
Tweaking the plot of My Best Friend’s
Wedding, your character in Made of Honor acts
as his best girlfriend’s Maid of Honor so
that he can sabotage her wedding. Has it always been
your dream to play the “Julia Roberts” roles?
They’re a lot of fun to do. Growing up, I never
had the chance to go to the movies much, so everything
that I would see was probably on PBS. They would do
classic comedies -- a lot of Cary Grant, Errol Flynn stuff
-- and all the slapstick really appealed to me. We really
wanted to pull from that.
Do you have a Rupert Everett-like gay best friend?
[Laughs] He’s not like Rupert Everett,
but yeah, I definitely do. He’s a good guy, but it
took him a long time to really get out of the closet.
Everyone around him knew, and then when he finally
came to terms with it and said, “Yeah, I’m
gay,” we were like, “Finally! Good for
you.” You could see the release in him where he
wasn’t having to pretend anymore and was
becoming his own person.
We’re not talking about T.R., are we?
No, no, no. It’s somebody else.
Um, OK. In Made of Honor’s opening flashback
scenes, you eerily look 10 years younger.
Well, the great thing about technology now is that they
can go in and take the lines away with computers,
which was comforting. [Laughs] It was kind of scary,
too, because I was like, Oh God, I don’t want to go
back to that time in my life when I looked so young.
I’m very happy to be the age that I am, so to
go back and see those scenes was a little unsettling.
Your character often gets mistaken for gay, which
also happens to your character in 1989’s
Loverboy. Has that happened to you in real life?
Sometimes now, yeah. I try not to read the blogs, but it
seems everybody’s convinced I’m gay --
especially since Versace. But the great thing with
sexuality and being gay is that there’s really no
stereotype anymore.
Meanwhile, you’re a cyclist, you race cars, and
as seen in Made of Honor, you’re good at
basketball. We get it, Patrick -- you’re butch.
What are some of your more feminine hobbies or qualities?
[Laughs] That’s a good question. I
haven’t really thought about it. Oh, man, I cry at
the drop of a hat. Everything makes me very emotional.
I try not to be a metrosexual or get too caught up in
grooming, but in my house, with my wife and everything,
there’s always stuff going on with products and
things like that -- not that that’s feminine;
that’s just sort of modern society.
How can you avoid grooming when you’re so known
for your hair?
I know, but I hate dealing with my hair. I just like to
put on a hat to go outside.
At 17, you dropped out of high school to play David
in a San Francisco production of Torch Song
Trilogy. Did you or your parents have concerns about
your taking a gay part so early in your career?
No, not at all. Doing theater, the gay community was
always incredibly kind to me -- never aggressive or
predatory, always supportive and nurturing. That was
the great thing about being a part of that show.
Especially being so young, there was a lot of concern only
because I was out there on my own and I’d never
been in the big city before, but everybody looked
after me.
Growing up in Maine, were you teased because of
your interest in the arts?
Oh, yeah, I got a lot of teasing early on -- a
lot of comments and abuse -- because I was performing
in a vaudeville troupe. In a small town, people can be
aggressive that way just because they don’t
understand and they’re threatened by someone
doing their own thing. It actually taught me a lot and
helped me in the long run, because then I stopped worrying
about what people thought of me.
Have you been aware of your gay following since
your breakout success in 1987’s Can’t
Buy Me Love?
Yeah, there was some stuff that [celebrity photographer]
Greg Gorman and I shot that sort of opened things up,
and everybody was telling me about that. It’s
good fun. It’s flattering.
Did you or your agents have any hesitations before
accepting a three-episode arc as Will’s
sportscaster boyfriend on Will & Grace,
your first major foray into TV?
No. When I sat down and talked with the
show’s creators, they were like,
“Here’s what we want to try to do,” and
I was like, “Yeah, I’m in for
that.” It was fun. I loved that character, and
certainly that role and being on that show helped turn
things around for me profoundly.
Opposite another straight actor, Eric McCormack,
was it challenging to make a gay romance appear believable?
No, because you just play a relationship -- two people
attracted to each other. You just trust that and
don’t worry about it. The situation reveals
that you’re gay; you don’t have to play gay to
be gay.
As a Versace model, not to mention all the shirtless
scenes you have in Made of Honor, do you
feel pressure to constantly hit the gym?
Yeah, I work out, but I’m not fanatical about it.
I’m not the kind of guy who can be completely
cut-up; I just want to stay in shape and be healthy
and lean. But there’s always the pressure of having
the perfect male body. At the same time, I’ve
got way too much going on to worry about it. You just
have to go, “Here’s my body,” and hope
people like it.
On People magazine’s “Sexiest Man
Alive” list, you came in second to Matt
Damon in 2007, George Clooney in 2006, and Matthew
McConaughey in 2005. How’s it feel to be that
close to the title for three years?
At least I’m consistently in the top two. And
I’ve been there longer than the other guys, so
that’s fine.
You’ve got to be in it to win it!
Yeah, that’s true. Maybe I need to work out more.
Which male celebrity do you find sexy?
Johnny Depp, certainly, without question. There’s
just something about his individuality, his humility,
and his sense of style. He’s also immensely
talented and intelligent, and that’s all very sexy.
You recently signed with Avon to be a spokesmodel for a
new cologne. If a fragrance should reflect the
qualities of its celebrity endorser, describe that scent.
Hopefully it’s just honest and comforting. You
want a smell that feels good, feels clean, and
doesn’t feel overwhelming. I want something
that’s subtle and fresh, modern but classic at the
same time, and that’s what we’ve been
working toward.
What’s the oddest thing you’ve done with
your character’s action figure from
Disney’s Enchanted?
It’s not so much what I have done but what my
friends have done with the doll -- and then sent
pictures of to my cell phone. They’ve put the
doll in various sexual positions with other dolls -- with
Barbie and Ken.