News, Reviews & Commentary on Gay and Bisexual Men in Entertainment and the Media

Dumbledore

To Make a Long Story Short ... Dumbledore gets campier, NPH spins the wheel, and more!


  • Today in Gay Irony: Out Sex and the City creator Darren Star's next pilot is based on a YouTube series called We Need Girlfriends.
  • Harry Potter himself has noted that since he was outed, Dumbledore (aka Michael Gambon) has been "camping it up" on the set.
  • Neil Patrick Harris pops up on Wheel of Fortune next week at Radio City. The look on the girl's face in that picture? You know he's totally pinching her tushie.
  • ABC News, whose history with gay matters isn't exactly stellar, has been spotted in Alabama filming people's responses to the sight of two men kissing in public. How about people's responses to the sight of two anythings kissing in public? Eew...

The Week in Gay Geek: YAOI-Con, Wonder Woman, My Sims and more

  • A weekend with girls who like boys who like boys:
    I spent the last weekend checking out YAOI-Con, which Publishers Weekly says showed that the genre is more than a niche. I had fun, though the two-plus hour commute from the East Bay to the convention hotel in San Mateo limited the time I spent there. There was plenty of cosplay (I can't remember when I last saw so many wigs at a single gathering) including one guy who dressed as a 300 Spartan. (And, yes, he should be seen in public dressed like that.) Unfortunately, it turns out that BL Twist, the anthology magazine from a San Francisco publisher won't be happening after all. Still, I left with a pile of Yamada Yugi books, which should make for some nice escapist reading.

  • I'd love to be a fly on the wall for that Fruits Baskets pitch meeting:
    Variety asks if it's Tokyopop's turn to be licensing properties to movie studios and includes a list of the publishers top properties. Too bad none of Toykopop's gay-themed properties, like the quirky romance Off*beat, isn't on the list.
  • Free to be virtual me:
    Overall, the Sims video games have been praised for allowing players a lot of freedom to create a character that's whatever the player wants them to be. Now, the Wii version, My Sims allows even greater freedom by dropping gender restrictions on a character's appearance.

  • Harken back to the days when Wonder Woman wanted to be Emma Peel:
    DC announced that a collection of Diana Prince: Wonder Woman comics, the run from the relevant era when Diana gave up her powers and the Amazons left for another dimension. I'll be keeping my fingers crossed this sells well enough to justify a second volume that, hopefully, includes Samuel R. Delany's contribution to the era.

  • Link of the week:
    Want to show off your Dumbledore Pride? Someone's already selling t-shirts for the occasion.

So what does GLAAD think of the outing of Dumbledore?

Harry Potter fansite The Leaky Cauldron has an interview with GLAAD director Sean Lund who discussed JK Rowling's recent announcement that Dumbledore is gay.

Lund compares the potential impact of Rowling's revelation to the romance between Willow and Tara on Buffy the Vampire Slayer:

"Joss Whedon, who revealed in a very gradual way and in a way incredibly authentic for that character that she was gay and introduced her girlfriend Tara, and the two of them became a really wonderful couple on that show. That was a really perfect example of how to do this sort of storytelling and how to create these characters right...
I think very much with how J.K. Rowling has brought Dumbledore out, I think that sort of quality of maintaining the authenticity and maintaining the truth of the character really goes a long way in terms of making sure people stay invested in those characters."

Lund also finds an optimistic perspective in Rowling keeping the information out of the books, saying that, at this point, it doesn't really matter. Even if it's not made clear in the books, anyone who reads them will view Dumbledore as a gay character thanks to the widespread media coverage:

"...for many readers who are coming into these stories now, they are coming into a series of books where the character of Dumbledore will always have been known to be gay...
It sends a message that heroes and people who we respect, and people that we look up to, come in all different shapes and sizes. And I think for the readers of the books, for the people who will see the movies in the future, I think that's a tremendously important message for them to carry forward."

Finally, Lund emphasizes one of the greater messages of Rowling's books is one of general inclusiveness, a lesson, that if understood fully, leads to LGBT tolerance:

"I think one of the most important themes of the Harry Potter books is J.K. Rowling's message about making sure that we treat all people, whether they are the same as us, or whether they are different than us, with dignity and respect.

The comments section is overwhelmingly positive but one commenter made a very interesting observation, one that certainly adds some additional depth to Dumbledore even if that's all based in fan speculation:

"She has now given Albus’ DoB as 1881 (no birthday yet), meaning that the events surrounding Gellert’s visit and the deaths of Kendra and Ariana are conceived of as happening in 1899, when Oscar Wilde was wandering Europe after his release from Reading Gaol before his death the following year. In other words, a very different world from our own, folks.
By the time homosexual activity between consenting adults was leagalised in the UK in 1967, Dumbledore would have been 86 and Hogwarts’ headmaster for some years."

J. K. Rowling Outs Harry Potter's Dumbledore as Gay

It's true Harry Potter fans — J.K. Rowling has outed Albus Dumbledore, the Headmaster of Hogwarts as gay! We've got all the details over on the mainpage!

J. K. Rowling reveals Albus Dumbledore is gay.

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