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This blog contains a highly addictive substance. Its side effects include: drooling, fainting, and an inability to stop staring at him

LL

jueves, 28 de noviembre de 2013

Tiger of the Week

Professionally, Wentworth Miller ’95 had a pretty good year. An actor best known for his role on the Fox television series Prison Break, Miller wrote the screenplay for Stoker, a thriller that hit theaters in March and received good reviews. His second screenplay, The Disappointments Room, is scheduled to begin filming next year. But Miller’s most notable piece of writing may have been the 120-word letter he wrote in August to decline an invitation to the St. Petersburg International Film Festival in Russia.
“Thank you for your kind invitation,” Miller began. “As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes. However, as a gay man, I must decline.”
Out magazine, which recently named Miller its Newsmaker of the Year, wrote that there “have been many powerful coming-out statements, but few as elegant and considered as Miller’s letter.” He went on to criticize the Russian government for denying its LGBT residents “their basic right to live and love openly.” But the story didn’t end there. At a Human Rights Campaign event in September, Miller spoke about his difficult teenage years, including a suicide attempt at age 15, sharing his story in the hope that it would encourage others to seek help.


7 comentarios:

morena39 dijo...

deseandole (de corazon !!...), siempre lo mejor !!!...
es un buen "tio"!!...

Anónimo dijo...

Hola Morena!

Si, totalmente, fíjate que la misma universidad lo felicita por su Coming Out y su activismo. Y que siendo escritor, ya de dos guiones, su "mejor escrito" fue el que le hizo a la organización del festival ruso, "However, as I´gay man, I´must decline"...

Saludos!
Caro.

Anónimo dijo...

carol vc é gay, se for tudo bem, mas respeite nossos comentarios sobre o went ok amamos ele e muito, não é gay e prontooooooooo

Anónimo dijo...

vc parece que quer ter espaços só para vc e a morena, o blog não é teu pelo que sei, então respeite nossos comentarios, para mim o went não é gay, se vc acha que é paciencia, mas para mim não é gay ok

Anónimo dijo...

Wentworth Miller Comes Out: Ellen DeGeneres, Rose McGowan, Matt Bomer Offer Support

By On Top Magazine Staff
Published: August 23, 2013

Ellen DeGeneres, Rose McGowan and Matt Bomer are among the celebrities offering support to Wentworth Miller after he came out gay.

The 41-year-old Miller publicly came out gay in the course of declining an invitation to attend a film festival in Russia.

(Related: Wentworth Miller declines Russian film festival invite; says he's gay.)

“I'm proud of Wentworth Miller for speaking out in support of equality,” Ellen DeGeneres tweeted to her more than 21 million followers. “Russia doesn't know what they're missing.”

“Well done, Wentworth Miller. Bravo,” messaged Neil Patrick Harris.

Rose McGowan added: “Happy for Wentworth Miller.”

Amaury Nolasco, who worked with Miller on Fox's Prison Break, also tweeted his support.

“I applaud my boy, Wentworth Miller's courageousness. I'm proud of you brother, for standing up for what you believe in. Enough is enough!” he wrote.

Matt Bomer, the openly gay star of cabler USA Network's White Collar, told E! News that he was “really proud” of Miller.

“Wow, I think it's really bold and incredibly classy how he came out and did it. I am really proud of him. It's very reflective of his amazing character,” Bomer said.

http://www.ontopmag.com/article.aspx?id=16203&MediaType=1&Category=22



Anónimo dijo...

Matthew Bomer Calls Wentworth Miller's Gay Revelation 'Classy'

August 23, 2013 08:06:36
The 'White Collar' actor says that Miller was 'really bold and incredibly classy' as he revealed his sexual preference in a letter to the director of a Russian film festival.

Matthew Bomer Calls Wentworth Miller's Gay Revelation 'Classy'

Actor Matthew Bomer is one of many celebrities who support Wentworth Miller after he came out of the closet on Wednesday. Speaking to E! News during Heineken U.S. Open kickoff party at PH-D at Dream Downtown, New York, on Thursday, August 22, the "White Collar" actor said nothing but praises to Miller.

"Wow, I think its really bold and incredibly classy how he came out and did it. I am really proud of him. Its very reflective of his amazing character," he commented. Speaking of better changes concerning LGBT issues in the U.S., the Neal Caffrey depicter said, "I hope all these laws continue to pass but we still have a long way to go."

Miller recently revealed his sexuality as he declined an invitation to attend a film festival in Russia amidst criticism faced by the country in regards to its treatment to LGBT community. "Thank you for your kind invitation. As someone who has enjoyed visiting Russia in the past and can also claim a degree of Russian ancestry, it would make me happy to say yes. However, as a gay man, I must decline," the "Prison Break" actor wrote.

After the news broke out on Wednesday, some celebrities took to Twitter to write supporting messages. "I'm proud of Wentworth Miller for speaking out in support of equality. Russia doesn't know what they're missing," Ellen DeGeneres said. "Little behind on the news: Good for Wentworth Miller!!! #courage," Andy Cohen added.

WWE wrestler Darren Young who recently came out as gay wrote, "Congrats 2 Wentworth Miller on living his life to the fullest now #beproud!! Big step 2 take. Not easy but well worth it!" Jesse Tyler Ferguson said, "So proud of #WentworthMiller. Coming out can be hard & scary but coming out to send a message of tolerance is heroic."

© AceShowbiz.com

http://www.aceshowbiz.com/news/view/00063431.html
Read more: http://www.aceshowbiz.com/news/view/00063431.html#ixzz2nQROElQ4


Anónimo dijo...

Somes sentences of Wentworth Miller, Speech his Coming out at HRC Dinner Gala, September 7, 2013:


I wasn’t born in this country. I didn’t grow up in any one particular religion. I have a mixed race background, and I´M GAY...

Like many of you here tonight, I grew up in what I would call "survival mode"...

I gave thousands of interviews. I had multiple opportunities to speak my truth, which is that I was gay, but I chose not to. I was out privately to family and friends, to the people I’d learned to trust over time, but professionally, publicly I was not. Asked to choose between being out of integrity and out of the closet, I chose the former. I chose to lie, I chose to dissemble...

Fear and anger and a stubborn resistance that had built up over many years...

Also, like many of you here tonight, growing up I was a target. Speaking the right way, standing the right way, holding your wrist the right way. Every day was a test and there were a thousand ways to fail. A thousand ways to betray yourself. To not live up to someone else’s standard of what was acceptable, of what was normal. And when you failed the test, which was guaranteed, there was a price to pay. Emotional. Psychological. Physical. And like many of you, I paid that price, more than once, in a variety of ways.
The first time that I tried to kill myself, I was 15. I waited until my family went away for the weekend and I was alone in the house and I swallowed a bottle of pills. I don’t remember what happened over the next couple of days, but I’m pretty sure come Monday morning I was on the bus back to school, pretending everything was fine. And when someone asked me if that was a cry for help, I say no, because I told no one. You only cry for help if you believe there’s help to cry for. And I didn’t. I wanted out. I wanted gone. At 15.
‘I am me’ can be a lonely place, and it will only get you so far...

I became a member and proud supporter of the Human Rights Campaign, and it was via this community that I learned more about the persecution of my LGBT brothers and sisters in Russia...

I thought if even one person notices this letter in which I speak my truth, and integrate my small story into a much larger and more important one, is worth sending. I thought, let me be to someone else what no one was to me. Let me send a message to that kid, maybe in America, maybe someplace far overseas, maybe somewhere deep inside, a kid who’s being targeted at home or at school or in the streets, that someone is watching and listening and caring. That there is an ‘us,’ that there is a ‘we,’ and that kid or teenager or adult is loved, and they are not alone.

I am deeply grateful to the Human Rights Campaign for giving me and others like me the opportunity and the platform and the imperative to tell my story, to continue sending that message, because it needs to be sent, over and over again, until it’s been heard and received and embraced. Not just here in Washington State, not just across the country, but around the world, and then back again. Just in case. Just in case we miss someone.

Look the Video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hzURem24MQU&list=PLX1POuU_cQQzswuQrU9m_nNvnjYyVcwOi


Estamos orgullosas de tu Coming Out Went!

Caro.

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