Here comes the new new queer cinema: the first wave of queer cinema slowed to a trickle years ago. Now a flood of smart, fun new movies is washing into theaters.There's a scene in Eating Out, a sweetly raunchy raun·chy adj. raun·chi·er, raun·chi·est Slang 1. a. Obscene, lewd, or vulgar: "[He] indie gay sex comedy currently working its way through art-house theaters, that arguably sums up in one broad stroke the progress American queer cinema has made in the past 15 years. Hunky hun·ky 1 n. pl. hun·kies Offensive Slang Used as a disparaging term for a person, especially a laborer, from east-central Europe. small-town college students Marc (Ryan Carnes Ryan Carnes (born December 6, 1982 in Pittsfield, Illinois) is an American actor. He attended Duke University. Carnes was the ninth actor to portray Lucas Jones on the ABC soap opera General Hospital from July 2004 until September 2005. ) and Caleb (Scott Lunsford) are out on a date, and they've made their way to the local video store--which has a section devoted exclusively to films of "gay/lesbian interest." There was a time when such a scene would have been a laughable fantasy, but when Eating Out's writer-director, Q. Allan Brocka, scouted his Tucson setting for locations he found "an actual video store that really did have a sizable gay and lesbian section. It was really great to see." That section is about to get a whole lot bigger. Eating Out is just one of a sudden bounty of gay- and lesbian-themed American films coming soon to theaters near you, ending a multiyear drought that had many GLBT GLBT Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgendered moviegoers latching on to the likes of Finding Nemo and The Lord of the Rings for their queer image satisfaction. OK, it wasn't quite that bad, but it's not an idle complaint. "We're an inherently invisible community. Film and video make the invisible visible," explains Stephen Gutwillig, executive director of Outfest, Los Angeles's international gay and lesbian film festival. In a nation facing a mounting bramble bramble, name for plants of the genus Rubus [Lat.,=red, for the color of the juice]. This complex genus of the family Rosaceae (rose family), with representatives in many parts of the world, includes the blackberries, raspberries, loganberries, boysenberries, of questions surrounding free expression and gay rights, a surge in gay representation in this country's biggest export, the modern motion picture, is certainly worth celebrating--and worth some healthy scrutiny as well. "What's notable about this year's collection of high-profile [domestic gay-themed] films is how they illustrate the different ways that films are being financed and distributed," notes Gutwillig. "It's a nice range of star-driven stuff, full-on indie stuff, emerging filmmakers, established filmmakers, start-up distributors, and well-known industry players." [For a heads-up on some of the year's most anticipated English-language movies, see "Cinema Queeradiso," beginning on page 46.] Of course, this kind of excitement has happened before. In the early 1990s, independent cinema was electrified by a bumper crop In agriculture, a bumper crop refers to a particularly good harvest yielded for a particular crop. Example: "With all the rain we've had over the last few months, we are expecting a bumper crop this year. of gay-themed films--including Todd Haynes's Poison, Gregg Araki's The Living End, Tom Kalin's Swoon, and Rose Troche troche /tro·che/ (tro´ke) lozenge (1). tro·che n. A small, circular medicinal lozenge; a pastille. and Guinevere Turner's Go Fish, to name just a few--so artistically bold and brimming with urgency that they were considered a full-fledged movement, dubbed the "new queer cinema" by renowned film critic and feminist academic B. Ruby Rich. Then ... things just fizzled out. None in this pink pantheon made much of a dent at the box office, and most of the directors eventually moved on to other subject matter. Even when one did readdress Re`ad`dress´ v. t. 1. To address a second time; - often used reflexively. He readdressed himself to her. - Boyle. the gay experience, like Haynes in Far From Heaven, it was typically as part of a much larger whole. But the foundations were laid. Brocka singles out Poison in particular as a powerful touchstone in his development as a filmmaker. "Seeing a film that was just so queer but so not, at the same time, was this voice that I'd never heard," gushes Brocka, who is also an occasional Advocate columnist. "I felt like I related to it on so many levels--it was a huge Inspiration for me." So much so that the last thing he expected his feature debut to be was a film like Eating Out. Brocka says he wrote the movie on a lark while attending graduate film school at California Institute of the Arts California Institute of the Arts known as CalArts U.S. private institution of higher learning in Valencia. Created in 1961 through the merger of two other art institutes, it was the first in the U.S. , structuring it like "the films I liked of the '80s, like John Hughes
See if this sounds slightly familiar: Shy jock Caleb is actually straight, convinced by his gay roommate, Kyle (Jim Verraros James Conrad Verraros (b. February 8, 1983) is an American singer/entertainer and native of Crystal Lake, Illinois who is most notable for being one of the top 10 finalists in the first season of American Idol. ), that playing gay to date music major Marc is the best way to snag Marc's cute roommate, Gwen (Emily Stiles Stiles can refer to: People
Rectangular open space completely or partially enclosed by buildings of an academic or civic character. The grounds of a quadrangle are often grassy or landscaped. completed by Kyle's long-standing, unrequited crush on Marc. If that's confusing, it's actually kind of the point. College sex comedies, remember, are supposed to feature love connections tangled by high-concept deceit; otherwise there's no movie. Not that Brocka ever thought he'd actually make the film. "I never thought I'd do anything with it," he laughs, "because it was so trashy, not really that deep, and it was a genre movie.... I hadn't seen many gay films that were genre movies, meaning like a gay horror movie, a gay Western, a gay college sex comedy, a gay spy movie--and now we've got one of each." No kidding. In fact, it's a major factor that gives Gutwillig hope that 2005 isn't just an "anomalous boomlet" in queer films. Eating Out is one of several movies this year that could essentially be called "gay and--." These films take Hollywood genres as old as the movies themselves and reconstitute re·con·sti·tute tr.v. re·con·sti·tut·ed, re·con·sti·tut·ing, re·con·sti·tutes 1. To provide with a new structure: The parks commission has been reconstituted. 2. them with gay characters and gay-themed plotlines. The first out of the gate, the "gay spy movie" D.E.B.S., debuted in March, and it's highly doubtful there'll be a better cinema success story, gay or straight, this year. In fact, if it was a movie, you probably wouldn't believe it. Angela Robinson grew up wanting to direct big Hollywood movies--not exactly an easy thing for an African-American lesbian to achieve. "I loved movies like Raiders of the Lost Ark and John Hughes movies," she remembers, "and I always wished the movies would turn out differently. I was always reimagining that Molly Ringwald got together with Ally Sheedy or something." About three years ago a friend told Robinson about POWER UP, a Hollywood networking organization that gives grants to lesbian filmmakers to make short films about the queer experience. So she submitted D.E.B.S., a kind of "Charlie's Angels in a boarding school" satire in which one of the good girls falls in love (and into bed) with their female archnemesis. POWER UP gave Robinson $20,000 to make it. When the 11-minute short debuted at the 2003 Sundance Film Festival, it was such a hit that Sony-owned studio Screen Gems hired Robinson to remake D.E.B.S. as a feature-length film for $4 million, lesbian plotline and all. Robinson, whose next project is--get this--Disney's summer family comedy Herbie: Fully Loaded with Lindsay Lohan Lindsay Dee Lohan (born July 2 1986) is an American actress and pop music singer. Lohan started in show business as a child fashion model for magazine advertisement and television commercials. , chalks up her success with D.E.B.S. to entertaining her audience above all else. "Many people have been like, 'Oh, I don't think your movie's a gay movie,'" she says with her ever-pleasant laugh. "And I'm like 'That's great!' Because it totally is. For me, I feel like I get to have my cake and eat it too. It's something that is one step removed from, 'This is just a gay story.'" Count B. Ruby Rich as one of Robinson's fans. In fact, she happily owns up to consuming her share of salty gay popcorn: "Hey, I sit around and watch The L Word on Sunday nights too." But she also expresses some concern that gay and lesbian audiences cannot subsist sub·sist v. sub·sist·ed, sub·sist·ing, sub·sists v.intr. 1. a. To exist; be. b. To remain or continue in existence. 2. on popcorn alone. "Fine, let people explore genre," Rich says. "But that doesn't mean that I'm automatically going to be interested." Her fear, Rich explains, is that pop movies like Eating Out, D.E.B.S., and June's gay horror film horror film n → película de terror or miedo horror film horror n → film m d'épouvante horror film horror n HellBent will siphon siphon (sī`fən, –fŏn), tube through which a liquid is lifted over an elevation by the pressure of the atmosphere and is then emptied at a lower level. gay audiences away from more challenging films like Tarnation tar·na·tion New England & Southern U.S. n. The act of damning or the condition of being damned. interj. Used to express anger or annoyance. [tarn(al) + (damn)ation. Jonathan Caouette's highly acclaimed kaleidoscopic autobiography that barely got distributed last year even after queer cinema luminaries Gus Van Sant SANT South African Native Trust (My Own Private Idaho) and John Cameron Mitchell John Cameron Mitchell (born April 21, 1963 in El Paso, Texas) is an American writer, actor, and director. He is best known for his motion pictures Hedwig and the Angry Inch and Shortbus. Early life and career Mitchell was born in El Paso, Texas. (Hedwig and the Angry Inch) put their names on it as executive producers. "A lot of audiences for the new queer cinema were not there because they were so excited about the aesthetic breakthrough," Rich says with a tinge of resignation. "They were there because it was the only place they could find gay content. It's a fickle audience, and if they can find it somewhere else and it goes down easy like classic Coke, they'll take it. I want them to be pushed." She's not the only one. Mitchell also laments the shift in gay cinema toward more mainstream story-telling tropes--although he does understand the impulse of up-and-coming gay filmmakers to move away from the standard gay coming-out stow. "Maybe that's part of the growing-up of gay-themed films," he ponders. "You move on from coming out. I think of [coming-out] films as almost traditional gay folk music folk music: see folk song. folk music Music held to be typical of a nation or ethnic group, known to all segments of its society, and preserved usually by oral tradition. Knowledge of the history and development of folk music is largely conjectural. or something. It's like, 'Oh, that song again.' You can [sing] it well, or you can sing it badly, but to me, it's a little bit tired." Mitchell is not just concerned about stereotyped gay story lines; he's also worried about stereotyping gay audiences. Take the hankie code gag in Eating Out, for example. In one scene a leather-bedecked gay couple snickers
Snickers is a sweet bar made by Mars, Incorporated. at faux-gay Caleb because he's unwittingly put a brown bandanna in his right back pocket--a ribald rib·ald adj. Characterized by or indulging in vulgar, lewd humor. n. A vulgar, lewdly funny person. [From Middle English ribaud, ribald person, from Old French, from joke even some gay men might not get. This scene and others like it, written specifically and exclusively for a gay audience, strike a nerve with Mitchell--and expose a tricky fracture within the world of gay filmmaking. "To me, whenever you assume that because you're gay you're going to like this, it's condescending," sighs Mitchell. "There are people I know who cannot bear to see the next Latter Days [the popular 2003 gay romantic comedy set largely in West Hollywood West Hollywood A community of southern California northeast of Beverly Hills. It is mainly residential. Population: 36,600. , Calif.] because they know it's going to be dumb. Not everybody likes that kind of music; not everybody likes gym-distended bodies; not everybody is into Britney Spears." Latter Days, it so happens, was the first feature from Funny Boy Films, founded two years ago by entrepreneur Kirkland Tibbels in order to produce exactly the kind of positive, heart-on-sleeve gay-themed movies that have become old hat for observers like Mitchell. "Studios don't want [this kind of movie] because of the subject matter, and the typical gay and lesbian distribution or production company doesn't want it because it's not edgy," Tibbels says in his whining west Texas twang. "I could put my hands on my hips and say, 'Well, some of us believe we've seen too many movies about the gay and lesbian community where we want to go home and slit our throats.' If you put a title on my section of this article, it would be 'Come on in, the water's fine.'" Tibbels says he's really not that upset; he'd just appreciate it if the gay filmmakers he so deeply respects would cut him a little slack. "You won't catch me throwing rocks at people who tell stories that make me want to go home and slit my wrists," he promises. "Because you know what? They got that reaction out of me, and that's their job." But Tibbels figures there's room for everybody. "We've got a lot of stories to tell, and now's the time to tell them." For the record, the upcoming project Tibbels is most excited about is not nearly as cheery as Latter Days: Sex-Crime Panic is the story of a '50s witch-hunt in a small U.S. town based on a nonfiction book (published by Advocate sister company Alyson Books). Further proof that the social awareness of queer filmmakers has not been completely supplanted by bubble gum, Gregg Araki's dark and deeply moving Mysterious Skin is actually the one upcoming film everybody agrees they're most anxious to see. And yet, interestingly enough, it's a gay-themed film that its "new queer cinema" writer-director would just as soon not label "queer cinema," new or otherwise. "The problem with [that label]," Araki says, stressing that he's speaking only for himself, "is that there was a certain expectation that was put on us, that we were somehow the queer representatives, these spokespeople. I make films not as a propagandist but as an artist, as a means of expressing myself. My films are not about representing gay identity for anybody, really. They're just expressing how I feel." In a way, Araki is touching on one of the big questions for any filmmaker who's gay or lesbian: Is the label "gay filmmaker" too limiting? Mitchell seems to think so. His next film, Shortbus, has already won him some notoriety for his plan to shoot a narrative film with actors participating in actual on-camera sex. "I very specifically wanted to examine the love lives of people of all sexual denominations," he says. "Certainly, the film has a queer sensibility, but it's trying to find things in common in the variety, which I think has to be the future for gay-themed films. Otherwise you're a ghetto. Take advantage of your nonconformism non·con·form·ist n. 1. One who does not conform to, or refuses to be bound by, accepted beliefs, customs, or practices. 2. . Use it." Brocka, currently putting the finishing touches finishing touches finish npl the finishing touches → der letzte Schliff finishing touches npl → ultimi ritocchi mpl on Boy Culture, a "gay Trainspotting with hustlers instead of heroin," takes a different tack. "It's really, really hard to make a film," he says. "And if I don't feel totally passionate about it, you know, screw 'em. If I'm making it, it's probably going to be gay. If I get ghettoized and all I can make is gay films from here on out, hey, I'm making films, and I can't think of a more exciting life. I'm making things I'm truly passionate about." As long as people see the films. One of the strangest phenomena about gay cinema, Outfest's Gutwillig is quick to point out, is that while GLBT film festivals are thriving--"There are more gay and lesbian film festivals than any other genre of film festival in the country and in the world"--gay-themed films in general do not see the kind of support at the box office that movies like My Big Fat Greek Wedding and this spring's Diary of a Mad Black Woman have received from their respective segments of the population (not to mention, ahem, The Passion of the Christ). Part of that may be the fault of the DVD DVD: see digital versatile disc. DVD in full digital video disc or digital versatile disc Type of optical disc. The DVD represents the second generation of compact-disc (CD) technology. . The same boom market that warranted an entire gay and lesbian section in Eating Out's video store is, in essence, making it easy for the gay consumer to skip the theater and watch a gay film in the comfort of her or his own home--something fewer people did during the heyday of the new queer cinema. Of course, Brocka points out that his movie probably wouldn't have been made at all if it wasn't for DVD. Produced for less than $50,000--and delivering a bang for the buck that would have been impossible before the recent revolution in cheap, high-quality digital filmmaking tools--Eating Out was budgeted specifically to make its production company, Ariztical Entertainment, a profit in the DVD market. The film wasn't even supposed to play in theaters, but its success last year on the international film festival circuit--where it won a fistful fist·ful n. pl. fist·fuls The amount that a fist can hold. Noun 1. fistful - the quantity that can be held in the hand handful containerful - the quantity that a container will hold of "audience favorite" prizes--convinced the producers to book a limited theatrical run. Eating Out opened at San Francisco's Castro Theater on March 18 and quickly scooped up $17,500 in one weekend. It opened April 8 in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of and Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850. , with other cities scheduled for later in the spring. Still, Eating Out's big-screen success story is the exception among DVD-targeted productions, in part because a budget of $50,000, even superlatively used, is barely a budget at all, and marketing dollars and press coverage tend to favor higher-profile productions. Most DVD-only movies make barely a blip on the cultural radar, even among targeted audiences such as gays and lesbians. For any filmmaker serious about a healthy career in cinema, a successful theatrical release remains essential. "Most movies make their money in an urban market," Gutwillig says, which means gay movies have to prove successful in a few big-city theaters before they're booked into the smaller markets--months later, if at all. As a result, even profitable gay and lesbian movies don't make much of a box-office splash. The weekend that Eating Out grossed $17,500 on one screen, for example, fellow indie Diary of a Mad Black Woman earned an average of just $1,900 per theater--but by playing on more than 1,200 screens to a remarkably supportive target audience, it had raked in nearly $48 million in just 24 days. If more gay-themed films proved themselves able to generate Diary-like audience support nationwide, perhaps the new new queer cinema could graduate from a passing wave into a permanent flow of films. As Angela Robinson puts it, "If everybody went to see that scruffy lesbian feature and it made a gazillion ga·zil·lion n. Informal An indefinitely large number: "The crowd cheered wildly . . . as gazillions of balloons poured down from the rafters" Tom Shales. dollars, they'd be turning them out in droves." Photographed by Albert Sanchez for The Advocate Vary also writes for Entertainment Weekly. Starting out on Eating out Playing gay was an education for two novice actors--one who graduated to Desperate Housewives Desperate Housewives is an American television comedy-drama series, created by Marc Cherry, who also serves as show runner, and produced by ABC Studios - The Walt Disney Company's main television studio - and Cherry Productions. When Q. Allan Brocka originally wrote Eating Out, he did it because he was plumb out of ideas and needed a script for his graduate film school screenwriting class. "There were some really cute guys in class, and I wanted to make them read gay sex scenes out loud," he laughs. The scene in question really is a doozy doo·zy or doo·zie n. pl. doo·zies Slang Something extraordinary or bizarre: "Among the delicious names taken by, or given to, minor political parties in the United States . . . . Caleb (Scott Lunsford, left), who's straight, starts having phone sex with the sexually aggressive sexually aggressive adjective Relating to potentially violent behavior focused on gratification of sexual drives, regardless of the desire for participation on the part of the partner. See Sexually dangerous. Gwen (Emily Stiles), who thinks Caleb is gay and just gun-shy with her gay roommate, Marc (Ryan Carnes, below), who is sitting right next to Caleb while he's on the phone with Gwen. One thing leads to another, and some heady issues of sexuality collide in the process. One might think that Lunsford and Carnes, who are both straight, would have to have been raised with a certain comfort level around gays. Yet both men say they grew up in tiny Midwestern towns in which homosexuality was not necessarily condemned but, as Lunsford puts it, "pretty much not talked about, ever." "It was like, out of sight, out of mind "Out of Sight, Out of Mind" was the 99th episode of the M*A*S*H television series, and the third episode of the fourth season. Written by Ken Levine and David Isaacs and directed by Gene Reynolds, it first aired on October 5, 1976 and was repeated December 28, 1976. ," agrees Carnes. So once they made it through the exhaustive audition process--"I can't believe that the two most attractive guys who came to the audition were also the two best actors," marvels Brocka--Lunsford and Carnes got a little schooling in Gay 101. Brocka assigned them movies like Beautiful Thing, Trick, and The Sum of Us, and he took them and Stiles out to some West Hollywood, Calif., gay bars to show them the kind of currency their good looks carry in that world. "It was an education, that's for sure," chuckles Carnes. Eating Out was literally his first acting job in Los Angeles (perhaps it's why he won't discuss his age), and Carnes admits to having some trepidation when he was offered the part of Marc. "I thought, Oh, boy, is this really the role I want to star with? Am I going to be pigeonholed? I sat down and talked with my manager. Ultimately we decided--the script was funny. It was a solid character, with substance, something that as an actor I could dig into Verb 1. dig into - examine physically with or as if with a probe; "probe an anthill" poke into, probe penetrate, perforate - pass into or through, often by overcoming resistance; "The bullet penetrated her chest" ." Ironically, when Carnes was subsequently cast in a small role on Desperate Housewives, he had no idea--and neither, it seems, did the show's writers--that his character would return months later to come out of the closet Verb 1. come out of the closet - to state openly and publicly one's homosexuality; "This actor outed last year" out, come out disclose, let on, divulge, expose, give away, let out, reveal, unwrap, discover, bring out, break - make known to the public , dragging Bree Van De Kamp's teenage son with him. Carnes didn't mind: "That show is so hot, it they'd asked me to be a lamppost on Wisteria Lane Wisteria Lane is a fictional street, appearing in the American television series Desperate Housewives. Premise within the show Wisteria Lane is located in the city of Fairview, in the fictional Eagle State. , [I'd have agreed.] I said, 'Let's do it. I'm sure there's no frontal nudity in this one!'" The same can't be said of the central 17-minute phone sex sequence in Eating Out. When it came time to shoot, both actors noted their nerves and then got on with the scene. "Basically," says Lunsford, 25, "[it was] just getting to the point of not giving a shit, you know?" Only slightly more experienced than Carnes, Lunsford figured their careers were essentially in the same boat. "I'd done a gay scene in acting class," says Carnes, "and I'd done nudity in acting class, but not in front of a camera, not for a job, not when it really mattered. I said to myself, Wow, what a challenge. If I do this, there's nothing I can't do." Except, maybe, talk about his age.--A.V. Lovin' the ride It's a busy year for out pop idol This article is about the British television series. For general popular culture icons, see pop icon. Pop Idol is a British television series which debuted on ITV on October 5 2001; the show was a talent contest to decide the best new young pop singer, Jim Verraros between Eating Out and his new CD, Rollercoaster By Dennis Hensley It's easy to see why American Idol American Idol is an annual American televised singing competition, which began its first season on June 11, 2002. Part of the Idol franchise, it originated from the British reality program Pop Idol. alum alum (ăl`əm), any one of a series of isomorphous double salts that are hydrated sulfates of a univalent cation (e.g., potassium, sodium, ammonium, cesium, or thallium) and a trivalent cation (e.g. Jim Verraros named his new CD Rollercoaster. Since auditioning for the show three years ago with a rendition of "When I Fall in Love When I Fall in Love may mean
tr.v. dev·as·tat·ed, dev·as·tat·ing, dev·as·tates 1. To lay waste; destroy. 2. To overwhelm; confound; stun: was devastated by the rude remark. downs. "Being on the show was amazing and life-altering," says the 22-year-old Crystal Lake, Ill., native. "But after the show and tour were over, I went through a postreality [TV] depression. I met with some agencies, and they looked me up and down like, 'What do you want us to do with you?' I hurt." Two e-mails offered Verraros a chance to keep going. One was from Q. Allan Brocka, a huge Idol junkie junkie Popular health A popular term for a person, usually an IV narcotic abusing addict, whose life is disorganized vis-á-vis family and societal structure, whose existence revolves around obtaining–often through theft, prostitution or other illicit , who thought Verraros would be perfect as the unlucky-in-love gay musician, Kyle, in Eating Out. "At first I was like, 'Is this softcore porn?'" recalls a laughing Verraros, who also sings on the film's soundtrack. "Then I read the script and knew I had to be part of it. Kyle's the not-so-good-looking guy who's shunned by the gay community. I could relate. I was 235 pounds when I was 19. I'm like 158 now." The second e-mail to land in Verraros's in-box was from Gabe Lopez Please help [ improve this article] by removing excessive trivia, irrelevant praise and criticism, lists and collections of links that are of . , a Los Angeles musician-producer who heard Verraros on the American Idol: Greatest Moments CD. Soon the pair were writing and recording in Lopez's home studio. "Before working with Gabe, I thought I was completely out of my league on Idol," says Verraros, who worked at a tanning salon and a phone bank to pay for studio time. "Gabe brought out this confidence in me." The resulting CD, Rollercoaster--which was picked up by the indie label Koch Records--is a surprisingly assured blend of sexy George Michael-esque dance tracks and catchy pop-rockers. The cheekily titled "Welcome to Hollywood" documents his post-Idol reality check, while "Outside" is inspired by years of being gay-bashed in his hometown. "it was serious shit," says Verraros, who is still the only Idol finalist to come out as gay. "My brake lines were cut on my car when I was 17. When I came out in my local paper, they got many phone calls saying, 'Take that faggot off the cover.' The other day I went ice skating ice skating, gliding along an ice surface on keellike runners known as ice skates. Skating as a Sport Skating, besides being an important form of winter recreation and the essential skill in the game of ice hockey (see hockey, ice) has developed with my best friend, and this 14-year-old called me a fucking faggot. I'm like, 'Who's raising you?'" Still, Verraros has no regrets about coming out in The Advocate alter his run on Idol was over. "It was the best thing I've ever done," he says. "There's no better feeling than having young girls know you're gay and still be like, 'I love you!' I think every Grace wants their Will. If it's an issue for you, don't buy my record. I want to be the guy that says, 'You can do whatever you want and be true to yourself.'" Hensley is the author of Screening Party (Alyson) and cowriter of Testosterone (Strand Releasing). |
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