Playing a gay character is little threat to an actor’s career anymore. With this change comes plenty of actors who are willing to take the roles and ready to talk about how they approach them.
John Lithgow gives a thoughtful and tender performance as a gay man in the upcoming Love is Strange, and was recently asked about his other famous role as transgender Roberta Muldoon opposite Robin Williams in 1982′s The World According To Garp.
He told the Huffington Post that he, “just decided to underplay everything [and] make her a perfectly normal person — in fact, a person who is utterly unaffected,” and that the character, “feels more herself than she’s ever been,” adding, “In that sense, it was revolutionary.”
Here’s how 13 other famous (assumedly) straight stars approached LGBT characters.
Jim Carey – I Love You Philip Morris
“What I’m doing for the gay community is loving and tolerating. Accepting everyone on equal terms.” When asked about getting down with Ewan McGregor? “A dream come true. I mean look at the guy.”
Michael Douglas — Behind The Candelabra
“Once you get that first kiss in, you are comfortable. Matt and I didn’t rehearse the love scenes. We said, ‘Well–we’ve read the script, haven’t we?’ The hardest thing about sex scenes is that everybody is a judge. I don’t know the last time you murdered somebody or blew anyone’s brains out, but everyone has had sex and probably this morning, which means everyone has an opinion on how it should be done.”
Heath Ledger — Brokeback Mountain
“It was certainly a surreal moment the first time I had to kiss Jake, but once that was done, I quickly realised that it didn’t make me want to run out and do it again. And you think, OK, what’s the next shot? Those scenes were just a small part of the package.”
Hilary Swank — Boys Don’t Cry
“I knew that if I couldn’t pass as a boy on the street then the movie wasn’t going to work. I was in it 24/7. I was sleeping with the sock in my pants trying as much as I could to be like Brandon Teena. This is a person’s life, this is someone who really lived, it wasn’t even a fictional character and I felt a huge responsibility to him. When I got the part I thought ‘I can’t mess this up, this story is too important.’ I received so much mail from that movie, running the full gamut from trans people to people who said, ‘this has changed my outlook.” *
Ewan McGregor — Velvet Goldmine
“Sex scenes are strange and awkward and a bizarre thing to be doing. The (Christian Bale) sex scene was fun though! We were in Kings Cross; he plays a journalist and I played a rock star and we had a shag on the roof in Kings Cross and they wanted to shoot a wide shot. We heard the kind of ‘action!’ (from the film crew on another rooftop) and we, you know, we start slowly, and then it went on and on, and we’re really going now. And then I thought ‘I would have come by now’, so I lean over and say ‘I think I would have come by now’, and I look over at the other roof, and the crew are already packing up. They must have thought it was a sensitive thing and wanted to leave us to it.”
Daniel Craig — Infamous
“There was never any self-consciousness about it. I always think that’s how a love story needs to play out anyway, because it’s just this friendship that starts growing, and if it turns into sex, it turns into sex; but it’s not like two young men meet in a bar, go out back and fuck. This is about two human beings really sitting down and trying to figure each other out.”
Colin Firth — A Single Man
“If you’re an actor who is afraid to play a character because they’re gay, you should probably go and get yourself sorted out, actually. Grow up. I certainly didn’t walk around gay, thinking gay, brushing my teeth gay.”
Robin Williams — Birdcage
“I grew up around gay people, I remember walking down the streets one day and the Sisters of Indulgence, specifically Sister Mary Boom Boom, looked at me and said, ‘There goes the neighborhood.’ I thought that was wonderful.”
Chris Plummer — Beginners
“Having to kiss my boyfriend of the moment, who is of course as butch as they come – I think he was more nervous than I was. I felt that I was sort of an oldish hand at it by the time we’d finished our relationship. You can’t get away from it; you have to do it. So we did it, and closed our eyes, and it was all right.”
Chiwetel Ejiofor — Kinky Boots
“Even though I loved the part, there’s always this possibility that it just wasn’t in me; that I’d throw on the wig and say the lines and look like a moron or a fraud. But actually something different happened. It was like I had been released!”
Dennis Quaid — Far From Heaven
“I don’t think it’s such a big risk anymore, unless you sort of get it wrong. And with this, I just felt that the story was told with such sincerity and it wasn’t a send-up or a spoof of something. It really dealt with what was going on with these people. I didn’t have any second thoughts about playing it.”
Terence Stamp – The Adventures Of Priscilla Queen Of The Desert
“It wasn’t something I’d have ever considered really. I thought it was a joke, but a woman friend of mine just happened to be present when I was getting calls from my agent about the script and she pointed out to me in a very incisive way that my fear was out of all proportion to the possible consequences. That’s the thing about fear: you’re only really subject to it as long as you don’t spot it. It’s not easy to realise when you’re turning down things from fear or genuine discernment.”
Seth Green – Party Monster
“A character’s sexuality is far less challenging than developing their personality. At the end of a day, your character loves someone—man or woman, it’s the same kind of love.”
*(gmp editor’s note: technically, this is not a gay role, as brandon teena was a man generally attracted to women, but the role was of a man and swank makes interesting points about how she portrayed him, so it remains)
Originally posted on Queerty.com