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Kristin Defends Sean, Takes on Newsweek


KRISTEN CHENOWETH SEAN HAYES X390 (PROMISES PROMISES) | ADVOCATE.COM

Kristin Chenoweth has posted a defense of Promises, Promises costar Sean Hayes on Newsweek's website after the actor was attacked in an article that many readers have deemed “homophobic,” even though it was written by a gay journalist. In an article titled “Straight Jacket” that was posted on Newsweek.com on April 26, Ramin Setoodeh has drawn the ire of many readers for implying that it’s impossible to believe openly gay actors as straight characters. Setoodeh specifically takes aim at Hayes for his otherwise much-lauded performance in the hit Broadway revival of the musical, for which he has been nominated for a Tony award as Best Actor.

Among the irate is actress Chenoweth, currently appearing as the love interest of Hayes’s character Chuck Baxter. Here is Chenoweth’s full response:

“As a longtime fan of Newsweek and as the actress currently starring opposite the incredibly talented (and sexy!) Sean Hayes in the Broadway revival of 'Promises, Promises,' I was shocked on many levels to see Newsweek publishing Ramin Setoodeh's horrendously homophobic 'Straight Jacket,' which argues that gay actors are simply unfit to play straight. From where I stand, on stage, with Hayes, every night — I've observed nothing "wooden" or "weird" in his performance, nor have I noticed the seemingly unwieldy presence of a 'pink elephant' in the Broadway Theater. (The Drama League, Outer Critics Circle and Tony members must have also missed that large animal when nominating Hayes' performance for its highest honors this year.) I'd normally keep silent on such matters and write such small-minded viewpoints off as perhaps a blip in common sense. But the offense I take to this article, and your decision to publish it, is not really even related to my profession or my work with Hayes or Jonathan Groff (also singled out in the article as too 'queeny' to play 'straight.') This article offends me because I am a human being, a woman and a Christian. For example, there was a time when Jewish actors had to change their names because anti-Semites thought no Jew could convincingly play Gentile. Setoodeh even goes so far as to justify his knee-jerk homophobic reaction to gay actors by accepting and endorsing that 'as viewers, we are molded by a society obsessed with dissecting sexuality, starting with the locker room torture in junior high school.' Really? We want to maintain and proliferate the same kind of bullying that makes children cry and in some recent cases have even taken their own lives? That's so sad, Newsweek! The examples he provides (what scientists call 'selection bias') to prove his 'gays can't play straight' hypothesis are sloppy in my opinion. Come on now! Openly gay Groff is too 'queeny' to play Lea Michele's boyfriend in Glee, but is a 'heartthrob' when he does it in Spring Awakening? Cynthia Nixon only 'got away with it' 'cause she peaked before coming out? I don't know if you've missed the giant Sex and the City movie posters, but it seems most of America is 'buying it.' I could go on, but I assume these will be taken care of in your 'Corrections' this week.

“Similarly, thousands of people have traveled from all over the world to enjoy Hayes' performance and don't seem to have one single issue with his sexuality! They have no problem buying him as a love-torn heterosexual man. Audiences aren't giving a darn about who a person is sleeping with or his personal life. Give me a break! We're actors first, whether we're playing prostitutes, baseball players, or the Lion King. Audiences come to theater to go on a journey. It's a character and it's called acting, and I'd put Hayes and his brilliance up there with some of the greatest actors period. 
Lastly, as someone who's been proudly advocating for equal rights and supporting GLBT causes for as long as I can remember, I know how much it means to young people struggling with their sexuality to see out & proud actors like Sean Hayes, Jonathan Groff, Neil Patrick Harris and Cynthia Nixon succeeding in their work without having to keep their sexuality a secret. No one needs to see a bigoted, factually inaccurate article that tells people who deviate from heterosexual norms that they can't be open about who they are and still achieve their dreams. I am told on good authority that Mr. Setoodeh is a gay man himself and I would hope, as the author of this article, he would at least understand that. I encourage Newsweek to embrace stories which promote acceptance, love, unity and singing and dancing for all!"

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Reader Comments
  • Name: William
    Date posted: 6/3/2010 4:43:02 PM
    Hometown: San Juan

    Comment:

    Homophobia was originally coined to reflect a theory that violence towards homosexuals was rooted in an irrational fear of homosexuality, which in turn was a result of the homophobe's own homosexual urges. Therefore, it denotes a homosexual who has sexual urges toward people of the same-sex that he hates, but cannot control. Today, it connotes anyone who has fear of or contempt for lesbians and gay men regardless of the homophobe's sexual orientation. This common defition includes any and all behavior based on such a feeling of fear or contempt. Newsweek's reporter seems to be well within both the classic and common defintions of homophobia, psychologist George Weinberg's neologism that he first used in his book ''Society and the Healthy Homosexual'' in 1972.

  • Name: D.L. Lujan
    Date posted: 5/12/2010 5:42:56 PM
    Hometown: Nashville

    Comment:

    I guess the guy writing this article is the gay version of "Uncle Ruckus" from the "Boondocks". I'm glad that I have come from that very dark and evil place of self-loathing as a gay. I remember once in school when someone (not of color) told a friend of mine how he knew that she must've hated being "black". If she had agreed with him she would have been in the same place as this quy. This is the worst type of ignorance and bigotry because it is perpetrated by one's self at their own people.

  • Name: Veronika
    Date posted: 5/11/2010 10:47:42 AM
    Hometown: Vienna

    Comment:

    the first thing I think, when I find out an actor is gay? what a loss for us girls! his sexual orientation doesn't stop me from swooning at the next rerun of any of his movies. so maybe the author hasn't met a lot of people like me but I'm glad that Kristin Chenoweth answered on my behalf.

  • Name: Peter Engel
    Date posted: 5/11/2010 2:10:31 AM
    Hometown: New York NY

    Comment:

    When Michelangelo Signorelli started "OutWeek" about 20 years ago, he unleashed a subset of self-loathing gays eager to validate themselves. They consider themselves being "out" as reason enough to make judgment on others. Unfortunately, some of them -- like this Setoodeh character -- have media outlets to propagate their sad, limited worldview, drenched in self-loathing. What's encouraging is the reaction of most people to the article; no one really cares abput this stuff any more except religious fundamentalists and a small circle of gossiping queens. Thank you, Kristen Chenoweth!

  • Name: conqueror
    Date posted: 5/10/2010 11:18:54 PM
    Hometown: victoria, canada

    Comment:

    i'm glad to see that someone who is famous, stood up and gave the author slap in the face. i am gay, and didn't even know who groff was until i saw glee. to know that he is gay is great. the more it is talked about, and shown that your career isn't going to tank when pursuing commercial success outside of the theatre community is a good thing. shame on the author for being a narrow-minded man. i'm sure he is going to have to eat some crow after this

  • Name: erin
    Date posted: 5/10/2010 10:19:48 PM
    Hometown: melbourne

    Comment:

    Chenowith: 1. Newsweek: 0. Take that, bigot!

  • Name: Jerry12
    Date posted: 5/10/2010 8:24:37 PM
    Hometown: Floral Park

    Comment:

    The fundamental problem with saying that gay male actors cannot play a strait male part is faulted by the dozens, if not hundreds, of gay male actors that have played strait males over the past entire twentieth century. You just did not know they were GAY. The comment only means that the speaker is a bigot.

  • Name: Mary
    Date posted: 5/10/2010 4:53:18 PM
    Hometown: Cape Coral, FL

    Comment:

    I saw him playing Jerry Lewis a few years ago. For the first time in my life, thanks to Sean Hayes performance, I liked Lewis. Wait a minute, that must mean Jerry Lewis is gay!

  • Name: Lane
    Date posted: 5/10/2010 9:45:07 AM
    Hometown: nyc

    Comment:

    seems as though Setoodeh was carrying his own biases into the article. very unfortunate and not true.

  • Name: JK
    Date posted: 5/9/2010 10:36:49 PM
    Hometown: Galveston

    Comment:

    Ramin Setoodeh's condemnation of "gays playing straight" was indeed missing a few factors. As a few mentioned before me, there have been some successful examples of this in the past (Hudson, Grant, etc.), but there aren't any modern examples to prove Setoodeh wrong. As long as the only instances are when "femme" actors sit for obligatory interviews for the "outing-of-the-month" cover stories, Setoodeh seems right on target ... if only by default. But, why is this so? Every "queen" can sit in a theater or watch evening television and pick out the homos - straight acting or not, out-of-the-closet or not. The biggest reason they don't come out - and the reason Setoodeh can preach his fact-deficient message is because their audiences are extremely bigoted, and thusly, we have no modern day Rock Hudson's to prove him wrong. Of course, "we" also have to deal with our own bigotries, like anti-femme bigotry among our straight-"acting" brethren. Let's open THAT can of worms!!!

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