Zachary Quinto, ‘Glee’ actor Jonathan Groff split: report
The couple have reportedly pulled the plug on their relationship due to distance and conflicting work schedules.
By Rachel Maresca / NEW YORK DAILY NEWS
Thursday, July 18, 2013, 2:24 PM
Jason Webber / Splash News/Jason Webber / Splash News
During happier times, Zachary Quinto and boyfriend Jonathan Groff seen out and about in the West Village.
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Distance has apparently stood in the way for Hollywood couple Zachary Quinto and boyfriend Jonathan Groff.
According to an Us Weekly report, "Star Trek" lead Quinto and "Glee” actor Groff have called it quits due to their busy acting schedules.
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"Zach being away and filming was not easy on them," a source explained to the mag.
"Now he's going to be in New York with his new Broadway play 'The Glass Menagerie.' They really loved each other, so it wasn't an easy split."
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The couple's break up has reportedly been an amicable one but the relationship "just ran its course," the source added.
"Zach has been out and about and he seems fine."
Bunny, PacificCoastNews.com/Bunny, PacificCoastNews.com
Zachary Quinto and boyfriend Jonathan Groff have reportedly called it quits, Groff confirmed his relationship with Quinto in September 2012.
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As Quinto, 36, gears up for the stage, Groff is currently consoling his close friend Lea Michele, his costar from the play "Spring Awakening" and "Glee," in wake of her boyfriend Cory Monteith's sudden death.
"He flew to be with her as soon as he heard," a pal told Us.
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"His heart is broken for her — and he loved Cory too. The three of them would hang out together."
Groff, 28, and Quinto's relationship was first confirmed in September 2012 just a month shy of a year after Quinto officially came out as a gay man during an interview in October 2011.
"I'm incredibly happy, I'm incredibly lucky," Quinto told Out Magazine of their relationship at the time.
"I found myself in a pattern of being attracted to people who were somehow unavailable, and what I realized was that I was protecting myself because I equated the idea of connection and love with trauma and death."
"I had to do a lot of work on the couch to really get to a place where I was able to show up to a relationship with someone who was actually capable of being in one — and that took a lot of trial and error," he added.
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