Showing posts with label Out magazine. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Out magazine. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

OUT Names Most Eligible Gay Bachelor On The Planet!

The results are in for this year’s Most Eligible Bachelor from OUT magazine. OUT provided a list of 100 of the most dateable gay guys on the planet and asked you to vote. And here are the results. Adam Lambert took the Top Spot as the Most Eligible Bachelor with a landslide of votes from his loyal fans (the No. 1 spot was held by Chris Colfer last year, who is at No. 6 in 2014). Chris Salvatore, at No. 2, is actually dating boyfriend Patrick McDonald (check out their adorable Instagram couple shots), so he may not be as available as previously supposed.

Actor Darryl Stephens easily took the No. 3 spot due to his stunning good looks and a fair amount of social media lobbying. There were several new faces that hooked hearts and minds, including androgynous male model Andrej Pejic (No. 10). For the first time ever, there's a politician in the lineup, Brian Sims at No. 5, with Israeli entrepreneur and party promoter Eliad Cohen, just in front, at No. 4. Surprisingly newly single Ricky Martin was nudged out of the Top 10 (landing at No. 11) and Jonathan Groff split his vote since many people voted for his Looking character, Patrick, rather than the actor himself.

Thursday, January 3, 2013

As Downton Abbey’s hot gay Villain, Rob James-Collier Finds Love and Redemption

Over its first two seasons, Downton Abbey has become a bona fide sensation. The show has been nothing short of a phenomenon, a runaway success for PBS, far outpacing in ratings that other popular period drama, Mad Men. As the world readies for the show’s third season, so, too, do the series legion of LGBT fans. This is the season in which that villainous gay footman-turned-valet, Thomas Barrow, experiences the tender love that his poor, neglected heart so craves and needs. Rob James-Collier, the actor behind the tumultuous Thomas, sat with OUT editor in chief Aaron Hicklin to discuss the upcoming season, his early days of acting, and playing gay in Edwardian England.
 
Season 2 ended with Thomas in the arms of the Dowager Countess, twirling around the dance floor at the Christmas party like a neuter content to spend his prime escorting ladies of a certain age to the ball. Season 3, however, is where it all changes for young Thomas. No one, of course, is more excited by this turn of events than James-Collier, who initially secured the role of Thomas with the understanding that it was a one-season deal. “My agent said, ‘Listen, you’ve got the part that everyone in town wants—he’s a villain, he’s a great role, the only bad thing is that he dies at the end of the first series,’ ” recalls James-Collier. But Thomas clicked with the audience, and his onscreen chemistry with his maid counterpart, O’Brien (a wonderfully surly Siobhan Finneran), was irresistible. “I gave it 110 percent and after the first couple of episodes Liz the producer came to me, and said, ‘We want you to stay on, will you?’ And I was, like, ‘Fuck, yeah.’
 
As James-Collier and the show moved into season 2, he has joked that his character’s sexuality became so muted that he called up creator Julian Fellowes, and asked, “Am I still gay?” Yes, as it turns out. In season 3, we get to see Thomas outed in a powerful sequences of episodes that James-Collier considers the best acting of his career. “It’s the series where we really get to grips with Thomas’s sexuality and the impact that must have had on him, being gay in Edwardian times,” he says. “If you’re including a gay character, there’s an onus and responsibility to at least show what the impact of the time will be on him, and of him on that time. Thankfully we’ve done that, and I’m so proud as an actor that I’ve been used to tell that tale.” 
 
A confrontation between Thomas and the butler, Mr. Carson, proves to be a high point, and one that confers uncommon dignity on the footman. “It’s a lovely, beautiful moment,” says James-Collier, clearly delighted by the opportunity to redeem his character. “If you were gay in those times, the fact that you’re even functioning, how you’re not completely fucked up by that, is beyond me.”
In spite of Thomas’ villainous nature on screen, James-Collier is the joker on set, and the one with the loudest mouth. “Most actors are really shy and insular creatures,” he explains. “I’ve just always been a dick.” He remembers his first day at acting class (he found it by consulting Yellow Pages), and realizing that he’d liberated himself. “We were doing these warm-up exercises, running around doing crazy things with our voices, and, rather than feeling embarrassed or stupid, I just felt that I’d come home,” he says.
 
Although not gay in real life, he says he has empathy for misfits and outsiders, perhaps because of his own atypical route to acting. Even now it’s clear that he can’t quite believe that he’s earned his place as an actor. He recalls sitting opposite Maggie Smith during the first read-through (“a proper pinch-yourself moment”) and feeling that everything out of his mouth sounded like wooden splinters. It can’t be easy playing the least lovable character on the show. When she arrived on set, guest star Shirley MacLaine greeted him with the words, “It’s you—the evil one! Why are you so evil?” The answers, apparently, are all in season 3.
 
 
Downton Abbey season 3 premieres this Sunday on Masterpiece on PBS.

Thursday, March 18, 2010

Out honored with national magazine award nomination

Out magazine has been named a finalist for the 45th annual National Magazine Awards, the preeminent awards for magazine journalism, sponsored by the American Society of Magazine Editors in association with the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.  
Out was named a finalist in the Photo Portfolio category for Jason Bell’s elegant “Out 100: School Days” photo collection and will compete with National Geographic, New York, The New Yorker, and W.
 
“We’re thrilled to be nominated in such a competitive category and among such outstanding company,” said Out Editor in Chief Aaron Hicklin. “This award reflects an incredibly ambitious portfolio of 100 people that was a true team effort requiring collaboration on every front, from photography to edit to design—a portfolio, moreover, that serves as an acknowledgement of the achievements of the LGBT community.”

Monday, April 6, 2009

Out magazine's 50 Most Powerful Gay Men and Lesbians


What a difference a year makes. The global economic crisis has pushed Democratic congressman Barney Frank to the top of Out magazine’s third annual list of America’s most influential gay men and woman. The 69-year old head of the House Financial Services Committee, who ranked second last year, has been a leading voice for banking reform in the wake of the financial crisis, as well as a prominent advocate for gay civil rights.

Others on the list include Ellen DeGeneres (#2), CNN news anchor Anderson Cooper (#3), media mogul Barry Diller (#8), and financial guru Suze Orman (#22). But what’s most striking is the number of new names on the list—17 in total—that reflect the growing visibility of America’s gays and lesbians. New names include MSNBC host Rachel Maddow (#4), the Oscar winning screenwriter of Milk, Dustin Lance Black (#25), Facebook co-creator Chris Hughes (#32), newly-out comedian and actress Wanda Skyes (#35), and Michelle Obama’s dressmaker Jason Wu (#44).


More information, including where to see the full list, after the jump.

“Barney Frank represents a remarkable American, not just for the crucial role he plays in determining how the stimulus money is spent, but in using his position to elevate the cause of gay and lesbian civil rights,” said Editor in Chief Aaron Hicklin. “In a year marking the 40th anniversary of Stonewall, his success—and that of the others on this list—reflects a growing consensus that all Americans deserve equal rights and protections.”

Frank is joined by a cadre of politicians and activists whose profiles have been given a boost by the Obama presidency. They include the controversial gay Episcopalian bishop V. Gene Robinson (#7), congresswoman Tammy Baldwin (#11), congressman Jared Polis (#16), and director of the Export-Import Bank Fred Hochberg (#12).

Also on this year’s list is Matt Drudge, the owner of the right-wing news-aggregating site Drudge Report. Although he has not publicly acknowledged his sexuality, the 42-year old journalist has enjoyed a long-term relationship with a male landscape gardener.

Editorial staff began assembling the 2009 list at the beginning of the year, basing their rankings on each candidate’s cultural resonance, political influence, media profile, and wealth. “For many of the most powerful gay men and women in America, sexuality takes a backseat to their career accomplishments, but we think their achievements deserve acknowledging,” says Hicklin.

The full Power 50 can be found at http://www.out.com/power50.