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DonViejo

(60,536 posts)
Tue Oct 29, 2013, 07:31 PM Oct 2013

Sean Hayes doesn’t owe us an apology for not coming out


The actor says he's sorry for not coming out sooner, but why should he be?

BY MARY ELIZABETH WILLIAMS


Sean Hayes would like to say he’s sorry. In a recent interview with the L.A. Times, the Emmy award winner, currently starring in “Sean Saves the World,” opens up about his breakthrough role on “Will and Grace” and fame he wasn’t quite ready for. “I was so young,” he says. “It made me go back in the closet [with the media] because I was so overwhelmed at 26 or 27. I didn’t want the responsibility; I didn’t know how to handle the responsibility of speaking for the gay community. I always felt like I owed them a huge apology for coming out too late.”

Admittedly, from the moment his over-the-top Jack McFarland sashayed his way onto “Will and Grace,” Hayes became the most poorly closeted man in America. Nevertheless, he spent years refusing to comment on his sexuality even long after the show’s run ended. He only officially came out three years ago, and even then it was somewhat defensively, saying, “I believe that nobody owes anything to anybody. Nobody owes anything to anybody. You are your authentic self to whom and when you choose to be, and if you don’t know somebody, then why would you explain to them how you live your life?… What more do you want me to do? Do you want me to stand on a float? And then what? It’s never enough.”

Now, however, Hayes apparently feels he does owe somebody something. But does the actor, who certainly never pretended to be straight, really need to make amends? Even now, he sounds unsure. “Some people in the gay community were very upset with me for not coming out on their terms,” he tells the L.A. Times. “They don’t stop to think about what’s going on in somebody’s personal life, and the struggles that they’re having. It was all very scary. We got death threats. It was a really rough time for me, but I was also having the time of my life.”

In a better world, there would be no such thing as the closet, because everybody would know that a) there’s nothing shameful or concealment-worthy about being gay and b) a person’s orientation is his or her own business anyway, so what’s it to you? Unfortunately, this is not yet that world. This is a world in which people get death threats for starring on dopey sitcoms. And Hayes isn’t the only person who’s had to seriously consider the potential negative consequences of coming out, from threats of violence to career repercussions. Pretty much everybody who’s ever come out has had to. When Anderson Cooper made his sexuality officially public – just last year – he mentioned his long-standing desire for privacy but he told another story as well. “I’ve often found myself in some very dangerous places,” he said. “For my safety and the safety of those I work with, I try to blend in as much as possible, and prefer to stick to my job of telling other people’s stories, and not my own. I have found that sometimes the less an interview subject knows about me, the better I can safely and effectively do my job as a journalist.” And Cooper knows that, sadly, being safe and being gay do not always go hand in hand.

Full article
http://www.salon.com/2013/10/29/sean_hayes_doesnt_owe_us_an_apology_for_not_coming_out/
8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Sean Hayes doesn’t owe us an apology for not coming out (Original Post) DonViejo Oct 2013 OP
Mostly self-serving bullshit but I love him anyway. n/t Smarmie Doofus Oct 2013 #1
Hunny, please. xfundy Oct 2013 #2
And in the press tour for that movie he said he was gay dsc Nov 2013 #8
He doesn't have to apologize but I'm tired of articles like this joeybee12 Oct 2013 #3
Very well said. Behind the Aegis Oct 2013 #5
Yup, it's like, how dare we criticize or question a CELEBRITY!!! nt joeybee12 Oct 2013 #6
Who? closeupready Oct 2013 #4
He owes me nothing mitchtv Oct 2013 #7

xfundy

(5,105 posts)
2. Hunny, please.
Tue Oct 29, 2013, 08:31 PM
Oct 2013

He was in "Billy's Hollywood Screen Kiss" before the tv series. He was always obviously gay, and his denials were obviously lies--then again, there may have been some people who took his denials seriously, and he may have confused some gay kids and helped put another layer of "gay is bad/gay is shameful" over the culture, and that is indeed bad and worthy of his shame.

I'll be fine as long as I know I can look up to Paul Lynde as a straight figure to emulate.

dsc

(52,162 posts)
8. And in the press tour for that movie he said he was gay
Sun Nov 3, 2013, 10:58 PM
Nov 2013

so just who he was kidding is hard to see.

 

joeybee12

(56,177 posts)
3. He doesn't have to apologize but I'm tired of articles like this
Wed Oct 30, 2013, 12:27 PM
Oct 2013

trying to make a celebrity out to be a hero because he acted like a shithead...enough already, first Jodi Foster, now Sean...if they didn't want to come out publcily, fine, but it's not heroic to come out later when it's safe.

Behind the Aegis

(53,961 posts)
5. Very well said.
Wed Oct 30, 2013, 03:21 PM
Oct 2013

The article almost seems to be 'wagging a finger' at US! That is what really pissed me off. We aren't the problem.

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