Saturday, 24 August 2013

Russell Tovey: the unlikely lad

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Russell Tovey: the unlikely lad

How did one of Britain's few out actors come to specialise in playing the archetypal bloke? Being Human and Him & Her star Russell Tovey reveals all



Russell Tovey: 'There are few actors who exude such irrepressible down-the-pub blokeishness.' Photograph: Julian Anderson
You want laddish? Russell Tovey's your man. In the beautifully observed TV sitcom Him & Her, he plays Steve, an unemployed procrastinator whose ambitions stretch to drinking, watching porn and shagging his girlfriend. As bewildered werewolf George Sands Junior in the supernatural drama Being Human, he makes his girlfriend pregnant but just wants to be one of the boys. In the new TV whodunnit What Remains, Tovey's Michael is again preparing, reluctantly, to be a father. He tends to play boy-men who find themselves in grown-up situations against their better judgment. He often gets the girl, but you're never sure why, or whether he'll keep her. There are few actors who exude such irrepressible down-the-pub blokeishness. Tovey is also one of Britain's few out gay actors.

We meet at a park in London's Soho. Tovey is accompanied by his gorgeous French bulldog, Rocky, or the Rock if you know him well. There's something instantly likable about both of them. Rocky introduces himself by giving me a thorough face wash, and Tovey starts telling me why he didn't join his parents' coach company (they own the Gatwick Flyer, which runs between Essex and Gatwick airport), how he got into trouble at school time and again, and how his ambition as a nine-year-old was to be a father by the time he was 14.

Tovey grew up in Billericay, Essex, to parents who worked all hours to build their business. He had one of the highest IQs in his year at school, but applied himself only to things that interested him. He was easily bored, and liked to make people laugh. That's how he got into trouble. He never did anything really bad, just daft or disrespectful – like the time he called his French teacher sweetheart. "I got escorted by the head of PE and a security guard to the office of the deputy headmistress, Mrs Palmer." Mrs Palmer asked if he would call her sweetheart, and he said, only if he knew her better. Tovey was suspended for two days. His next suspension was for eating cake. Well, if we're being pedantic, for following girls into the toilet after they had refused to give him some of the cake they had made in Home Economics, and stealing it from them. "I turned round with a mouth full of victoria sponge and there was Mrs Palmer."
 
Tovey and his French bulldog, Rocky. Photograph: Julian Anderson
Then there was the time he was thrown out of Barking & Dagenham College. He left school at 16, was doing a BTec in performing arts, and was due to be in the chorus of the college production of Rent when he was offered a part in a commercial. "They said, if you take this we're not going to invite you back, and also if you leave you'll never work again. Anyway, I left." The college now cites him as one of its famous former students.

 
Tovey says he spent one school holiday just watching movies, and that was that. "Dead Poets Society was a big one, Home Alone, Stand By Me, Labyrinth, things like that. I thought the films were brilliant, but more than anything I wanted to be a part of them rather than just watching."

His first part was as an extra in The Bill in the last year of junior school. He played a traveller who shouted "Oi" and threw a football at a police officer. It wasn't much but he loved it. He started making money while at school, but says nobody noticed because most of the children had loaded parents anyway. Tovey's mother always warned him not to show off about his work, so he kept quiet. "Mum said, if people ask you about it, it's fine, but don't boast, don't talk about anything. So it's always felt very private, what I do. If you've seen me, great, and if you want to talk about something, brilliant, but I'm not going to come in and say, 'Did you see me on this, what did you think?' That's just not in my nature... Oh my God! Look at that, he's trying to hump you!" His voice rises a couple of notches in shock. "Rocky! Don't do that! What's wrong with you?" He gives Rocky a severe talking to, apologises on his behalf, then tells me it's not easy being a French bulldog. "If you're human and you feel sexed up, you can do something about it. But if you're a dog I don't think you can, can you?" He looks at Rocky's underbelly. "Rocky can't reach his," he says sympathetically.

A holidaying Brazilian family walk over and ask what breed Rocky is. It's funny, Tovey says when they've gone, he worried that Rocky might make him more recognisable, but it's worked the other way – strangers approach him all the time, ask about the dog, have a few strokes and toddle off without so much as a hint of, "Aren't you ...?"

From 11 onwards, Tovey acted regularly in professional productions. But it was only in his early 20s that he made his name with Alan Bennett's The History Boys, alongside Dominic Cooper and James Corden. Tovey was already out, and Bennett could happily have cast him as Posner, an angsty gay boy infatuated with one of his fellow students. But somehow it didn't seem right; Tovey was always going to be more convincing as sporty, plain-speaking Rudge, who is given the brilliant line: "How do I define history? It's just one fuckin' thing after another."
 
In fact, Tovey auditioned for Dakin, the handsome smoothie eventually played by Cooper, even though he knew he was unlikely to get the part. "I had loads of spots, but I went in and said, look, I want to play this part. Dakin was meant to be the lead, lothario, sex object, and nobody was going to lust after me, this spotty, pasty, big-eared thing. But Alan Bennett really liked me and he thought, well, he obviously wants a bigger part, so he wrote up the part of Rudge for me." Tovey's skin problem almost led to him quitting the production. "My skin was so bad, I thought, I just want to leave. It was really affecting me psychologically. You go into makeup and they'd paint each spot. It was self-esteem-crushing. Horrible."

Tovey has perfect skin today, but he has had to work at it with medication. "I still feel I'm going to wake up any moment and my skin's going to break out all over. If I get one spot now, this absolute cloud comes over me."

Despite this, he was never exactly lacking in confidence."I thought I could charm people. I never felt I was attractive to women. I felt I was attractive to men when I was growing up. And even now, if a woman fancies me, I find that a bit alienating. A bit like, 'You're sure you're not taking the piss?' Because, having the skin, it always felt, I don't know, not good enough. Whereas with men it was a bit like, it's rough, it's fine, don't worry. Do you know what I mean? Growing up having sticky-out ears, pasty skin, then going through teenage years with spots." Did he consider having his ears pinned back? He looks appalled. "No. I've never felt anything apart from love for my ears. My eldest nephew's got them now, and he's so proud of them because he's got his uncle Russell's ears. They're my trademark."

As George the werewolf in Being Human. Photograph: BBC Wales
At school he always had girlfriends. It was only when he got into his mid-teens that he realised they didn't do that much for him, that he was attracted to boys. "Looking back, I always knew. But you don't really know till you get to a point where you go, oh, that's what makes me happier." At 18, he came out to his family and his father tried to talk him out of it. "My dad was of that generation where it's changeable if you get it early enough."

How would he have changed you?

"Hormone therapy or shock treatment, all of these horror things that you watch. You see, they had all this Aids thing. It was all, 'Don't die of ignorance.' My nan thought being gay was a disease. It's just a generational, educational thing. And Dad was like, 'I wish you would have told us sooner because we would have done something about it.'"

Were you surprised by the reaction?

"No, I was prepared for it."

Was it based on prejudice or fear?

"Not knowing. Not knowing anybody else who is gay, not experiencing it, hearing of people dying of Aids and seeing, say, Larry Grayson on TV and thinking, that's it. Seeing gay men appear in stories in which they were miserable and sad. And I think he felt sad and worried for me, that I'd have a terrible life if I made this choice. And he thought it was a choice, because being straight is so natural, why would you want to be anything different from that?"

It's touching how determined Tovey is to understand his family's fears of his sexuality.

"You want your kids to be perfect and at that time it felt like it was an imperfection. Whereas now a lot of people are like [enthusiastic voice], 'Are you? Cool! Well, make sure you look after yourself.' It seems like it's a different time. I sense that with younger generations, when they have after-school clubs where they talk about being gay. I meet a lot of kids who've come out at school, and I'm like, 'What! You came out at school! Did you get bullied?' 'No!'"

He smiles. He's just remembered something that amuses him. "My mum used to think it was the pill that made you gay. There was too much oestrogen in the water, and people started taking the pill in the 60s and it made everybody gay."

On screen, Tovey is forever snogging girlfriends or flashing his bum. Does he enjoy his sex scenes? "I have quite enjoyed my sex scenes." Hurrah! He's the first actor I've ever heard admit that.

"I don't get embarrassed by sexual parts. I want to protect the girl. Nine times out of 10, girls are more embarrassed." He thinks about it. "You know what? Actually, if I was doing a gay sex scene, I'd probably feel really embarrassed."

Do women playing his love interest see him as a challenge? "No, because most of my leading ladies are in relationships, and their partners are thrilled when I get cast with them in these intimate roles because I'm not a threat. I think if I'd been straight I would have slept with a lot of actresses by now and there'd be a lot of broken relationships."

Really? He laughs. "Is that quite an egotistical thing to say? It's just the leading man/leading lady thing, which happens again and again. You're playing being in love and you fall in love."

Tovey says he's looking forward to his next part in What Remains because his character is a bit darker than normal. There's also a new series of Him & Her coming up, which he loves. ("It feels very Pinteresque to me. If I wasn't in it, I'd watch it religiously.") And he's busy writing: he's written three plays so far, which have been read at the Soho theatre and National theatre studio but have yet to be performed. He describes them as being "about people in the margins".

Tovey with Sarah Solemani in Him & Her. Photograph: BBC
I ask Tovey if there was one thing he could change in the world, what it would be? "Right now? I feel, as a taxpayer who's self-employed, I hate the fact that you have to pay on your projected earnings for the following year. Can't we get rid of that? Let me earn it, then I'll pay it back to you. Don't say, well, you owe us half of what you might earn next year. That's it. Haha!" Blimey, he sounds like a proper Tory Essex boy. "Tory? No, absolutely not. I was in the House of Lords recently for the whole debate about gay marriage. It was incredible, just sitting there watching all these really old white, middle-class, crusty men talking about how they thought it was wrong. They feel very removed from what is happening in the real world outside."


It's interesting that Tovey says it's so much easier to come out today than when he was a boy. If anything, among actors, the opposite appears to be true. Whereas years ago the likes of Ian McKellen, Anthony Sher and Rupert Everett came out (admittedly in middle age or when already established), there are few openly gay stars of Tovey's generation. "Well, there's the guy who plays Spock in the new Star Trek film, Zachary Quinto." He tries to think of others, but fails.

The fact that you can name only one gay actor in Hollywood suggests there is still a taboo, I say. What about well-known young British actors? He racks his brain. No, no one he can name – not publicly, anyway. "I assume there are a few. Whether they are out or not is not for me to say." That is crazy, I say. "Well, I hope it's changing… I've found out over the years that the conversation about casting me has come up: would it affect the show and the audience if I'm a gay man playing a straight character? These conversations are being had still." Everett has said that coming out crippled his career, that now he's largely restricted to playing gay. Perhaps the difference for Tovey is that he was out from the start, and because he didn't make much fuss about it, nor did anybody else. As for the viewing public, he says they couldn't care less. "You've got to remember that of the millions who watch TV, most people don't give a fuck about your private life or know who you are."

Tovey says he is keen to play a gay man, but there are very few good parts. "I really want to do it properly, with something that is clever and moving everything forward rather than covering old ground. Not someone who's gay and miserable, dying of Aids, secluded, a bit weird. I want to play someone who's normal and just happens to be gay."

Shortly after I meet Tovey, the actor Ben Whishaw issues a statement saying he is gay and happily married. I contact Tovey to ask what he thinks. "I'm just happy he is a well-adjusted dude and out now, another good role model who isn't defined professionally by who he wants to share his personal life with."

Tovey has been with his boyfriend for four years. They live together, are very happy, and that's all he wants to say because it's private. He's wearing a couple of rings. I ask about their history. The one on his middle finger, he says, is his father's old ring and he never takes it off. And the other? He blushes. "It's just another ring. It's on that finger... which means something. I'm not married or anything. It's just a symbol of commitment, I suppose." Yes, he says, he would like to get married, and still fancies being a father.

Tovey says he always knew it was important for him to be open about his sexuality. Why? Simple, he says. "I love my personal life and having a social life. And I didn't ever want to have to compromise. I could imagine being at this stage now and having skeletons in the closet, and you sitting here going, 'So have you got a girlfriend?' and me saying, 'I've not got a girlfriend at the moment, I've not met the right girl, there's a few people around.' And in my head going, I'm going back home to my boyfriend in five minutes." He pauses. "D'you know what I mean? I just can't be arsed with that."

What Remains starts on BBC1 at 9pm on 25 August.

Thursday, 22 August 2013

Actor Wentworth Miller says he's gay, turns down Russian festival invite

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Actor Wentworth Miller says he's gay, turns down Russian festival invite

Actor Wentworth Miller attends the 2007 Producers Guild Awards held at the Hyatt
Regency Century Plaza in Los Angeles,
California, January 20, 2007.
LOS ANGELES | Thu Aug 22, 2013 3:43am BST

(Reuters) - Actor and screenwriter Wentworth Miller, best known for his leading role in Fox television drama "Prison Break," came out as a gay man on Wednesday in a letter declining an invitation to attend a Russian film festival in light of Moscow's recently adopted anti-gay laws.

Miller, 41, turned down an offer to attend the St. Petersburg International Film Festival as a "guest of honour" in a letter posted on the website of advocacy group GLAAD, which monitors media representation of gay, lesbian, bisexual or transgender people and issues.

"Thank you for your kind invitation. As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes. However, as a gay man, I must decline," Miller wrote to festival director Maria Averbakh.

Miller wrote that he was "deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government," and did not want attend a festival in a country where "people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly."

Russia's parliament banned the spread of gay "propaganda" among minors in a law passed in June, which includes imposing fines on those holding gay pride rallies, has attracted international condemnation.

Miller, who played incarcerated structural engineer Michael Scofield in Fox's "Prison Break" from 2005 to 2009, has recently turned his hand at screenwriting, penning the script for this year's dark thriller "Stoker," starring Nicole Kidman.

Miller's letter comes after Bravo channel host and executive producer Andy Cohen told E! News last week that he would not be co-hosting Donald Trump's Miss Universe pageant this year in Moscow because he "didn't feel right as a gay man stepping foot into Russia."

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Eric Walsh)

Wentworth Miller Comes Out: 'Prison Break' Star Reveals He's Gay

[Source]

Wentworth Miller Comes Out: 'Prison Break' Star Reveals He's Gay

Posted: 08/21/2013 6:33 pm EDT  |  Updated: 08/22/2013 1:33 am EDT


Wentworth Miller is the latest celebrity to reveal he's gay.

After being invited to attend the St. Petersburg International Film Festival in Russia, the "Prison Break" star decided it was time to go public with his sexual orientation.

"Thank you for your kind invitation. As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes," the 41-year-old wrote in a letter to the festival's director, which was posted on GLAAD's website. "However, as a gay man, I must decline."

The actor went on to explain:
I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government. The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly.
Miller is of course referring to Russia's new anti-gay laws, which are a ban on "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations" as part of an effort to promote traditional Russian values over Western liberalism, and prohibit the adoption of Russian-born children to national and international same-sex couples.

The actor concluded his letter by stating, "Perhaps, when and if circumstances improve, I'll be free to make a different choice."

In a statement, GLAAD spokesman Wilson Cruz praised Miller's decision to come out, noting that the actor's "bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians," telling them they are not alone.

"As people from across the globe continue to speak out against this horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia's anti-LGBT law," he said.

Wentworth Miller reveals that he's gay

[Source]

Wentworth Miller reveals that he's gay


Trey Barrineau, USA TODAY 1:12 a.m. EDT August 22, 2013

He made the revelation in a letter declining an invitation to a film festival in Russia.

Actor Wentworth Miller comes out
as gay in an open letter to the
St. Petersburg Film Festival.
(Photo: Jon Kopaloff, FilmMagic)
Prison Break star Wentworth Miller has declined an invitation to the St. Petersburg International Film Festival saying that as a gay man he disapproves of the Russian government's crackdown on homosexuals.

Miller had been invited to appear as a guest of honor at the festival. "As a gay man, I must decline, he said.

The actor, 41, whose sexual orientation has been the subject of speculation in the past, came out in a letter he sent on Wednesday to festival organizers.

Wentworth's letter, which is posted on GLAAD's website, thanks festival organizers for an invitation but states "I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government."

"Wentworth's bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and persecution: you are not alone," said a statement from GLAAD representative Wilson Cruz, who is also an actor (My So-Called Life).

Miller's announcement comes amid international condemnation of Russia's recent crackdown on homosexuals. Stringent new laws prescribe fines for people accused of spreading "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations" to minors. Gay pride rallies are banned, as is the adoption of Russian-born children by same-sex couples. And foreign visitors suspected of being gay can now be detained for up to 15 days, which has raised concerns worldwide as Russia prepares to host the 2014 Winter Olympics.

Wednesday, 21 August 2013

Wentworth Miller Comes Out as Gay

[Source]

Wentworth Miller Comes Out as Gay

By Dahvi Shira
08/21/2013 at 06:50 PM EDT

Wentworth Miller
Shizuo Kambayashi/AP
Wentworth Miller has come out.

The former Prison Break star, 41, went public with the news in a letter to Petersburg International Film Festival director Maria Averbakh, who had invited him to attend.

According to the message, which was posted on GLAAD's website Wednesday, Miller thanked Averbakh for the "kind invitation" but turned it down because, "As a gay man … I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government."

Added the actor: "The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly. … If circumstances improve, I'll be free to make a different choice."

Miller's words refer to recent anti-LGBT legislation passed by the country. Signed by President Vladimir Putin in June, the law bans the "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations" and imposes hefty fines for providing information about the gay community to minors or holding gay pride rallies, the Associated Press reports.

There also is concern about a long-running problem of violence against gays in Russia, as well as a new law restricting adoptions of Russian children by people in countries allowing same-sex marriage.

E! News was first to report the posting of Miller's letter.

Wentworth Miller Comes Out as Gay in Response to Russian Film Fest Invitation

[Source]

Wentworth Miller Comes Out as Gay in Response to Russian Film Fest Invitation

Kiyoshi Ota/Getty Images
August 21, 2013 | 03:52PM PT 

GLAAD touts actor/scribe for publicly condemning anti-LGBT law


@allegraceline

“Prison Break” star and “Stoker” scribe Wentworth Miller came out as gay in a letter sent Wednesday to the St. Petersburg International Film Fest, declining to participate because of Russia’s anti-LGBT laws.

“I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government,” Miller wrote. “The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly.”

GLAAD spokesman Wilson Cruz released a statement: “Wentworth’s bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and persecution: you are not alone. As people from across the globe continue to speak out against Russia’s horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia’s anti-LGBT law.”

Russia’s anti-LGBT legislation have attracted international censure since the nation’s parliament passed a law in June, which bans “propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations” and imposes fines on those holding gay pride rallies.

Read Miller’s full letter here.

Wentworth Miller rejects Russian film festival invitation; 'As a gay man, I must decline'

[Source]

Wentworth Miller rejects Russian film festival invitation; 'As a gay man, I must decline'

Wednesday, August 21, 2013 - 5:56pm by Seth Adam, GLAAD's Senior Manager of Communications



Actor and screenwriter Wentworth Miller today rejected an invitation to attend the St. Petersburg International Film Festival, citing Russia's anti-LGBT laws. In a letter to the Festival's Director, the 'Prison Break' star stated that "as a gay man, I must decline." Miller goes on to say that he is "deeply troubled" by Russia's lawful brutality toward the LGBT community. "I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly," Miller concludes.

Read Miller's full letter to the St. Petersburg International Film Festival below.
August 21, 2013

Re: St. Petersburg International Film Festival / "Guest of Honor" Invitation

Dear Ms. Averbakh:

Thank you for your kind invitation. As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes.

However, as a gay man, I must decline.

I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government. The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly.

Perhaps, when and if circumstances improve, I'll be free to make a different choice.

Until then.

Wentworth Miller

Member, HRC
Member, GLAAD
Member, The ManKind Project
"Wentworth's bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and persecution: you are not alone," said GLAAD spokesperson Wilson Cruz. " As people from across the globe continue to speak out against Russia's horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia's anti-LGBT law."


Earlier this year, Russian president Vladimir Putin passed a law that prohibits the adoption of Russian-born children to national and international same-sex couples, as well as any couples living in a country that has any LGBT acceptance policies. President Putin has also signed a law which bans the public, including tourists, from presenting pro-LGBT "propaganda." Such propaganda can include something simple as hand holding, t-shirts, or pro-gay statements. "Criminals" who break these laws are at risk of being fined, arrested, or deported. Following the passage of these laws has been a surge in anti-LGBT violence in the country.

GLAAD and Rusa LGBT, an organization that works to support LGBT Russians, are collaborating with multiple organizations to address the ongoing persecution of LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and oppression due to the recent passage of the country's draconian 'anti-gay propaganda' law.

Wentworth Miller Comes Out as Gay, Refuses Invitation to Russian Film Festival

[Source]

Wentworth Miller Comes Out as Gay, Refuses Invitation to Russian Film Festival

Celebrity News August 21, 2013 AT 6:30PM By

Wentworth Miller came out as gay in a letter to a Russian film festival on Aug. 21
Credit: MUNAWAR HOSAIN/FOTOS INTERNATIONAL/GETTY

Wentworth Miller took a stand -- and a big step -- on Wednesday, Aug. 21, when he came out as gay in a letter to the organizers of the St. Petersburg International Film Festival in Russia. Citing the country's headline-making anti-LGBT legislation, the 41-year-old Prison Break star said he could not "in good conscience" attend an event in a place that would promote such discrimination.

PHOTOS: Out and proud stars

"Thank you for your kind invitation. As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes," he wrote in the letter, posted to GLAAD's website. "However, as a gay man, I must decline."

Wentworth went on to note that he took issue with Russia's anti-gay laws, which include a ban on the adoption of Russian-born children to national and international same-sex couples.

PHOTOS: LGBT allies

"I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government," he continued. "The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly."

"Perhaps, when and if circumstances improve," he added, "I'll be free to make a different choice. Until then."

PHOTOS: Gay power couples

"Wentworth's bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and persecution: you are not alone," GLAAD spokesperson Wilson Cruz said in a statement after the letter was posted. "As people from across the globe continue to speak out against Russia's horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia's anti-LGBT law."

Wentworth Miller, "Prison Break" Star, Comes Out As Gay, Declining Russian Film Festival Invite

[Source]

Wentworth Miller, "Prison Break" Star, Comes Out As Gay, Declining Russian Film Festival Invite

“I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government,” he wrote. Miller also wrote Stoker, which came out earlier this year.

posted on August 21, 2013 at 5:58pm EDT

Chris Geidner
BuzzFeed Staff

Kiyoshi Ota / Getty

Actor Wentworth Miller, of Prison Break, came out as “a gay man” in a letter sent Wednesday to the St. Petersburg International Film Festival, declining his participation because, he writes, “I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government.”
He went on:
The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly.

Perhaps, when and if circumstances improve, I’ll be free to make a different choice.
GLAAD spokesman Wilson Cruz noted in a statement, “Wentworth’s bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and persecution: you are not alone. As people from across the globe continue to speak out against Russia’s horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia’s anti-LGBT law.”

Miller, who is 41, also had his first screenplay hit theaters this year — with Stoker, starring Nicole Kidman, Matthew Goode and Mia Wasikowska.


Prison Break Star Wentworth Miller Comes Out As Gay

[Source]

Prison Break Star Wentworth Miller Comes Out As Gay
by Marc MalkinWed., Aug. 21, 2013 2:47 PM PDT

Matt Sayles/AP Photo

Matt Sayles/AP Photo

Wentworth Miller has come out as gay.

The Prison Break star decided it was time to publicly reveal his sexuality after being invited to attend a film festival in Russia.

"Thank you for your kind invitation. As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes," Wentworth, 41, says in a letter to Maria Averbakh, director of the St. Petersburg International Film Festival. "However, as a gay man, I must decline.

"I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government," he continued in the letter, posted on GLAAD's website. "The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly."

PHOTOS: Same-sex celebrity couples

He also said "if circumstances improve, I'll be free to make a different choice."

GLAAD spokesman Wilson Cruz praised Miller's actions.

"Wentworth's bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians: you are not alone," Cruz said. "As people from across the globe continue to speak out against this horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia's anti-LGBT law."

Implemented last month, a controversial new law has banned "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations around minors," including the public discussion of gay rights and relationships anywhere children might hear it. The law has been condemned by Russian and international human rights groups as highly discriminatory.

The anti-gay propaganda law quickly stirred up controversy, with people calling for a boycott of the 2014 Winter Olympics in Russia to gay bars in Los Angeles and New York holding "vodka-dumping" protests.

C. Hodes/FOX
VIDEO: Neil Patrick Harris talks about getting married

Madonna was unsuccessfully sued by conservative groups in Russia for violating the propoganda law in St Petersburg after she said during a concert there last summer that gay people should be "treated with dignity."

Earlier this month, Lady Gaga tweeted her outrage over Russia's treatment of LGBT people.

"Sending bravery to LGBTs in Russia. The rise in government abuse is archaic. Hosing teenagers with pepper spray? Beatings? Mother Russia?" she first tweeted, followed by "The Russian government is criminal. Oppression will be met with revolution. Russian LGBTs you are not alone. We will fight for your freedom...Why didn't you arrest me when you had the chance, Russia? Because you didn't want answer to the world?"

Can I say "Finally"? - Wentworth Miller comes out

[Source]

'I'm a gay man': Prison Break star Wentworth Miller comes out as he takes a stand against Russia's homophobic laws

By Daily Mail Reporter
PUBLISHED: 23:38 GMT, 21 August 2013 | UPDATED: 09:13 GMT, 22 August 2013


Television star Wentworth Miller announced he was gay on Wednesday in order to take a public stand against homophobia in Russia.

The Prison Break star declined an invitation to a Russian film festival after the country passed a series of anti-gay laws.

The 41-year-old Prison Break star had been asked to attend the St. Petersburg International Film Festival.

'As a gay man, I must decline,' he wrote in his reply, which was made public by the campaigning group GLAAD.

Must decline: Wentworth Miller, shown in September 2010 at a film premiere in Japan, announced he was gay on Wednesday as he declined an invitation to a Russian film festival due to that country's discriminatory laws against gays
'I am deeply troubled by the current attitude toward and treatment of gay men and women by the Russian government,' Wentworth added in his letter.

'The situation is in no way acceptable, and I cannot in good conscience participate in a celebratory occasion hosted by a country where people like myself are being systematically denied their basic right to live and love openly,' he said.


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Wentworth said if circumstances improved he would be free to make a different choice - adding that he had 'a degree of Russian ancestry' and had enjoyed past visits to the country previously.

Television star: Wentworth, shown at left in 2005 on Prison Break and right in 2010 in Resident Evil: Afterlife, was championed for taking a stance

The actor was immediately praised by gay rights advocates.

'Wentworth's bold show of support sends a powerful message to LGBT Russians, who are facing extreme violence and persecution: you are not alone,' said GLAAD spokesperson Wilson Cruz in reference to the country's lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender community.

'As people from across the globe continue to speak out against Russia's horrific law, more celebrities and corporations should follow his courageous lead in openly condemning Russia's anti-LGBT law,' he added.

Major announcement: Wentworth, shown in March 2008, said he could not in good conscience attend the Russian film festival
Russian President Vladimir Putin in July signed a law banning the adoption of Russian-born children by gay couples.

Putin in June signed another bill that classified 'homosexual propaganda' as pornography and provides for fines and arrest for those making it accessible to minors.

A law passed in 2012 also banned public gay pride events in Moscow for the next 100 years.

The Russian laws have sparked protests in the US where some gay rights advocates have poured Russian vodka in the streets.

The laws also have caused some concern among athlethes who will be heading to Russia for the 2014 Olympic Winter Games.

Friday, 16 August 2013

Partial articles from The Backlot

[Source]

Briefs: Area 51 Declassified, That Russian Pole Vaulter Was “Misunderstood,” and Is The Question “Are You Gay” Offensive?

by snicks | August 16, 2013

And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Michael Urie. Wrapping up our week with Michael, last years he returned to TV in the ill-fated CBS sitcom Partners. Here’s an extended trailer to refresh your memory.




[Source]

Briefs: Ryan Murphy Gives More Finn Clues, Chris Hayes Taken To Task, and Reaction to Darren Young Coming Out

by snicks | August 15, 2013

And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Michael Urie. In 2012, Michael starred as Bud in the second Broadway revival of How To Succeed In Business. Below you can see him with co-star Nick Jonas





[Source]

Briefs: Russian Newscaster Comes Out On Air, Zesty Guy Returns, and “Drag Race” Stars Inhabit Cher’s “Woman’s World”

by snicks | August 14, 2013

And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Michael Urie. In 2009, Michael starred on stage in The Temperamentals, playing Rudi Gernreich, one of the founding members of the Mattachine Society. Below you can see Frank Decaro talk to Michael and Cheyenne Jackson about being out in show business.




[Source]

Briefs: Lady Gaga and Cher Are “The Greatest,” Who Are “The Almighty Johnsons,” and “Comics Undressed”

by snicks | August 13, 2013

And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Michael Urie. Michael landed his biggest role to date in 2006 in Ugly Betty. His Marc character was supposed to be a one-shot deal, but he clicked so well with co-star Vanessa Williams, they decided to keep the character, and Michael would become an integral part of the ensemble cast through it’s four seasons.




[Source]

Briefs: Harry Styles Twerks For Darren Criss, Archie Boycotts Russia, and Is This Zachary Quinto’s New Guy?

by snicks | August 12, 2013

And here’s The Weekly ShoutOUT™. Each week we’re going to focus on one out athlete/performer and feature a daily pic and career timeline. We’ll be showcasing the big names, but also the lesser-known gay celebs who deserve more recognition. This week we give a ShoutOUT to … Michael Urie. 33-year-old Michael got his start with bit parts in film and TV before scoring his big break in 2005 in the stage and feature version of WTC View, playing a man who spends the weeks after 9/11 looking for a someone to share his 2 bedroom apartment in NYC.

Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Michael guested in Hot in Cleveland

Data from IMDb

Hot in Cleveland (2010– ) Comedy

Three 40-something best friends from Los Angeles are flying to Paris when their plane makes an emergency landing in Cleveland. Realizing that all the norms from Los Angeles don't apply anymore, they decide to celebrate a city that values real women and stay where they're still considered hot.

Creator:

Stars:
, ,

A partial article from The Backlot

[Source]



A Very Gay “Hot in Cleveland” with Michael Urie and an Emotional “Furturama” Reunion

by Lyle Masaki | August 14, 2013

Hot in Cleveland (TV Land) 10:00 PM ET
If Robert Gant made this a good night for gay comedy, things get even gayer with both Michael Urie and Parvesh Cheena. Joy weaves a web of deception in order to get Cleveland’s hottest pediatrician to treat Wilbur. It leaves her presenting a local chef’s (Cheena) cooking as her own and agreeing to date the pediatrician’s son (ShamelessPej Vahdat). Meanwhile, Victoria‘s wedding planner (Urie) has decided the dinner is a great opportunity to plan an Indian wedding.

Thursday, 8 August 2013

Russia's Anti-Gay Law, Spelled Out in Plain English

[Source]

Russia's Anti-Gay Law, Spelled Out in Plain English

Russia's Anti-Gay Law, Spelled Out in Plain English

On June 30 this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed into law a bill banning the "propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations to minors," thus opening a new, dark chapter in the history of gay rights in Russia. The law caps a period of ferocious activities by the Russian government aimed at limiting the rights of the country’s lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and intersex people.

The violations of fundamental, constitutionally protected rights of Russia’s gay citizens have included multiple bans on gay pride parades in Moscow and other cities, hefty fines to gay rights groups accused of acting as a “foreign agent,” denial of registration to nongovernmental organizations, and regional laws banning the propaganda of homosexuality to minors, which served as a basis for the federal law enacted by Mr. Putin and unanimously passed by the State Duma. Against this backdrop, violent attacks on gays or “suspect gays” are becoming commonplace.

The state-sponsored initiatives relied on ludicrous assumptions. For example, the regional bans on propaganda of homosexuality equated same-sex relations with pedophilia even though the former has been legal since 1993 and the latter is, of course, a serious crime. The court decision denying registration to Sochi Pride House states that “propaganda of nontraditional sexual orientation” is a direct threat to Russian society, while calling attempts to confront homophobia “extremist” because they inherently “incite social and religious hatred.” Essentially, the court ruled that gays incite hatred toward themselves and should be “protected” from doing so. The court went on to argue that such extremist activities present a threat to “Russia’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.” The Russian government uses these flawed arguments when it defends its discriminatory ways to an international audience. Russian diplomats are fond of saying that discrimination does not exist in Russia because the country’s constitution forbids it. Some logic!

Russia’s courts and diplomats — and President Putin — cannot be trusted to explain the status of gay rights in the country, but the European Court of Human Rights can. In April 2011, the Strasbourg court fined Russia for violating articles 11, 13, and 14 of the European Convention by banning 164 pride events and marches between 2006 and 2008. The unanimous decision in Alekseyev v. Russia came into force after the Russian government lost its appeal in Strasbourg, yet although the Kremlin paid the fine, they continued to ban pride rallies. In May 2012, a district court in Moscow issued a ruling banning such events in the city until May 2112. That’s Russia’s approach: pay the fine, admit nothing, and make things worse.

The cornerstone of Mr. Putin’s “War on Gays,” however, is the vaguely defined and definitively antigay Article 6.21 of the Code of the Russian Federation on Administrative Offenses, which allows the government to fine individuals accused of the propaganda of nontraditional sexual relations amongst minors. The federal ban “builds on the success” of regional laws on “propaganda of homosexualism to minors,” passed in 10 regions since 2006. We have yet to see an example of the federal law in action, though we came pretty close when four Dutch citizens were briefly detained in the northern city of Murmansk in July. Regional laws were used several times to fine gay rights activists.

Here is what Article 6.21 actually says:

Propaganda is the act of distributing information among minors that 1) is aimed at the creating nontraditional sexual attitudes, 2) makes nontraditional sexual relations attractive, 3) equates the social value of traditional and nontraditional sexual relations, or 4) creates an interest in nontraditional sexual relations.

If you’re Russian. Individuals engaging in such propaganda can be fined 4,000 to 5,000 rubles (120-150 USD), public officials are subject to fines of 40,000 to 50,000 rubles (1,200-1,500 USD), and registered organizations can be either fined (800,000-1,000,000 rubles or 24,000-30,000 USD) or sanctioned to stop operations for 90 days. If you engage in the said propaganda in the media or on the internet, the sliding scale of fines shifts: for individuals, 50,000 to 100,000 rubles; for public officials, 100,000 to 200,000 rubles, and for organizations, from one million rubles or a 90-day suspension.

If you’re an alien. Foreign citizens or stateless persons engaging in propaganda are subject to a fine of 4,000 to 5,000 rubles, or they can be deported from the Russian Federation and/or serve 15 days in jail. If a foreigner uses the media or the internet to engage in propaganda, the fines increase to 50,000-100,000 rubles or a 15-day detention with subsequent deportation from Russia.

Huh? What?

The law passed by the Duma is so ambiguous for a reason. Without a legal definition of ‘propaganda’ or ‘nontraditional sexual relations’ — key operative words in Article 6.21 — we are not getting a clear picture of how the authorities will use it. Ironically, the best arguments against the adoption of this the antigay legislation come from none other than the Russian government. In 2004 and 2006, the government resisted attempts to introduce similarly ambiguous federal bans on “the propaganda of homosexuality.”

On February 20, 2006, then-Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Zhukov (currently serving as a Deputy Speaker of the State Duma and the President of Russia's Olympic Committee), submitted an official recall to a tabled antigay bill, arguing that the legislation contradicted Russia's criminal code that doesn’t allow to criminalize the propaganda of noncriminal behavior, contains “a row of mistakes and judicial-technical inexactitudes,” and relies on definitions that do not allow to clearly formulate corpus delicti. The May 20, 2004, rebuttal from Mr. Zhukov was even more forthcoming, pointing out that the bill “contradicts article 29 of the Russian Constitution, as well as articles 8, 10, and 14 of the European Convention on human rights.”

I couldn’t put it better than Zhukov. Unfortunately, his resistance to the anti-gay bills of 2004 & 2006 came at a time when the Kremlin cared about Russia’s international reputation. Now it appears to care only about nontraditional sex.