer, Alison Faulk. She was fantastic. She choreographs Britney Spears and Madonna, and so she knew how to take people who didn’t have a lot of dance experience and make them look like they actually have a sense of rhythm. And then there was the training and this fake tanning and the man-scaping and all that stuff which was, you know, a lot by the time the cameras were rolling.
But we had a blast, man. Channing is one of the coolest, most gracious, generous, sweet people I’ve ever worked with, and this movie could have been a really awkward experience and because of him and the fact that he was so cool to everybody and so supportive from the beginning, it was really, really fun. Between him and Steven [Soderbergh, the film’s director]… Steven’s a fantastic director and we had this dinner right before we started shooting and he said, ‘Jump off the cliff. I will catch you.’
And after I heard that I was like, ‘All right. We’re doing this.’ And we did and we just had such a great time and I’ll tell you, if you ever want to build an ensemble between a cast of male actors, make them all hang out with each other in thongs and it’s like instant Band of Brothers. You will have each other’s back in any circumstance. Those guys will be friends to the end, I’m sure. We all kind of jumped off a cliff together. We’re like, ‘Well, I hope the water feels good.’

AE: But the movie does have dramatic element to it, right? It’s not just a fun and stripping.
MB: Yeah. I mean, look. This movie is really a coming of age story. The really central relationship of it is between Channing’s character, Mike, and Alex Pettyfer’s character, The Kid. It’s about somebody who’s trying to get out of the world they’re in or definitely sees a ceiling on the world they’re living in, and another new, young soul who just is just kind of fascinated and drawn like a moth to the flame to that hedonistic lifestyle.

Bomer cryptically said gay audiences will find boundaries blurred in Magic Mike.

AE: For our gay readers, is there a gay character in the film or a gay element to the movie?
MB: I don’t know how much I can say. I think there will be several scenes that will… I think the gay fans will be very, very happy with several of the scenes that occur in the film. But, yeah, there is one scene that I… well I don’t want to say anything because then it’s going to ruin it for everybody and it comes out in June and it’s going to give away a big thing, but…

AE: So there’s one scene to look forward to…
MB: There is one scene in particular where definitely those boundaries are blurred. Yeah.

AE: Good to hear. So what else is going on for you?
MB: I’m done shooting this movie [and] I really only have two months before I go back to White Collar and right now I’m trying to squeeze a movie in while I’m shooting White Collar in New York and then tag the rest of it in when I finish, [but] that hasn’t been announced yet. I think it should be announced in the next couple weeks, but it’s a really exciting movie. Hopefully if it all comes together it’s a really, really important and big movie for a lot of people. I hope that happens.

AE: What about more singing? I saw you on the Kennedy Center Honors sing with Kelli O’Hara and you’ve sung on the show.
MB: I so want to be able to do a Broadway show, and I’ve had opportunities to do them, but it’s hard enough commuting away from my family six months out of the year and then to say, ‘Hey, I’m going to be gone actually a full year so that I can be on Broadway every night.’ It just wouldn’t be fair to my family, so…

How can you not love a guy who takes his Mom
as his date to the Kennedy Center Honors? (2010)

AE: You could take them with you…
MB: Well, I think you have to make that choice as an artist. You know, it’s like, are you going to be someone who takes your family with you wherever you go? Or are you going to give them a real sense of roots and you’re going to be the one who has to be a little bit of a satellite from time to time? I think if an opportunity comes up where it’s a shorter run…and I had talked to Kristin Chenoweth about doing a job possibly with her and if it were a three month situation and I didn’t have a film lined up and we could make that happen I would definitely be into it.

AE: You could do a guest spot on Smash.
MB: I haven’t seen Smash. I’ve heard wonderful things. The producers are very dear friends of mine, so I would love to come do a guest spot on Smash.

AE: It seems from where I sit you’ve handled the success of the show and your overall success really well. How do you feel?
MB: To be honest with you, I don’t really feel any different as a person. I don’t live my life any differently. I mean, there might be people who want to come take a picture when I’m having dinner, which is fine by me. I don’t know any artist who doesn’t want people to respond to their work on some level, but I’m just grateful to be a working actor and to get to play roles that I like and get to work with great directors in the hiatus. And I count myself really blessed to get to score a really great role that I can actually grow with over the course of six seasons, not just spouting expositional dialogue or, you know, doing the formula that works every episode.

White Collar airs Tuesdays at 9/8c on the USA Network. Magic Mike is scheduled for a June 29, 2012 opening.

Monday, 9 January 2012

Congratulations - Alan Cumming

[Source]

Alan Cumming announces gay wedding in New York
by Staff Writer, PinkNews.co.uk
9 January 2012, 12:59pm

Cumming and partner Grant Shaffer
married on the anniversary of their
civil partnership
Bisexual actor Alan Cumming announced last night he had married his partner Grant Shaffer in New York, adding to their British civil partnership.

The pair celebrated the fifth anniversary of their civil union by marrying in the US state, the sixth in the union to allow the ceremonies.

Cumming, originally from Scotland, announced the news on micro-blogging site Twitter with a special message for Republican presidential candidacy hopeful Rick Santorum.

He wrote: “I just got married!!!!! On the 5th anniversary of our wedding in London grant and I tied the knot again in NYC!!! #eatmericksantorum. [sic]”

Santorum was booed last week for his anti-gay comments ahead of the New Hampshire primary, as the race for the Republican presidential nomination gets under-way.

Cumming, who will be appearing this year as both Macbeth and Lady Macbeth in a Glasgow production of the Scottish play, now lives in New York City with Shaffer and their two dogs.

Last year, he criticised figures from his industry who recommended young actors stay in the closet.

He said: “I always think about a little gay boy in Wisconsin or a little lesbian in Arkansas seeing someone like me, and if I cannot be open in my life, how on earth can they?”

======================
And those are his tweets.



Pub Renault Twingo mariage gay, VF


Uploaded by yaggvideo on 9 Jan 2012

La nouvelle publicité Renault montre un couple d'hommes qui se marient.
Yagg est le nouveau média LGBT en français: infos, vidéos, blogs, communauté et réseau professionnel, rejoignez-nous sur http://yagg.com/
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translated by Google
Renault's new ad shows a couple of men who marry.
Yagga is the new LGBT media in French: news, videos, blogs, community and professional network, join us on http://yagg.com/
All of our videos on our YouTube channel (abonnez-vous!) or http://tv.yagg.com/
Follow us on twitter: http://twitter.com/ #! / Yagga
or facebook: http://www.facebook.com/group.php?gid=69087594716&ref=ts

Thursday, 5 January 2012

Damon Gameau - funny video


Found a funny video with Damon Gameau who is a cast of RTÉ's Irish drama, RAW

Congratulations - Jonny Weir

[Source]

American figure skater Johnny Weir marries boyfriend

Leading American figure skater Johnny Weir married his boyfriend in New York, last week.
Peter Lloyd


Thursday, 5 January 2012

Leading American figure skater Johnny Weir married his boyfriend in New York, last week.

The 27 year-old – who is both a three-time U.S. National Champion and the 2008 World bronze medalist – wed lawyer Victor Voronov in a private ceremony on Friday 30 December.

According to the Associated Press, both men's parents were present at the ceremony which took place in New York City's Courthouse.

Although they are planning a summer ceremony to celebrate the union, Weir said in a Twitter post on Saturday that "all the official stuff is done now!"

"I am so happy to have found my match," he said in a statement.

"Marrying Victor has been the greatest moment in my life and I will work very hard to make him proud and happy." The two are using the surname Weir-Voronov, although not professionally.



Here is his tweet.

Wednesday, 4 January 2012

Jonathan Groff will be on The Good Wife as a guest star.

[Source]

Jonathan Groff will guest on “The Good Wife”
By Greg Hernandez on Jan 4, 2012 8:31 am

Out actor Jonathan Groff is set to guest star on CBS’s The Good Wife!

The Tony Award nominee, who has a recurring role on Glee as Jesse St. James, will appear on the hit legal drama in February, according to TV Line.

Groff will appear in this season’s 15th episode as Jimmy, a plaintiff suing a software company after his sister disappears during a peaceful protest in Syria.

He is also set to return to Glee later in the season.

Monday, 2 January 2012

The GAYS Of DAYTIME- The Blog.: "RAW" RETURNS ON JANUARY 8

The GAYS Of DAYTIME- The Blog.: "RAW" RETURNS ON JANUARY 8: RTE is currently hyping the show, which MAY be available globally on the recently launched RTE Player for iPad / iPhone (some other recent...


9.30pm RTÉ One
RAW opens its doors for a fourth new season with familiar faces - and some new ones. It's one year on from the season three finale, and upbeat Fiona (Aisling O'Sullivan) is turning 40 and the gang are planning some drinks at the end of the night. Things are thrown off kilter when word comes through of the RAW building being sold. It turns out Fiona and Geoff's (Damon Gameau) new landlord is none other than Dan Kelly (Dermot Crowley) - Fiona's Dad. Geoff's relieved to be paying rent to someone they can trust, but Fiona's not so sure Dan's going to be as 'hands off' as he promises.

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I can't wait for the 8th of Jan, a new season of Raw! But according to The Gay Of Daytime, Pavel might not be in the first some episodes or more.