Jamie lee curtis gay


Thirteen minutes with Jamie Lee Curtis was not quite enough time to discover out why, even though it was "very important to me" to probe the sexuality of one of her characters, she's never considered the sexuality of her most enduring, Laurie Strode. I'm still curious. I still yearn to know. Jamie, if you're out there, if you're reading this, verb me. 

The day we spoke, Curtis, in signature no-nonsense mode, was fully immersed in a whirl of action at the media junket for her fresh whodunit film "Knives Out," which left precious time for contemplative states, Laurie Strode gay verb and cheeseburgers.

The esteemed "Scream Queen" is completing her instruct as she calls me, though "the last thing I'm thinking about is what I'm gonna eat." Eventually, however, I've got Jamie Lee Curtis thinking about that second she decided to make a character gay and no one ever really knew. Minutes into our twisty chat, Curtis, best known for roles in "A Fish Called Wanda," "Trading Places" and some movie called "Halloween," is reflecting on a role she seems very proud of: her portrayal of the schoo

Jamie Lee Curtis calls out transphobia from religious right in advocate award speech

Jamie Lee Curtis is fed up with the anti-gay bigotry.

The "Knives Out" star affirmed the community and took aim at religious conservatives while being honored as advocate of the year at Out magazine's Out celebration on Thursday.

"I pray that the homophobia and transphobia that is being championed in the name of religion by the right is exposed and silenced as erroneous by the noun of humanity that is the center of our gay and our trans community," Curtis told an onlooking crowd.

The event recognized trailblazers for the LGBTQ community and included appearances from fellow honoree Brandi Carlile, as well as Tan France, Dylan Mulvaney, David Archuleta and Trixie Mattel.

Curtis told the crowd that she wrote out her speech because she wanted to be very "specific" about what she had to say.

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"These are very dangerous times, and I'm very content to be in a room with people who are fighting the foremost fight we can fight," she said.

The "Halloween"

Jamie Lee Curtis is making a movie about stand-in moms at gay weddings 

Sara Cunningham, a mother from Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and founder of the nonprofit Free Mom Hugs, went viral last summer when she posted on Facebook that she would be a stand-in mom for people whose hold mothers refused to attend their weddings because of their sexuality. Now Jamie Lee Curtis has bought the rights to Cunningham&#;s memoir, How We Nap At Night, about how she came to terms with her son&#;s sexuality, according to the Washington Post.

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Curtis plans to make a movie about Cunningham. She spent three days in September with her family and was moved by her story, and posted a photo of herself and Cunningham together—which caused fans to speculate about a potential movie months before the news was revealed.

&#;I was moved by her journey,&#; Curtis tells the Washington Post. &#;And I continue to be thrilled as her movement is catching on. I hope to execute justice to her story and the story of so

We are two days after the Academy Awards and still feel the history-making reverberations of the historical wins of A24&#;s critically acclaimed multiverse fever dream family drama Everything Everywhere All At Once from Daniel Kwan and Daniel Sheinert (aka the Daniels). The film won seven Oscars from its 11 nominations. 

EEAAO was the most nominated film this year and broke numerous records and, in its retain way, disrupted a system that usually gravitates towards &#;prestige&#; cinema about Hollywood, a war, or something very European that doesn&#;t quite align with general movie-going audiences. EEAO won the Oscar for Foremost Picture, Best Director, Best Original Screenplay, Best Editing as well as three of the four acting categories. Actor Ke Huy Quan gave a stirring speech as he continued his &#;I didn&#;t go no where, you just havent been paying attention to me&#; awards run by winning Supporting Actor. Icon Michelle Yeoh finally got her due and made history as the first woman of Asian descent to defeat Best Actress and the seco