Showing posts with label coming out. Show all posts
Showing posts with label coming out. Show all posts

Sunday, 13 July 2014

Ian Thorpe comes out - Mail Online

[Source]
'Part of me didn't know if Australia wanted its champion to be gay. But I'm telling the world that I am': Ian Thorpe reveals why he kept his sexuality a secret for years... and only started telling people two weeks ago
  • Swimming legend says he only came out to family and friends over the last few weeks
  • Australian television interview with Sir Michael Parkinson was aired on Sunday night
  • Thorpe also spoke about his battle with depression, his struggle with fame and his future
  • The 31-year-old retired from professional swimming in 2012
By Penelope Kilby and Sally Lee

Published: 12:49 GMT, 12 July 2014 | Updated: 12:40 GMT, 13 July 2014

Australian Olympic swimming legend Ian Thorpe has finally put an end to years of speculation about his sexual orientation.
The 31-year-old revealed that he 'is a gay man' during his compelling interview with Sir Michael Parkinson on Sunday night.
Thorpe touched on his battle with depression which reached a point where he considered suicide, his struggle with fame, his ambitions and what he hopes the future may hold for him.
But it was Parkinson's highly-anticipated question that kept viewers waiting.
'You've always said that you're not gay. Is all of that true?' Parkinson asked.
Scroll down for video
'Are you gay?' No question was off-limits for British journalist Michael Parkinson when he sat down with former Olympic swimmer Ian Thorpe for an interview that will air next week
No holds barred! The tell-all interview will air on July 13 on Network Ten



Superhuman! Known as the the Thorpedo during his stellar career, Thorpe smashed 22 world records and along the way won five gold, three silver and one bronze Olympic medals

SEXUALITY
'I've thought about this for a long time,' Thorpe said.

'I'm not straight. And this is only something that very recently - in the past two weeks - I've been comfortable telling the closest people around me exactly that.'

The champion swimmer, who was first asked about his sexuality at the age of 16, acknowledged he had hid behind a 'convenient lie'.

'I didn't know at the stage, I was too young,' he said.

'I didn't accept it in myself. I didn't want to be gay. I was still gay at the end of the day.

'Yes, I lied about it. I'm comfortable saying I'm a gay man.'

But it was the fear of letting down or hurting his loved ones - and his nation - that held him back from revealing the truth.

'My close friends are going to be accused of being my lover,' he said.

'It's happened before. It happened in 2009. My housemate who lived with me - I was on a vacation in Brazil, there was a photo, instantly people said: 'this is my lover'. He was my housemate, one of my best friends, and he was drawn into this. And I loathed that because I tried to protect everyone from it.

'Part of me didn't know if Australia wanted its champion to be gay. But I'm telling the world that I am.'

Since coming out, Thorpe wishes he had done so earlier.

'My parents told me that they love me and that they support me,' he said.

'I'm a little bit ashamed that I didn't come out earlier. That I didn't have the strength to do it, that I didn't have the courage to break that lie. I don't want that struggle to be so hard for other people.'


Big news: The Australian swimmer arrives at a press conference to announce his retirement from professional swimming at the Sofitel Sydney Wentworth hotel on November 21, 2006
Pensive: Thorpe, a five-time Olympic gold-medallist, announced he would discontinue his professional swimming career to concentrate on new challenges

DEPRESSION AND FAME

Thorpe, who retired from professional swimming in 2012, had accomplished his dreams by the time he reached 17.

Known as the Thorpedo during his stellar career, the athlete smashed 22 world records and along the way won five gold, three silver and one bronze Olympic medals.

He has also won 11 World titles and 11 (10 gold, one silver) Commonwealth Games medals.

'I struggled with the success of what I did,' he said.

'I just wanted to swim. And when that wasn't taken away from me, when I wasn't able to have the peace that I needed at training - when that was interrupted by photographers - it felt as though it was being taken away and that my career was not my own, it was other people's.

'I felt that I needed to get my life back. And I thought that the way I could do it was to stop swimming. It's unfortunate that I did it, and I know why I did it. Now I wish that I hadn't but it's what I needed to do.'

Yet this wasn't enough to help him with his crippling depression, which had grown up with from a very young age.

The severity of the it hit Thorpe at the age of 19, which is when he began taking anti-depressants and also turned to alcohol.

'I knew I needed something that was a safety net for me,' he said.

'When I looked at anti-depressants that aren't working, I'll have a drink and I feel better, then it becomes cyclical. You start to drink and you start to self-medicated.

'I thought it was unfair that I was doing the right thing: I was taking my anti-depressants and I was still feeling miserable.'

The then teenage Thorpe was afraid to show the world his inner turmoil.

'I didn't want to share my problems with people,' he said.

'I didn't want anyone else to know I'm unhappy. Because I'm living what is a dream life for an Australian. I'm a tremendously successful athlete - I should be having the time of my life and I'm not. So I kept it to myself.'

He even went as far as contemplating suicide but it was his family and friends who held him back.

'I couldn't do it to them. I think that's the only thing that stopped me,' Thorpe said.






Thorpe celebrates his victory on the podium during the medal ceremony for the men's swimming 200 metre freestyle event at the Athens 2004 Summer Olympic Games

LIFE AFTER SWIMMING

While Thorpe may consider swimming instructing in the near future, he also wants to continue his fight for the injustice Indigenous people face in Australia.

He spoke about his charity that has helped Indigenous people, focusing on employment and education.

'I see too often the stereotyping of Indigenous people that is not accurate,' he said.

'I think it is time that we actually recognise that we have this tremendous culture on our doorstep and it's time to embrace it and it's time to recognise the Indigenous people for their contribution to the nation.'

Thorpe's passion for television may also steer him in the direction of interviewing athletes during major sporting events. And he's already signed a deal to be part of Network Ten's Commonwealth Games commentary team this month.

The swimming legend also shared his hopes to settle down with a long-term partner.

'I love kids and I'd love to have a family,' he said.

Overall, Thorpe is looking forward to getting on with his life.

'This is very new for me,' he said.

'Telling my parents and close people, they reflected, they said it's like I'm a happier person, a person that know and that they remember.

'My parents have wanted more than anything else to have their son back.'

Ian Thorpe thanks those who supported him
Fellow Olympic great Stephanie Rice, who retired on 9 April 2014, said she hopes everyone 'respects' Thorpe's choices

Swimming superstar Rice was previously dumped by sponsor Jaguar after writing a homophobic slur on Twitter

Thorpe has been inundated with support from fans and celebrities since the revelation was first reported in The Sunday Telegraph on Saturday.

This sent Twitter into a frenzy and prompted Thorpe to write: 'To Everyone who has sent messages of support I sincerely Thank you.'

Such tweets included one from fellow Olympic swimming great Stephanie Rice who called him a 'superstar'.

Writing on Twitter, Rice said: 'I'm sure it must have been incredibly hard for @IanThorpe to come out, but I hope this bring him peace and that everyone respects his choice.

'Thorpie is and will always be a superstar in my eyes!' she wrote.

The 26-year-old was previously dumped by her sponsor Jaguar after she made a homophobic comment on Twitter, relating to a Rugby Union match in which the Australian Wallabies defeated the South African Springboks.

'Ian Thorpe we're proud of YOU Regardless of sexuality, achievements, medals or anything else... You're an Aussie who we'll love & stand by,' radio show 2dayFM breakfast said.

Former preacher turned gay rights advocate Anthony Venn-Brown tweeted: 'Life's much brighter on this side of the closet @IanThorpe. Welcome to being you.'

Add captionSupportive: Twitter was sent into a frenzy following Thorpe's news

Words of encouragement were also tweeted for Ian Thorpe

Thorpe vows to continue his fight for the injustice Indigenous people face in Australia

The Black Dog Institute showed their support on Twitter
Ian Thorpe's interview prompted Australian gay and lesbian lifestyle website SameSame.com.au to share their views

British Australian actress Magda Szubanski wrote: 'So happy and proud for @IanThorpe Coming Out in his own time on his own terms. Wish you all things good darling boy. It's fun & free Out here!'

Speaking on the Today show on Sunday morning, Szubanski added: 'After I came out then I freaked out about it and thought "what had I done" but everyone was fine.'

'I'm very pleased he can be whatever he wants to be, when he wants to be proudly... We live in a homophobic society so the reluctance of gay people is completely understandable,' she said.

She called for Australia to 'examine our attitudes and change them'.

Australian novelist Dominic Knight said: 'I hope Ian Thorpe's decision to come out allows him to find a little more peace in life. He has always been an inspiration.'

More to come: In the 25 second promo clip, Parkinson said to Thorpe: 'You've always said that you're not gay... is all of that true?'

Australian radio stars Fitzy and Wippa sent a message of support on Sunday morning

British Australian actress Magda Szubanski said she is proud of Thorpe for 'coming Out in his own time'

Magda Szubanski called for Australia to 'examine our attitudes and change them' while speaking on the Today Show


Meanwhile, Peter FitzSimons wrote in his Sydney Morning Herald column: 'With homophobia still such an omnipresent force in Australian life, the fact that our most admired modern sportsperson declares himself gay, is significant, and yet one more forearm jolt to the Hydra head of the beast known as bigotry.'

Radio stars Fitzy and Wippa said they hoped Thorpe was happier now.

'Ian Thorpe, you're a legend. Your bravery has been shown in and out of the pool. We hope you're happier now mate. Proud of you,' they wrote on Twitter.

And journalist Julia Baird said: 'We're all behind you, @IanThorpe. xx'

'Big love to @IanThorpe!' tweeted Gay Times magazine.

Australian journalist Julia Baird said: 'We're all behind you'
Australian novelist Dominic Knight said he hopes Thorpe will 'find a little more peace in life'


Teen star Troye Sivan wrote: '@IanThorpe you've made a gigantic leap for the LGBT community, the sporting community, and for Australia today. #OnYaThorpie :)

And comedian Charlie Pickering said: 'So Ian Thorpe is our most successful gay swimmer. Or as I like to say our most successful swimmer.'

In his 2012 autobiography This Is Me, Australia's most decorated Olympian said that he found the accusations about his sexuality hurtful and judging of his integrity.

In an extract, he explained: 'That’s the only part I find hurtful, that this is something I would be embarrassed about and that I would hide.'

False claim: In 2009 it was reported that Thorpe's management issued a statement regarding comments in a 2007 magazine article discussing a heterosexual relationship with Olympic swimmer Amanda Beard

Teen star Troye Sivan said Thorpe has 'made a gigantic leap for Australia'

'For the record, I am not gay and all my sexual experiences have been straight,' he added.

'I'm attracted to women, I love children and aspire to have a family one day.

'I know what it's like to grow up and be told what your sexuality is, then realising that it's not the full reality. I was accused of being gay before I knew who I was.'

This followed years of public denials including a statement issued in 2009 by his management company: 'In the past, on several separate occasions, I have answered questions about my sexuality openly and honestly with the media ... my situation in this regard has not changed,' he said.

Then in July 2011 he told the The Sunday Times : 'I don't think anybody has a right to write about [my private life], but I don't care enough about it to be bothered. If you try and fight it, you're damned; if you don't, you're damned. If you get married, it's a sham.'

The startling admission is just taste of what viewers can expect from the no-holds barred interview.

Sit down chat: 'His fight against depression offers a unique insight into the darker side of celebrity and success,' Michael said
No holds barred: Ian looked pained as Parkinson quizzed him on his sexuality
In 2009, news.com.au reported that Thorpe's management issued a statement regarding comments in a 2007 magazine article discussing a heterosexual relationship with Olympic swimmer Amanda Beard.

'Well, I did have a long-term, long-distance relationship (with Beard), and it was great while it lasted. It was sort of public knowledge we were seeing each other, and yet not. It went on for ages, years,' he was quoted as saying.

Beard's agent quashed the statement: 'Take out the word relationship and put in the word friendship and that's exactly what it was.'

Thorpe has just overcome a physical and mental battle following complications arising from shoulder surgery that almost cost him his arm.

Parkinson said Thorpe's decision that no question was off limits was brave and says he examined the good times and the bad of the Australian swimming legend.

'His fight against depression offers a unique insight into the darker side of celebrity and success,' Parkinson said in a statement released by Ten.

'What fascinates me most about Ian is that apart from the very beginning of his career, he never seemed to enjoy and celebrate his success.

'I think his sexuality is no one's business but his own. But I think it is one of the best interviews I have ever done.

'Ian Thorpe has always been near the top of my list to interview.

'Not many athletes can claim to be the best of all time. Ian can.'



Parkinson is renowned for not being afraid to ask the tough and sometimes uncomfortable questions.

Some of the British journalist's most memorable moments includes the time that boxer Muhammad Ali squared up to him for calling him Cassius Clay instead of by his Muslim name, and when former Spice Girl Victoria Beckham let slip her nickname for husband David was Golden Balls.

Former British Primer Minister Tony Blair also spoke about the time that his father-in-law had asked permission to smoke cannabis in front of him, while his chat with Hollywood A-lister Meg Ryan made for uncomfortable viewing when she appeared moody and unresponsive and asked for the interview to be wrapped up.

Thorpe first retired in November, 2006, aged 24, and then made an ill-fated comeback in 2011 when he failed to make the Australian team for the 2012 London Games.

Ian Thorpe: The Parkinson Interview aired on Sunday, July 13, at 6.30pm.

Thorpe's agent and Network Ten have been contacted by Daily Mail Australia for comment.

IAN THORPE'S INTERVIEW WITH MICHAEL PARKINSON
On his sexuality:
I was 16 (when I was first asked about it). I've thought about this for a long time. I'm not straight. And this is only something that very recently - in the past two weeks - I've been comfortable telling the closest people around me exactly that. I don't want young people to feel the same way I did. I've wanted to for some time. I couldn't, I didn't feel as though I could. The problem was I was asked at such a young age about my sexuality. I went to an all-boys school... so if you're accused of being gay then the first answer is no and you get ready for a fight. I didn't know at the stage, I was too young. I carried this. I thought that the lie had become so big that I didn't want people to question my integrity. A little bit of ego comes into this. I didn't want people to question whether I'd lied about everything. Yes, I lied about it. I'm comfortable saying I'm a gay man. My parents told me that they love me and that they support me. Part of me didn't know if Australia wanted its champion to be gay. But I'm telling the world that I am.

On suicide:
I couldn't deal with leaving friends and family. I couldn't do it to them. I think that's the only thing that stopped me.

On depression and medication:
It keeps you in a safe area. I knew that I needed to have something that was a safety net for me. When I looked at anti-depressants that aren't working, I'll have a drink and I feel better, then it becomes cyclical. You start to drink and you start to self-medicated. I thought it was unfair that I was doing the right thing: I was taking my anti-depressants and I was still feeling miserable. It was something that I was doing privately. I didn't want to share my problems with people. I didn't want anyone else to know I'm unhappy. Because I'm living what is a dream life for an Australian. I'm a tremendously successful athlete - I should be having the time of my life and I'm not. So I kept it to myself.

On fame:
I struggled with the success of what I did. I just wanted to swim. And when that wasn't taken away from me, when I wasn't able to have the peace that I needed at training - when that was interrupted by photographers - it felt as thought it was being taken away and that my career was not my own, it was other people's. I felt that I needed to get my life back. And I thought that the way I could do it was to stop swimming. It's unfortunate that I did it, and I know why I did it. Now I wish that I hadn't but it's what I needed to do.

A good get! 'Ian has always been near the top of my list to interview,' Parkinson said



New role: Thorpe will be part of Network Ten's Commonwealth Games commentary team this month

Straight talker: Parkinson, pictured with his wife Mary, is renowned for not being afraid to ask the tough and sometimes uncomfortable questions

QUESTION MARKS OVER THORPE'S SEXUALITY
In his 2012 autobiography This Is Me, Australia's most decorated Olympian said that he found the accusations about his sexuality hurtful and and judging of his integrity. In an extract, he explained: 'That’s the only part I find hurtful, that this is something I would be embarrassed about and that I would hide.'

This followed years of public denials including a statement issued in 2009 by his management company: 'In the past, on several separate occasions, I have answered questions about my sexuality openly and honestly with the media ... my situation in this regard has not changed,' he said.

Then in July 2011 he told the The Sunday Times newspaper: 'I don't think anybody has a right to write about (my private life), but I don't care enough about it to be bothered. If you try and fight it, you're damned; if you don't, you're damned. If you get married, it's a shame.'
Australia's gold-medalist diver Matthew Mitcham publicly came out as gay in 2008

American footballer Michael Sam (left) and British diver Tom Daley (right) have both come out publicly
AUSTRALIAN GAY AND LESBIAN ATHELETES
Snowboarder Belle Brockhoff
Beach volley-baller Natalie Cook
Swimmer Bobby Goldsmith
Diver Mathew Helm
Field hockey player Gus Johnston
Swimmer Daniel Kowalski
Diver Matthew Mitcham
Rugby league player Ian Roberts
Tennis player Rennae Stubbs
Gymnast Ji Wallace
Footballer Sarah Walsh
INTERNATIONAL GAY AND LESBIAN ATHELETES
English basketballer John Amaechi
American basketballer Jason Collins
Puerto-Rican boxer Orlando Cruz
English diver Tom Daley
American basketballer Derrick Gordon
American basketballer Brittney Griner
American tennis play Billy Jean King
American soccer player Megan Rapinoe
American soccer player Robbie Rogers
American footballer Michael Sam
Welsh rugby player Gareth Thomas


theguardian - Ian Thorpe comes out

[Source]

Ian Thorpe comes out as gay in Parkinson interview

The Australian swimming champion tells a private tale of depression, alcohol problems and drug abuse

Nadia Khomami
The Observer, Sunday 13 July 2014

Ian Thorpe in 2012. At aged 14, he became the youngest ever male to represent
Australia. Photograph: Tom Jenkins/Getty Images
After years of denial, swimming champion Ian Thorpe has revealed he is gay in an exclusive interview with Sir Michael Parkinson. The five-time Olympic gold medallist and Australia's most successful Olympic athlete to date, has revealed his sexuality in an interview to be aired on Australia's Network Ten on Sunday night.

Thorpe, known as the "Thorpedo" for his prowess in the swimming pool, broke 22 world records and won five Olympic gold medals. At the 2000 Sydney Olympics, he won three gold and two silver medals, making him the most successful athlete at the Games. He also won 10 gold medals at the Commonwealth Games.

"I've thought about this for a long time. I'm not straight," said the 31-year-old. "And this is only something that very recently, we're talking the past two weeks, I've been comfortable telling the closest people around me, exactly that. I've wanted to [come out] for some time but I couldn't, I didn't feel as though I could. What happened was I felt the lie had become so big that I didn't want people to question my integrity."

The interview, which Parkinson has described as one of the best he has conducted, also details the swimmer's battle with depression, drugs and alcohol, which caused him to check into a rehabilitation unit earlier this year.

The revelations are dramatic particularly because Thorpe has always vehemently denied rumours of his homosexuality. In his own autobiography This Is Me, published in 2012, the swimmer said that he found questions about his sexuality hurtful, writing: "For the record, I am not gay and all my sexual experiences have been straight. I'm attracted to women, I love children and aspire to have a family one day … I know what it's like to grow up and be told what your sexuality is, then realising that it's not the full reality. I was accused of being gay before I knew who I was.''

This came after years of public denials, including a statement issued in 2009 by his management company: "In the past, on several separate occasions, I have answered questions about my sexuality openly and honestly with the media … my situation in this regard has not changed," he said. And in July 2011 he told the Sunday Times: "I don't think anybody has a right to write about [my private life], but I don't care enough about it to be bothered. If you try and fight it, you're damned; if you don't, you're damned. If you get married, it's a sham."

Parkinson said Thorpe's decision that no question was off limits was brave and says he examines the good times and the bad of the Australian swimming legend.

In his autobiography published in 2012, Thorpe said 'for the record, I am not gay'.
Photograph: Bernd Thissen/EPA
"His fight against depression offers a unique insight into the darker side of celebrity and success," Parkinson said in a statement released by Network Ten.

"Ian Thorpe has always been near the top of my list to interview. The reasons are obvious. Not many athletes can claim to be the best of all time. Ian can.

"What fascinates me most about Ian is that, apart from the very beginning of his career, he never seemed to enjoy and celebrate his success … The story of a boy who was a teenage world champion, conquered the world and then seemed to give it all away is a fascinating and intriguing one."

Aged 14, Thorpe became the youngest male to represent Australia. His victory in the 400m freestyle at the 1998 Perth World Championships made him the youngest individual male world champion. After that, Thorpe became master of the 400m freestyle, winning the event at every Olympic, World, Commonwealth and Pan Pacific Swimming Championships until his break after the 2004 Olympics.

He originally retired from swimming in 2006, aged 24, due to waning motivation. He attempted a comeback in 2011 and 2012, but failed to qualify for the London Olympics. It was subsequently announced that he was targeting qualification for the 2013 World Championships in Barcelona and later the 2014 Commonwealth Games in Glasgow but was forced to abandon his plans due to a shoulder injury that almost cost him his arm.

He has, however, enjoyed success as a sports commentator and worked for the BBC during the London Olympics. He will also be part of Network Ten's Commonwealth Games commentary team this month.

The revelation sparked a frenzy on social media, with many coming out in support of the swimmer. "Ian Thorpe we're proud of YOU Regardless of sexuality, achievements, medals or anything else … You're an Aussie who we'll love & stand by," @2dayFMbreakfast wrote on Twitter. "Big love to @IanThorpe!" tweeted @GayTimesMag.

"'I can only hope Thorpe's revelations help millions of teens struggling inside themselves to find the courage to be them. Snaps for Thorpie," wrote Lady Catherine @KadyLio, while Anthony Venn-Brown @gayambassador tweeted: "Life's much brighter on this side of the closet @IanThorpe. Welcome to being you."

Wednesday, 28 May 2014

In the Lonely Hour - Sam Smith comes out

[Source]

Sam Smith Officially Comes Out, Wants “A Guy Who Can Love Me The Way I Love Him”

Photo by Leonie Hampton, courtesy The Fader
British singer Sam Smith is officially addressing his sexuality in a new interview with The Fader. Last week, his implied gayness became a topic of discussion when his latest video “Leave Your Lover” showed him romantically involved with another man.

In the Lonely Hour is about a guy that I fell in love with last year,” he tells The Fader, “and he didn’t love me back. I think I’m over it now, but I was in a very dark place. I kept feeling lonely in the fact that I hadn’t felt love before.”
He continues:

I told him about it recently, and obviously it was never going to go the way I wanted it to go, because he doesn’t love me. But it was good as a form of closure, to get it off my chest and tell him. I feel better for it. I feel almost like I signed off this part of my life where I keep giving myself to guys who are never going to love me back. It feels good to have interviews like this, to chat about it and put stuff to bed. It’s all there now, and I can move on and hopefully find a guy who can love me the way I love him.

Smith was assumed to be gay for years after revealing himself as a future pop “diva,” aspiring to become like his idols George Michael and Elton John. He also had a personal Twitter account several years ago, on which he was extremely open about being gay.
He tells The Fader:

I am comfortable with myself, and my life is amazing in that respect. I’m very comfortable and happy with everything. I just wanted to talk about him and have it out there. It’s about a guy and that’s what I wanted people to know?I want to be clear that that’s what it’s about. I’ve been treated as normal as anyone in my life; I’ve had no issues. I do know that some people have issues in life, but I haven’t, and it’s as normal as my right arm. I want to make it a normality because this is a non-issue. People wouldn’t ask a straight person these questions. I’ve tried to be clever with this album, because it’s also important to me that my music reaches everybody. I’ve made my music so that it could be about anything and everybody? whether it’s a guy, a female or a goat?and everybody can relate to that. I’m not in this industry to talk about my personal life unless it’s in a musical form.

On fans being “curious” about his sexuality:

In the short time I’ve lived on this Earth, all I’ve seen are boxes. People put things in boxes; it makes it easier to digest information. People say I’m the new Adele. Why is [gender] a talking point? I’m singing, I’m making music, I’m performing my music?that’s what should be the talking point. If I come on record and start speaking about it in an interview, then mark my words, that’s your time to chip in; I’ve given you the passcode to my business and to my personal life. But I am an artist, and in interviews, speaking like this, it’s not my idea of art; it’s just my idea of exchange, talking human to human. It shouldn’t be an issue, but it will be an issue. It’s always an issue.

Check out the rest of The Fader’s interview here, along with more stunning exclusive photos.



By: Matthew Tharrett
On: May 28, 2014

Monday, 5 May 2014

Van Hansis Comes Out

[Source]

Van Hansis Comes Out

by snicks | May 5, 2014


We first fell in love with Van Hansis during his stint as the groundbreaking Luke Snyder on As The World Turns, and Luke’s relationship with dimbulb explosives expert Noah, and lovably crusty trainwreck Reid. Van garnered three Emmy nominations for the role, and he helped open the floodgates for gay characters on daytime drama.

Van moved to TV roles and a few indie films after ATWT, but came roaring back into our lives when he co-starred in the web series phenom Eastsiders, as Thom, one half of a troubled couple. Eastsiders will be back for Season Two, and the show’s creator (and Thom’s partner on the show), Kit Williamson sat down with Van to discuss the show and his career.

It’s a great interview, as Van talks about the impact that Luke had on Daytime TV, and the differences and similarities between Luke and Thom, and then this happens:
You were out in your personal life, but you didn’t speak out about your sexual orientation at the start of your career. What was your hesitation?
I guess it was a combination of a lot of things—It was my first job, it was a different time back then in regards to LGBT stories being told—I mean, the Luke story was groundbreaking at the time. Now, I think every remaining soap has a gay storyline. I was completely green, fresh out of college, and honestly, I was scared.
To my knowledge, this is the first time that Van has publicly acknowledged that he’s gay. It’s been fairly well known, and he has come close before, but this is the most definitive statement we’ve seen.

So congratulations Van, and keep breaking that new ground!

Tuesday, 25 March 2014

Advocate.com - Tyler Glenn comes out

[Source]

Tyler Glenn, Frontman of Neon Trees, Urges Fans: 'Come Out as You'

The 30-year-old gay singer revealed conflicts with his Mormon faith and how he was inspired by NFL hopeful Michael Sam.

March 24 2014 4:09 PM ET               UPDATED: March 25 2014 3:10 PM ET

The lead singer of Neon Trees has come out as gay, and he's urging his fans to strive for an honest life as well.

After first revealing his sexual orientation in a Rolling Stone interview, musician Tyler Glenn posted a long note on the Neon Trees Facebook page late Monday night thanking his fans old and new for "so much compassion and love." He then urged them to "come out as you."

"I guess the last thing I want to say tonight and for now is if you're like me, a wanderer, a questioner, a soul searcher, a dreamer, or misunderstood for any reason at all: Come out," Glenn concluded. "Come out as a wanderer. Come out as a questioner. One day it wont matter. But it still does. Come out as YOU. That’s all I really can say. That’s what i’d say to me at 21, the scared return mormon missionary who knew this part of himself but loved God too. You can do both. Don’t let anyone tell you you can’t."

Read the full note on the Neon Trees Facebook page.

In an interview to be released Friday in the upcoming print issue of Rolling Stone, Glenn, 30, revealed his sexual orientation and the conflicted emotions he had toward his Mormon faith, which resulted in years of repression.

"I had my crushes on guys throughout high school, but it was never an overwhelming thing until my 20s," the frontman revealed. "Then I'd be dating girls and in love with my straight friend and it was the worst feeling in the world."

"We were always taught, and I hate this word, 'tolerance,'" he said in reference to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saint’s opposition to same-sex love both morally and politically. "The only time that felt different was when the Prop. 8 thing came up.”

Glenn began coming out privately to family and friends in October 2013 while writing music for the upcoming Neon Trees album Pop Psychology, which includes lyrics that speak about his experiences as a closeted gay man. He says his coming out was partly inspired by athletes like NFL hopeful Michael Sam, who recently came forward about his sexual orientation.

"I really love all of the sports figures that are coming out recently," he said. "I appreciated Michael Sam was like, 'I want to be able to go to the movies and hold hands with my boyfriend.' Even hearing him say 'boyfriend,' I was just like, 'that's cool.'"

Neon Trees - Facebook

[Source]

I don’t think I’m special for being a gay man. That’s not why I came out. I didn't come out so all of you could say “i knew it” based on the clothes I wear or the way I dance. I never even thought I’d have to come out.

I’d be the 50 yr old living with dogs hiding my relationships living on a beach somewhere. Maybe then i’d be comfortable with it. But it was last summer, writing songs for the new album, being so fed up with “hiding” and being so ready to be “free” that I poured my heart out into music more than I’d ever had before. Music indeed was my first love. Not a boy. It was music that I had always had a torrid love affair with. I felt I owed him, the music, or her, the song. I had to be honest with that relationship.

It was the moment I let myself write about the years spent in falling for my straight friend or the song I let myself write about thinking it was ok to be alone forever because it was better than explaining myself. It was those truths that came out before I decided to. You can’t hide away forever. I don't think i was even trying. But music never let me lie. Something always would come out in the songs.

So now you know what you may have always assumed. Good for you. How does it feel? Do you want a “gaydar” award? Do you want to be pat on the back because you can “spot them”?

It is not news. It is not meant to be salacious. Until you know what it’s like to hide, to keep away true happiness out of fear. That’s when you truly understand what it’s like. It’s not about coming out to wave a flag in another’s face. At least it’s not for me. For me its about finding the purist of peace. The absolute settling of my soul. The clearest vision of the road I want to take.

I’m 30. I don’t want to die anymore. I want to really live. Honestly, and fully. What an amazing place to be. For me it was a place I never cared about. Now all I want is to be honest.

That’s what this whole “coming out” thing is for me. It’s been quite a real and beautiful day to have so much compassion and love coming from strangers, fans that have been there since the beginning, new fans, family, friends. For someone like me, the eternal self deprecator, i just want to say thank you.
I guess the last thing I want to say tonight and for now is if you're like me, a wanderer, a questioner, a soul searcher, a dreamer, or misunderstood for any reason at all: Come out.

Come out as a wanderer. Come out as a questioner. One day it wont matter. But it still does. Come out as YOU. That’s all I really can say. That’s what i’d say to me at 21, the scared return mormon missionary who knew this part of himself but loved God too. You can do both. Don’t let anyone tell you you can’t.

All my love and hope, and for now, back to the music.

XO Your friend, Tyler.

Monday, 24 March 2014

CNN - Neon Trees singer comes out as gay

[Source]

Neon Trees singer comes out as gay

By Caryn Ganz, Rolling Stone
March 24, 2014 -- Updated 2203 GMT (0603 HKT)


(RS.com) -- Tyler Glenn — lead singer for Provo, Utah New Wave-pop quartet Neon Trees and a Mormon his entire life — reveals he is gay in the new issue of Rolling Stone (on stands Friday, March 28).

"I've always felt like I'm an open book, and yet obviously I haven't been completely," he tells the magazin Caryn Ganz.

But he is now: Glenn speaks candidly about his first gay experiences, his band's reaction to his coming out and his complicated relationship with his conservative religion.
Artist of the Week: Neon Trees

Glenn says he's known he was gay since he was a young child, but kept his sexuality a secret — until now. "I had my crushes on guys throughout high school, but it was never an overwhelming thing until my 20s," he admits. "Then I'd be dating girls and in love with my straight friend and it was the worst feeling in the world."

"We were always taught, and I hate this word, 'tolerance,'" he says, regarding his church's stance on homosexuality, which is notoriously fraught. "The only time that felt different was when the Prop 8 thing came up," he says, referring to when the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints spent an estimated $22 million fighting same-sex marriage in California in 2008.

Neon Trees talk about wanting to always sound like Neon Trees

Glenn started to tell close friends and family members his big news in October 2013, as he was finishing up writing songs for Neon Trees' upcoming third LP, "Pop Psychology," many of which address his years in the closet.

Today, he's inspired by the variety of men and women from all corners of pop culture who have been coming out publicly, especially athletes facing high stakes.

"I really love all of the sports figures that are coming out recently," he says. "I appreciated (that) Michael Sam was like, 'I want to be able to go to the movies and hold hands with my boyfriend.' Even hearing him say 'boyfriend,' I was just like, that's cool."

Read the full story for reaction from Glenn's Neon Trees bandmates and his mother, plus Glenn's take on straight artists acting as the gay community's spokespeople and his explanation of the events that led to his big coming out.

See the original story at RollingStone.com.

Rolling Stones Magazine - Tyler Glenn comes out

[Source]

Neon Trees' Tyler Glenn Comes Out as Gay in Rolling Stone

Mormon frontman speaks for the first time about his lifetime in the closet in our new issue

Tyler Glenn of Neon Trees performs in New York City.
Lloyd Bishop/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank
March 24, 2014 2:00 PM ET

Tyler Glenn — lead singer for Provo, Utah New Wave-pop quartet Neon Trees and a Mormon his entire life — reveals he is gay in the new issue of Rolling Stone (on stands Friday, March 28th). "I've always felt like I'm an open book, and yet obviously I haven't been completely," he tells RS' Caryn Ganz. But he is now: Glenn speaks candidly about his first gay experiences, his band's reaction to his coming out and his complicated relationship with his conservative religion in our new story.

Gay, Mormon & Finally Out: read our full Neon Trees feature

Glenn says he's known he was gay since he was a young child, but kept his sexuality a secret — until now. "I had my crushes on guys throughout high school, but it was never an overwhelming thing until my twenties," he admits. "Then I'd be dating girls and in love with my straight friend and it was the worst feeling in the world." (Read the full feature on here).

"We were always taught, and I hate this word, 'tolerance,'" he says, regarding his church's stance on homosexuality, which is notoriously fraught. "The only time that felt different was when the Prop 8 thing came up," he says, referring to when the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints spent an estimated $22 million fighting same-sex marriage in California in 2008.

Glenn started to tell close friends and family members his big news in October 2013, as he was finishing up writing songs for Neon Trees' upcoming third LP, Pop Psychology, many of which address his years in the closet. Today, he's inspired by the variety of men and women from all corners of pop culture who have been coming out publically, especially athletes facing high stakes.

The Hidden War Against Gay Teens

"I really love all of the sports figures that are coming out recently," he says. "I appreciated Michael Sam was like, 'I want to be able to go to the movies and hold hands with my boyfriend.' Even hearing him say 'boyfriend,' I was just like, that's cool."

Read the full story for reaction from Glenn's Neon Trees bandmates and his mother, plus Glenn's take on straight artists acting as the gay community's spokespeople and his explanation of the events that led to his big coming out.

Tuesday, 31 December 2013

ABC News

[Source]

WATCH: ABC News Looks Back at One Big Gay Year

By Lucas Grindley Dec. 31, 2013, 4:25 p.m.

Monday, 2 December 2013

Tom Daley Comes Out

[Source]

WATCH: Tom Daley Comes Out! Says He’s Happy And Dating A Guy



Though there has been a fair amount of speculation, and many a furtive wet dream, leading up to this moment, Olympic diving twunk (twink + hunk) Tom Daley has come out.

In a video he posted to his YouTube today, Daley admits he’s only been willing to talk about things with which he’s comfortable. Now that he’s in a serious relationship, having met and fallen for a guy recently, he’s been able to take a figurative dive by publicly acknowledging his sexuality for the first time.

“Now I kind of feel ready to talk about my relationships,” Daley says. “Come spring this year, my life changed. Massively. When I met someone. And it made me feel so happy. So safe. And everything just feels so great. Well, that someone is a guy.”

Daley says he was “taken by surprise” by his new relationship, and though he still “fancies” girls, he says he couldn’t be happier.

Maybe that’s what that clandestine coffee canoodling with Dustin Lance Black was about back in October. Perhaps he was seeking coming-out advice. Or maybe there was something more. Either way, mazel! Welcome to the family, Tom.  In celebration, here’s a gif that never gets old:



Congrats!



By: Les Fabian Brathwaite
On: Dec 2, 2013

Friday, 15 November 2013

Andrew Scott interview - The Independent

[Source]

'Sherlock has changed my whole career': Andrew Scott interview


Moriarty made Andrew Scott's name. Now he's playing a raft of leading roles on television, film and stage

James Rampton | Friday 15 November 2013

At the start of our interview, Andrew Scott and I are squeezing into a booth in the restaurant at the British Film Institute. It is very similar to the one occupied by Billy Crystal and Meg Ryan's characters in When Harry Met Sally. Quick as a flash, the actor smiles at me and says, “I'll have what she's having.”

Scott goes on to remark that he often dreads reading interviews with actors and hopes this won't be another that he recoils from. “Sometimes talking about acting can be reductive and a bit boring. Of course,” he adds, breaking into a wry, self-mocking grin, “I'm not like that. I'm completely fascinating. Everything I say is a bon mot. It's epigram after epigram. It's like sitting with Oscar Wilde... Although I have better hair!”

Witty. Mischievous. Charming.

These are precisely the qualities that catapulted Scott to stardom as Moriarty in BBC1's worldwide hit drama, Sherlock. People were already talking about him as a striking new talent after his first brief, if completely scene-stealing, 10-minute appearance in Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss's compelling modern-day reworking of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's classic detective stories.

His performance as Holmes's dastardly foe – by turns mesmerising and menacing – won Scott the best supporting actor Bafta award last year, beating his co-star Martin Freeman (who plays John Watson in Sherlock) in the process.

It was not exactly an overnight success for Scott – the 37-year-old Irishman had for many years been turning in very creditable, if not such conspicuous performances in dramas such as Lennon Naked (in which he gave a memorable Paul McCartney opposite Christopher Ecclestone's John Lennon), The Hour, John Adams and Band of Brothers.

But Moriarty, who appeared to come to a sticky end at the end of the last series on Sherlock, transformed Scott's profile. Moriarty is the archetypal baddie who has all the best lines, and his popularity meant that the actor was soon being offered leading roles in ITV1 dramas such as The Town and The Scapegoat.

Scott, who was raised in Dublin, where his father worked in an employment agency and his mother was an art teacher, has the volume turned down in real life and has no need to turn the dial up to 11 in the way that Moriarty does. But you can see that he still possesses the same razor-sharp instincts as Sherlock's arch-enemy.

Adversaries: Benedict Cumberbatch (left) as Sherlock Holmes and
Andrew Scott as Jim Moriarty in the ‘Sherlock’ series-two finale ‘The
Reichenbach Fall’
The actor is the first to acknowledge that playing the role of Moriarty has moved his career up several notches. Picking at a croissant, he reflects that: “Sherlock has changed all our careers, and I'm really pleased about that. It gives you the benefit of the doubt because executives like to see recognisable faces.

“It was overwhelming to be on a TV show that is quite so popular. That took me totally by surprise. People had an instant affection for it from the first episode. The reaction was extraordinary. People still come up to me in the street all the time, wanting to talk about it.”

Sherlock fans are known as some of the most passionate in the business, but Scott says they are generally delightful. “There is this impression that the fans are crazy, but they're not – they're very respectful. They don't overstep the mark. I get a lot of fan mail. Of course, some of it is a bit creepy, but mostly it's very moving and creative. People send me drawings and their own versions of Sherlock stories. It's a source of escapism for people and that's great.

“I'm an enthusiast for people, and I don't want them to become the enemy. I've seen that happen to colleagues who are disturbed the whole time, but there's a certain degree of control you can have if you keep yourself to yourself. The kind of actors I admire move through different characters and genres. That's the kind of actor I try to be. If you want that, you have to be circumspect about your private life.”

Scott thinks the character made such an impact because, “Moriarty came as a real surprise to people”. He adds: “He doesn't have to do the conventional villain thing. He is witty, and people like that. He is also a proper match for Sherlock. He's very mercurial, too. I have since been offered to play a lot of different characters, and that's because Moriarty is a lot of different characters. He changes all the time.”

The next legacy of the “Sherlock Effect” is that Scott is starring in a one-off BBC2 drama entitled Legacy. An adaptation by Paula Milne of Alan Judd's bestselling 2001 espionage novel, this is an absorbing contribution to the BBC's “Cold War” season. In this film, set at the height of the conflict between the UK and the USSR in 1974, which goes out on Thursday 28 November, Scott plays Viktor Koslov, a KGB spy.

Charles Thoroughgood (Charlie Cox), a trainee MI6 agent, tries to reconnect with Viktor, an old friend from their Oxford days, in an attempt to “turn” him. However, Victor adroitly turns the tables on Charles with a shocking revelation about the British spy's family. Deliberately shot in Stygian gloom, Legacy captures the murky world of the secret services where cynicism and duplicity are part of the job description. Its tagline could well have been: “Trust no one.”

The film convincingly conjures up the drabness of the 1970s, all three-day weeks, petrol rationing and power cuts. Scott says: “Characters in those days called from phone boxes – whoever does that now? The film fits the era. It has a melancholic tone. It's very brown and downbeat.”

Scott particularly enjoyed playing the ambiguity of Viktor's character. “I like the idea that you don't know who he is. It's important that you feel for Viktor and his predicament. You have to feel he's a human being with a family. But both he and Charles are elusive figures – it's not clear whose side they're on. It's not at all black-and-white, and that's why the film is so shadowy.”

Life after death: Sherlock Holmes killed his character (or did he?) But
Andrew Scott returns as Viktor Koslov in ‘Legacy’
The actor boasts a terrific Russian accent in Legacy. Where did it come from? “There isn't a huge amount of footage of Russians speaking English as a second language, so I started looking at Vladimir Putin videos on YouTube. But then Putin introduced anti-gay legislation this summer – so, being a gay person, I switched to Rudolf Nureyev videos instead. It was another Nureyev defection of sorts!”

Scott is low-key on the subject of his sexuality. “Mercifully, these days people don't see being gay as a character flaw. But nor is it a virtue, like kindness. Or a talent, like playing the banjo. It's just a fact. Of course, it's part of my make-up, but I don't want to trade on it. I am a private person; I think that's important if you're an actor. But there's a difference between privacy and secrecy, and I'm not a secretive person. Really I just want to get on with my job, which is to pretend to be lots of different people. Simple as that.”

Scott is very much getting on with the job at present. He has many intriguing projects in the pipeline, including starring in Jimmy's Hall, the new Ken Loach movie about a political activist expelled from Ireland during the “Red Scare” of the 1930s. He is also appearing with Tom Hardy and Ruth Wilson in Locke, a film about a man whose life is falling apart, and in The Stag, a movie about a stag weekend that goes horribly wrong. In addition, he is headlining alongside Bill Nighy, Dominic West and Imelda Staunton in Matthew Warchus's movie Pride, a true story about an alliance between the mine workers and the lesbian and gay community during the 1984 miners' strike.

If he can possibly find any spare time, Scott is also open to comedy offers. “Everything in life has to have an element of comedy about it. I did Design for Living at the Old Vic in 2010 – Noël Coward was a master of comedy. The audience were convulsing every night. It's such a joyous feeling to hold a pause and wait for the laughter. There is no better high. Forget about drugs!”

But despite the fact that producers are now cold-calling him like overeager mis-sold PPI salesmen, Scott won't be rushing into the first role he's offered. One positive by-product of his success is his ability to be choosy about what he does. He observes: “You have to be brave to turn things down, but there is a certain power to that. I've had offers to do more regular TV series, but I don't regret rejecting them. If money and fame are not your goals, then it becomes easier. American agents use the expression, 'this could be a game-changer'. The implication is that you want the game to change. But I don't. I don't have a plan. I like unpredictability and randomness.

“People get distracted by box-office figures and take jobs because they think it will advance their careers. Of course, it's nice to get a big cheque and be able to buy a massive house, but my view is that we're not here long, so why not do something of value?”

So Scott is very happy with where he's at. “To do all these different things is a dream for me. My idea of a successful actor is not the most recognisable or the richest – it's someone who is able to do a huge amount of different stuff. I don't want to be known for just one thing.”

It's true that Scott is now broadening his career far beyond Moriarty. But I can't resist one final question on the subject: Is there any chance that Moriarty will, like his nemesis, be making a Lazarus-like comeback in the new series of Sherlock? Scott has, after all, been photographed filming scenes for the upcoming third season.

“People ask me that every day. It's a small price to pay for having been in such a wonderful show,” he teases. But he is forbidden from spilling the beans about Moriarty's fate in Sherlock even to close family members.

So has Moriarty played one more dastardly trick on us by faking his own suicide? Or are the scenes the actor has been shooting merely flashbacks? Scott could tell us, but then – like some ruthless Cold War spy – he would have to kill us...

'Legacy' is on BBC2 at 9pm on Thursday 28 November