LOUD & PROUD: Alan Carr Reveals Homophobic Attacks He Receives For Being 'Camp'

We held a video panel to conclude our series on gay culture.
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Alan Carr has revealed the most hurtful comment that was ever made about him, during an exclusive panel conversation with Huffington PostUK.

Watch Alan Carr in conversation above, as part of our Loud & Proud panel, alongside Phillip O’Ferrall, Dominic Treadwell-Collins and Ben Thompson 

Alan was speaking as part of our Loud & Proud series, when he explained that he and fellow mainstream entertainer Graham Norton had been singled out and described as “to blame” for young people being targeted for bullying.

He remembered: “Someone tweeted this thing to me, and I wish I’d never clicked on the link.

“A focus group said me and Graham Norton were grotesque, over the top, effeminate, and that’s why people were being beaten up at school, that is the most hurtful thing.

“I’m choking up thinking about it because I was that kid who bullied at school… to say for a minute that I would bring that about someone else… I was so angry and it’s not fair.

“The gay scene used to be 'I am what I am' and we have to be careful it’s not, ‘You’re not who I want you to be.’”

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Alan Carr reveals some of the worst slurs on his personality have come from within the gay community
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Alan, whose quick wit and rapport with celebrity guests on his chat show have made him one of the country’s top TV stars, made the point that his profession demands a certain style from its presenters that doesn’t necessarily represent who he really is.

“I get a lot of stick for being camp and stuff, but you’ve got to remember, I’m in the light entertainment business, like Frankie Howerd and Kenneth Williams… If they turned up and did ‘Countryfile’ like that, I’d think, well this is inappropriate. I do exactly what Keith Lemon does - muck about, be silly, a bit rude, that’s what I’ve got to do.

“I don’t represent gay men when I do that, I have a remit to be offhand.

“I don't always feel like being camp, but telly is unbelievably camp. ‘X Factor’, ‘Strictly’, ‘Britain’s Got Talent’ are all unbelievably camp, someone orange coming down the stairs and saying, ‘Hi, it’s Saturday night. That’s camp.

“Sometimes, people look for role models, and it’s the wrong place. TV is heightened. It’s not normal. Camp is filling a remit, and if you weren’t like that, you probably wouldn’t be on the telly, you’d work in a bank.”

In the concluding part of our Loud & Proud series, we invited four leading characters across the entertainment and media industry to sit down to discuss their personal experiences of being gay in mainstream culture. 

Alan added that some of the strongest homophobia he had received was from within the gay community, and Dominic Treadwell-Collins agreed.

“There’s a lot of gay-on-gay bullying, I find. I remember going out with a group of gay guys to a restaurant and I asked for the special of the day, and everyone said, ‘ooh no one likes a fat gay.’ What am I doing wrong? And      that we have to be careful of, that we don’t start attacking ourselves.”

Alan described being gay as “like being in the world’s biggest girl group” when it comes to being subjected to peer pressure and judgement. 

He added: “Telling a gay person to be more straight is the most homophobic thing you can do. Being told, ‘Change the way you act, act more butch, more straight, it’s so homophobic.”

Dominic voiced the need to have all sorts of different role models across the fields of entertainment. 

"It’s about having loads and loads of different role models on the television," he added. "I was bullied mercilessly at school, I remember praying every night until my fingers were raw that I wouldn’t be gay, because I didn’t want to be different. Nobody growing up wants to be different to the norm, and our job is to show everyone, the whole spectrum on the TV."

Phillip O'Ferrall added that characters like Alan had inspired him, but agreed other programmes were needed to appeal to all sorts of viewers, many of them shy to reveal their "otherness".

He said: "It’s fine to be who are you, and shining a lens on that was very important for me. As young people come out, in whatever capacity that means, you have to have something to identify with, if you don’t identity with the Carry On films… a good spread is the most important thing."

HuffPost UK has turned Loud & Proud. We're celebrating how gay culture has influenced and, in turn, been embraced by all fields of entertainment, inspiring cinema-goers, TV audiences, music-lovers and wider society with its wit, creativity and power of expression.

Through features, video and blogs, we're championing those brave pioneers who paved the way, exploring the broad range of gay culture in British film, TV and music and asking - what is left to be done? If you’d like to blog on our platform around these topics, please emailukblogteam@huffingtonpost.com with a summary of who you are and what you’d like to blog about.

Tap the first picture to open the slideshow:

10 LGBT Rising Stars
Samira Wiley ('Orange Is The New Black' actress)(01 of10)
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"I was just taught that love is the most powerful thing." (credit:Megan Mack via Getty Images)
Adore Delano (Drag performer/singer)(02 of10)
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"My voice is not only for singing, I speak about body image issues, HIV rights, and many other topics that should be addressed when you have a platform like mine." (credit:Gabe Ginsberg via Getty Images)
Mary Lambert (singer/songwriter)(03 of10)
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"Hearing women of all ages sing 'She Keeps Me Warm' at the top of their lungs - they don’t give a shit about what pronoun it is.

"They get that it’s about love, so I think that’s really given me perspective. I think people can deal with it, and they get it."
(credit:Paul Morigi via Getty Images)
Todrick Hall (YouTube star/singer)(04 of10)
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"When you’re a person that’s trying to be a public figure and you’re black and you’re gay and for some people it’s a little too much for them to handle...

"I think there are a lot of people who are afraid to be who they are and if I have to sacrifice a little bit of fame and a little bit of success because I’m being 100 percent truthful with who I am, hopefully that will create a paved way for someone else."
(credit:Robin Marchant via Getty Images)
Ines Rau (model)(05 of10)
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"It's all about what's in your heart. Gender and sexuality do not make you who you are. Your heart and actions do!" (credit:Instagram/Ines Rau)
Riley Carter Millington ('EastEnders' actor)(06 of10)
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"I want to help make a difference. [Being trans] is a part of me and I want hopefully to make other people feel like they can come out, like they can feel that they’ve got support." (credit:Peter MacDiarmid/REX/Shutterstock)
Angel Haze (rapper)(07 of10)
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"Sexuality is like having a favorite colour. It doesn’t rule you, you know? And I should be able to do whatever and whoever I want at any given time." (credit:Brian Killian via Getty Images)
Joe Lycett (stand-up comedian)(08 of10)
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"Gender is fluid and I think it’s absolutely fascinating, so I talk about that a little bit in my show. I think it’s important some people do publicly go, 'Hey, I’m not straight and I’m not gay. I’m somewhere in the middle and that’s OK.'" (credit:David Fisher/REX/Shutterstock)
Ruby Tandoh (foodie/'Bake Off' finalist)(09 of10)
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"To all the bros who hate social media, who pit it against 'real life' - I never would've had the courage to be me without Twitter's queer queens." (credit:Richard Saker/Rex/Shutterstock)
Troye Sivan (YouTube star/pop sensation)(10 of10)
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'[Being gay] been a non-issue for me. But the same thing that’s been a blessing in my life can lead someone to suicide. Every time I hear about an LGBTQ kid committing suicide, it’s just so much frustration. I just think about lost potential because a parent wasn’t accepting or a friend wasn’t, and it ended an LGBTQ kid’s life.

"I really want the parents of my audience to see these videos actually. And realise that their reaction influences their kid’s entire experience. Showing them two sides of the coin: this is how it could go or this is how it could go. It’s up to you."
(credit:Frazer Harrison via Getty Images)