Tom hollander gay
Chloe Sevigny
Chloe Sevigny has revealed she treated her Feud co-star Tom Hollander enjoy a “gay top friend” before realising he had a wife.
The actress admitted she consideration Tom was homosexual after watching him play a male lover man in smash TV show Pale Lotus.
“I was like, ‘He’s my new gay leading friend,’ until I realised that he had a wife and kids,” she told Variety. “And I was enjoy, ‘Oh no!’ I’d been pushing up against him. He must have been like, ‘She’s the biggest flirt I’ve ever encountered in my life.'”
In Feud, Tom plays American novelist Truman Capote, while Chloe plays his ally C.Z Guest.
“One of the wonderful things about Feud was, because I was playing a gay bloke, the relationships with all the ladies in the cast benefited,” Tom told Variety. “Here I was essentially playing the gay finest friend, so it created this relaxed environment where we were all having fun.”
He added that he changed his view of Chloe throughout filming as well.
“She comes across as a tough, straight-talking New Yorker,” he said. “There’s a no-nonsense streetwise-ness to her.
The White Lotus Season 2 Stars Tom Hollander and Leo Woodall on That Episode 5 Cliffhanger
(Photo by HBO)
Spoiler alert: The tracking reveals plot points from the fifth episode, “That’s Amore,” of HBO’s The White Lotus season 2.
In the second season of HBO’s The White Lotus, creator Mike White’s Emmy-winning satire of wealthy people on vacation, heiress Tanya McQuoid (Jennifer Coolidge) hits it off with a cavalcade of middle-aged gay men led by British ex-pat Quentin (Tom Hollander), and her assistant, Portia (Haley Lu Richardson), really hits it off with Jack (Leo Woodall), Quentin’s nephew/errand boy. So, of course, the ladies happily grab the gentlemen up on their offer to abscond away from their Sicilian luxury hotel to explore Quentin’s manse in another part of Italy.
But the fifth episode, entitled “That’s Amore,” brings up several red flags about the story Quentin and Jack have told them. First, there’s the fact that Jack “forgot his wallet” at dinner and forces Portia to dine-and-dash (in heels). And then there’s Tanya’s discovery: while walking around the complex at n
Tom Hollander portrayed the same-sex attracted character Quentin in the second season ‘The Pale Lotus’, and he recently addressed his sexuality.
Aside from the hit HBO series, the 56-year-old British thespian is playing another queer role in Ryan Murphy’s upcoming TV show ‘Feud: Capote vs. The Swans’, where he is starring as American novelist and screenwriter Truman Capote.
Related:FX Drops Intriguing Trailer of Recent Series ‘Feud: Capote vs. The Swans’
Not to talk about , he also portrayed other real-life gay men, including British diplomat Guy Burgess, as well as Oscar Wilde’s lover Bosie Douglas. In an interview with Vanity Fair, Hollander talked about his experience describing gay characters, stating:
“I contain been asked to compete several gay characters over the years […] People keep asking me to do it because apparently when I play these characters, it’s believable. And that’s, in a way, where my job begins and ends.”
“For some reason, who I am, who I am as a person allows me to present as gay. Yeah, sometimes I do display as gay […] I’m somebody that walks into a room and there are some people who walk into the room, you go, ‘Well, th
Tom Hollander: Bringing Truman Capote to Life
SHOW NOTES
On the season nine premiere, Dan speaks with British actor, Tom Hollander, who plays the infamous literary genius in the novel TV series “Feud: Capote vs. the Swans.” Tom shares his memories of growing up in Oxford, getting a big break on “Absolutely Fabulous,” joining cinematic history in “Pride and Prejudice,” playing the murderous villain in smash hit “The Alabaster Lotus,” and how he explored the inner workings of a controversial figure during his monumental downfall.
TRANSCRIPT
Tom Hollander: You can’t worry about all of it, you can only worry about the next moment. You play that moment and then you play that moment. Just concentrate on that, and then all the moments strung together will be like a string of pearls and there’ll be a necklace at the end of it, but all you ever contain to worry about in conscious moment is the thing that you’re doing and then the next moment will emerge.
Dan Rubinstein: Hi, I’m Dan Rubinstein, and this is The Grand Tourist. I’ve been a design journalist for nearly 20 years, and this is my personalized guided tour for the worlds of fashion, art, architecture, meal, and travel, all the elements