LOUD & PROUD: Where Are All The Bisexual Men In The Entertainment World?

One section of the LGBT community is still pretty invisible.
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Over the past two weeks, HuffPost UK has been celebrating the broad range of LGBT culture in the world of British entertainment as part of our Loud & Proud series. However, while we’ve discussed the great strides in how gay, lesbian and trans people are represented in the media, it’s very apparent there’s one section of the community who are still pretty much invisible in showbiz - bisexual men.

A quick straw poll around our office had us really scratching our heads trying to think of openly bi males in the entertainment industry, or current on-screen representations of them. ‘Made In Chelsea’ star Ollie Locke was the only name that instantly sprang to mind, while one member of the team also remembered ‘EastEnders’ featured bi character Danny Pennant - played by Gary Lucy - a few years back. That was it.

So why is there a lack of bi men in the spotlight?

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Ollie Locke is one of the very few openly bisexual men in the limelight
Anthony Devlin/PA Archive

Wayne Dhesi, founder of LGBT charity RUComingOut, believes it is due to the wider perceptions of bisexuality in society. “It’s not specific to the showbiz world,” he tells us. “A lot of it is about how we perceive the world. If we see a guy with a girl, we perceive them as straight. If you see a guy with a guy, we see them as gay. Unless that person tells you otherwise, you don’t know they’re bisexual, it’s easier to think they’re gay.” This confusion of what bisexuality is, is something that Metro Showbiz Editor and Guilty Pleasures columnist, Andrei Harmsworth, agrees with. “From a straight perspective there is a tendency to view bi and gay in the same way because straight people probably don't spend huge amounts of time evaluating gay life,” he says. “They likely just hear a guy has slept with another guy and that gets put in the gay bin.”

But it is not just the straight community that have preconceived notions of bisexuality. “From inside the LGBT community, there is a tendency for gay people to be sceptical about bi people,” Andrei says. “Often bi people are scoffed at like they haven't fully accepted being gay.” This expectation that bisexuals are still dealing with internal shame and will later come out at gay, is how jokes such as “bi now, gay later” have become part of the discourse associated with bisexuals among the LGBT community.  And while Wayne explains there are often instances where people borrow the term ‘bisexual’ as a stepping stone on their journey of discovering their sexuality, he admits it can have an adverse effect. “That doesn’t do the bi community any favours if they are the only stories you hear about bi people,” he explains. “If they’re the only times people are hearing about being bi, then obviously society is going to think that’s what it is.”

Wayne thinks this is to do with the lack of bi stories that are told on screen. He says: “The fact that some people don’t think it’s an actual thing people identify as is ridiculous. But you can see why, because you don’t see many bi characters in TV programmes or films, so what are we supposed to think unless we meet bi people in everyday life and get to hear their stories and experiences?”

While TV soaps have led the way telling certain LGBT stories and casting openly gay actors, homophobia is still a widespread problem in Hollywood. Andrei believes this is the reason why we rarely see films about bisexual characters, or openly bi actors cast in straight roles.

“As we know there are almost no openly gay men in leading straight roles which underlines filmmaker’s uneasiness with gay stars,” he says. “Hollywood kind of operates from that straight perspective, that any actor who has slept with a man must be gay. For actors there is a risk of them being typecast forever more of only getting gay roles. This is mainly down to an antiquated school of thought that men want to be film stars and women want to sleep with them. Therefore, directors seem paranoid that there will always be too much association with an actor's real personal life for them to be believable on screen, which of course is nonsense.”

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James Franco has played with speculation about his sexuality
Larry Busacca via Getty Images

However, in recent months, we have seen Hollywood stars Sacha Baron Cohen and James Franco claim to be a “bit gay”. The latter is about to star as a gay porn producer in ‘King Cobra’ -  a film about the murder of a gay porn baron - and he addressed theories about his own sexuality in a recent interview, admitting to being a “gay cock tease”. He told New York Magazine: "There is a bit of over-focusing on my sexuality... and so the first question is, why do they care? Well, because I'm a celebrity, so I guess they care who I'm having sex with. But if your definition of gay and straight is who I sleep with, then I guess you could say I'm a gay cock tease.” He continued: “It's where my allegiance lies, where my sensibilities lie, how I define myself. Yeah, I'm a little gay, and there's a gay James."

But while this could be seen as a progressive step, Andrei suggests it could be damaging to our understanding of male sexuality. “I think straight stars who make jokes or mock speculation about their sexuality and play the fop like James Franco or David Walliams whilst funny are ultimately unhelpful,” he explains. “You could argue they are bringing the notion of sexual fluidity to the masses, the flip side is it risks perpetuating the idea that being gay or bi is all just a joke. It suggests if there is some truth to their actions, they are so unnecessarily uneasy with it and they need to turn it into the ridiculous for people to consume or process it.”

James may have neither confirmed or denied reports about his sexuality, but his refusal to define it is in line with a current movement away from traditional LGBT labels. When Tom Daley came out in 2013, he revealed he was in a relationship with a man, but was still attracted to women. Likewise, when George Shelley opened up about his sexuality in a candid YouTube video earlier this year, admitting he’d had boyfriends and girlfriends, he was also careful not to label himself as bisexual. “I’ve been reading a lot of speculation online as to whether I’m gay or straight or bi, and it’s all these labels and it’s a little bit old fashioned,” he said at the time. “That’s why I’m not going to label it myself because it’s not something I feel I can label.”

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George Shelley decided not to label his sexuality when he admitting he'd had boyfriends and girlfriends
Gareth Cattermole via Getty Images

RuComingOut’s Wayne Dhesi believes this shunning of labels is particularly prevalent when someone is attracted to both genders, as it paints them as being in the centre of the spectrum of sexuality, when actually they may consider themselves to lean more to one side or another. “It’s quite a binary term,” he says. “To say you identify as bi, is being bang in the middle - you can understand why people would say, ‘that’s not me.’ Did George not use the term bi because bi men are ostracised and singled out by the gay community and the straight community? Or it may be because he doesn’t feel it represents him, and is still on his journey discovering who he is.”

Despite George not labelling his sexuality, many media outlets were quick to state he was bisexual when they reported on the news. It could be argued this lack of understanding makes it harder for celebrity men to come out as fluid or bisexual, compared to those who are gay - something which Wayne seems to believe.  

“Labels make the press’s job easier,” he explains. “To say someone is gay, or has had a lesbian affair is very easy. It’s a lot harder to write a gossip piece when you’re having to first of all educate yourself about what a binary gender is.” However, he does not perceive any such actions as active biphobia. “It’s laziness, and not willing to educate yourself on the massive spectrum of gender and sexuality is all about - that’s not what sells tabloid newspapers,” he continues. “But while it isn’t conscious, that doesn’t mean it is any less harmful.”

PR expert Denise Palmer-Davies, who is a director of Borne Media PR and Management, also claims the media can sometimes be cynical of bisexuals, believing how they define their sexuality has been managed so not to damage their careers. “The media are harder on those that come out as bi,” she says. “It’s often assumed to be a commercial decision – a cover for being gay. They seem to have a suspicion that they are playing a cynical game in order to capture both gay and straight markets.” This was certainly true when Tom Daley told fans he still fancied women, despite being in a relationship with Dustin Lance Black. Many claimed it was simply a way of ensuring he didn’t lose the affections of his army of lucrative female fans, having established himself as a pin-up for teenage girls, as well as making sure he kept a big-money endorsement deal with sports brand Adidas.

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Tom Daley said he still fancied girls when he came out, but is now in a committed realtionship with Dustin Lance Black
Gareth Cattermole via Getty Images

The treatment and invisibility of bisexual and fluid men in the media is also in stark contrast with their female counterparts. There are many more openly experimental famous women, with the likes of Miley Cyrus, Cara Delevingne, Kristen Stewart, Lily Rose Depp, Mel B, Lindsay Lohan and Jess Glynne all admitting to having had relationships or sexual experiences with both genders. Sexism plays a key part in when we try to understand why this might be, with lesbianism having become highly festishised in our patriarchal society. Metro Showbiz Editor Andrei explains: “It could be argued that lesbian and bi women face less hostility from the straight male arena as they form a sexual fantasy and that is welcomed by straight men. It's viewed as hot, fearless - that their sexuality is fluid, that they are not really gay and that they might be straight again one day.” Citing Lindsay Lohan as an example, he continues: “I don't think people think of her as gay, bi or straight - just as sexual and wild, which has its own allure.”

Wayne argues that men are not encouraged to experiment in the same way. “When you look at what society tells us is right, the idea of what a lesbian is, is very different to what a gay man is,” he says. “I don’t necessarily think that male gayness is [fetishised] to the same extent really. The idea of being on the spectrum of sexuality, society welcomes women more to do that than men.”

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Lindsay Lohan has had relationships with both genders
Chris Pizzello/AP

So what has to change in the showbiz world in order for us to have more bisexual male role models? TV has a big role to play in this, having led the way on many other LGBT issues. Reality shows such as ‘Big Brother’ and ‘The X Factor’ have opened our eyes to many different people from different walks of life, and allowed us to get to know the everyday people behind the labels. Featuring more bisexual contestants would be a huge leap forward in educating mass audiences. Likewise, soaps have a long history in being progressive in the LGBT movement. Introducing bi characters who aren’t defined by their sexuality, and telling real, honest stories about them would also do wonders in helping break down preconceptions. Then, once we have helped generate understanding and informed opinions on the topic of male bisexuality, maybe more stars will be brave enough to speak publicly about their experiences.

HuffPost UK is turning Loud & Proud. Over the next fortnight, we’ll be is 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’ll be 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.

LGBT TV Stars You Should Know About
Rylan Clark-Neal(01 of30)
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Best known for? Competed on ‘The X Factor’ in 2012, before winning ‘Celebrity Big Brother’ in 2013. He’s since gone on to launch a successful presenting career, fronting ‘Big Brother’ spin-off show ‘Bit On The Side’, and filling in on ‘This Morning’. He recently announced news of his own chat show for Channel 5.

Other info: Rylan married partner Dan Neal in November 2015, who he met when the former police officer was a housemate on ‘Big Brother’ and he was presenting ‘Bit On The Side’.

He says: "I get loads of messages from 16-year-old gay lads saying they’ve come out to their parents because of me. I didn’t realise going on [‘X Factor’] would help someone else other than myself."
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RuPaul(02 of30)
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Best known for? US drag star who is host and head judge on reality show ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’. During the 1990s, Ru was known in the UK for his appearances on the Channel 4 series ‘Manhattan Cable’.

Other info: Despite being one of the most recognised faced in the LGBT community, RuPaul does not consider himself a gay icon, saying: “That's for someone else to consider me that.”

He says: “Regular, straight pop culture has liberally lifted things from gay culture as long as I can remember. And that's fine, because guess what? We have so much more where that comes from. Take it!”
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Laverne Cox(03 of30)
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Best know for? Plays transgender character Sophia Burset on ‘Orange Is The New Black.

Other info: A transgender woman herself, Laverne has been lauded as a trailblazer for the trans community and won many awards for helping to spread awareness.

She says: “I think transwomen, and transpeople in general, show everyone that you can define what it means to be a man or woman on your own terms. A lot of what feminism is about is moving outside of roles and moving outside of expectations of who and what you're supposed to be to live a more authentic life.”
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Sue Perkins(04 of30)
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Best known for? She is one half of TV duo Mel and Sue, who have been on our screens for nearly 20 years, hosting the likes of ‘Light Lunch’ and ‘Great British Bake Off’.

Other info: Sue revealed her sexuality in 2002, when she went public with her relationship with Rhona Cameron. She later had a five-year relationship with journalist and author Emma Kennedy, and is now dating presenter Anna Richardson.

She says: “Being a lesbian is only about the 47th most interesting thing about me.”
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Alan Carr(05 of30)
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Best known for? The stand-up comic hosts his own Channel 4 chat show, ‘Chatty Man’.

Other info: Alan has claimed he doesn’t believe he is a role model for the gay community, as he doesn’t consider his sexuality to be a focal part of his shows, saying: “I think what better equality for gays than that?

He says: "I wouldn't change myself for the world. It's made me a lot of money, being this camp."
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Nick Grimshaw(06 of30)
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Best known for? Having hosted the Radio 1 Breakfast Show since 2012, last year saw him become an ‘X Factor’ judge. He’s also presented the likes of ‘T4’, ‘Sweat The Small Stuff’, ‘The One Show’ and ‘Children In Need’.

Other info: Grimmy publicly addressed his sexuality for the first time in 2012 during an interview with The Guardian, where he described Frank Ocean as his perfect man.

He says: “I never felt as an adult that I even had to come out. I only feel like you’re coming out if you’ve been married, or pretend you were straight. I never felt I had any false thoughts in my brain. I didn’t have three kids and then go, ‘Guess what, guys?’ There were no bulletins to be delivered because it was all I ever knew.”
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Russell Tovey(07 of30)
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Best known for? Playing Steve in BBC Three sitcom ‘Him & Her’ and as George Sands in drama ‘Being Human’. He’s known starred in the likes of ‘The Job Lot’ on ITV2, and had small roles in BBC One dramas ‘The Night Manager’, ‘Sherlock’ and ‘Doctor Who’.

Other info: When Russell came out to his parents aged 18, it caused a huge rift with his father, who said he would have made him undergo treatment to “fix the problem” if he’d known earlier. They later reconciled after the birth of Russell’s nephew.

He says: “The only thing I can give to young gay people is that when I was growing up there were no role models that were blokey, that were men. Everybody was flamboyant and camp, and I remember going, 'That's not me, so even though I think I am gay, I don't think I fit into this world.”
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Luisa Bradshaw White(08 of30)
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Best known for? Plays Tina Carter on ‘EastEnders’, having previously starred in ‘Holby City’ and ‘This Life’.

Other info: She has been with partner Annette Yeo for over 15 years, and they are parents to two children. The pair tied the knot last year.

She says: “People ask me if I want to be a gay role model and I say no, I just want to be me and if I do help people to come out then that’s fantastic.”
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Jussie Smollett(09 of30)
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Best known for? As well as a singer, he currently stars as Jamal Lyon on ‘Empire’. The character has been praised for breaking down the taboos of homosexuality in the hip hop industry.

Other info: Jussie confirmed he is gay during an interview on ‘The Ellen DeGeneres Show’ in 2015, telling her: “There is without a doubt, no closet that I’ve ever been in, and I just wanted to make that clear.”

He says: “There is a responsibility for me as a man, as a man of color, as an artist to be myself and make things that reflect me and that are true. That’s what matters. It’s about all of us, not a particular group of people. I hope to make an impact on society and the world and as a human being, that’s what’s real and what I want to do.”
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Graham Norton(10 of30)
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Best known for? Host of his own BBC Friday night chat show, as well as the commentator for the broadcaster’s coverage of the Eurovision Song Contest.

Other info: He was named the most influential gay Irish person in The Guardian’s World Pride Power List in 2014.

He says: “The only thing that makes me sad is that the most stick you get is from gay people. It’s always been the same, that there’s this sort of weird self-loathing in the gay community. But it’s heartbreaking.”
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Anna Richardson(11 of30)
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Best known for? Fronts Channel 4 shows including ‘The Sex Education Show’, ‘Supersize vs Superskinny’.

Other info: Anna was in a heterosexual relationship for 18 years before she began dating Sue Perkins in 2014.

She says: “The sexual adjustment is easy. The emotional adjustment is something else. As you know, a relationship with a woman is far more intense. This I have learnt. It’s an emotional tsunami.”
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Paul O’Grady(12 of30)
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Best known for? For years Paul was the man behind colourful drag alter-ego Lily Savage, who was a TV regular in the 80s and 90s. Nowadays, he hosts his own ITV chat show, and animal shows ‘For The Love Of Dogs’ and ‘Animal Orphans’ for the broadcaster.

Other info: Paul was in a long-term relationship with business partner Brendan Murphy until his death in 2005.

He says: “I just find it very disturbing that in Russia, in a so called civilised country, gay men and women are being beaten to death in the street and it’s perfectly acceptable. And that gay men and women are afraid to leave their homes because they are going to be abused and they are going to be beaten up and imprisoned… they are going to be killed. What does that smack of? It smacks of the Jews in Nazi Germany and it has got to be stopped now.”
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Kieron Richardson(13 of30)
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Best known for? Playing Ste Hay on ‘Hollyoaks’, who made history for being the first gay character living with HIV to be featured on a British soap.

Other info: The actor came out to fans on live TV, during an appearance on ‘This Morning’ in 2010, having accepted his sexuality four years earlier. He is now married to long-term partner Carl Hyland.

He says: “The best thing about ‘Hollyoaks’ is, and I know people joke about this being the ‘gayest show on television’, but there’s so many different gay characters and they’re all so different.”
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Clare Balding(14 of30)
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Best known for? Clare presents horse racing coverage for the BBC and has also hosted many other great sporting events, including the Olympics. She also presents ‘Sports Personality Of The Year’ and her own chat show for BT Sport.

Other info: She is married to BBC Radio 4 continuity announcer and newsreader Alice Arnold. They tied the knot in 2015, having previously formalised their relationship with a civil partnership in 2006.

She says: “I’m very aware that it’s important for people to see a couple in the mainstream. But it can get a bit exhausting. I don’t walk down the street saying, ‘Hi! I’m gay!’ At the same time, I want to be one of the people who helps. What am I meant to do? I don’t know what the bloody answer is.”
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Craig Revel-Horwood(15 of30)
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Best known for? Dancer and choreographer Craig has served as a judge on ‘Strictly Come Dancing’ since its first series in 2004.

Other info: Craig admitted he was bisexual between the ages of 17 and 26, and “flitted between men and women quite a lot”. He was also married to a woman, Jane, who left him for another man.

He says: “We should encourage that sort of thing [same-sex partners on ‘Strictly’], absolutely. There are competitions throughout the world that have same-sex couples, you just have to decide who goes backwards, darling!”
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Rebecca Root(16 of30)
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Best known for? Star of ‘Boy Meets Girl’, where she is the first transgender actor in a lead transgender role in a British sitcom.

Other info: Rebecca began her transition in 2000, aged 34 and received the full support of her family. Having spent time gigging on the standup circuit, Rebecca also works as a voice coach, specialising in transgender voice adaptation.

She says: “We’ve had cisgender actors in trans roles for too long. It’s about time we had trans actors in trans roles.”
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Gok Wan(17 of30)
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Best known for? Having worked as a stylist, Gok fronted his own show ‘How To Look Good Naked’, before moving on to host ‘Gok’s Fashion Fix’ and ‘Fearne & Gok: Off The Rails’. He also pops up on ‘This Morning’ as one of their fashion experts.

Other info: Gok was placed at number six in the Guardian’s World Pride Power List 2014.

He says: “What you see on the telly is an act. I camp it up for the cameras. In real life I’m just a normal geezer. The only difference is I dress flamboyantly. But I love fast cars, football and lager.”
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Jane Hill(18 of30)
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Best known for? A regular face on the BBC News presenting team, fronting broadcasts on the BBC News Channel, BBC 1 O’Clock News and BBC Weekend News.

Other info: Jane came out publicly came out to her colleagues in 2009, during an interview with the corporation’s in-house magazine, Ariel. She is now in a civil partnership with her partner of seven years, TV camera woman, Sara Shepherd.

She says: “When I was growing up, I had terrible struggles with who I was,' she said. 'It was hugely difficult for me. I didn't know any lesbians. I didn't see any gay women in the media in magazines. It wasn't talked about it, it wasn't part of the conversation. What I think is truly incredible is that I now look in a magazine and I see Cara Delevingne, this beautiful model, just completely relaxed about who she is and not trying to hide it, not being secretive.”
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Antony Cotton(19 of30)
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Best known for? Plays one of soap’s most-loved gay characters, Coronation Street’s Sean Tully.

Other info: Antony is a patron of the LGBT Foundation and The Albert Kennedy Trust, which supports young LGBT people who are homeless, living in a hostile environment or in housing crisis.

He says: “I get a lot of stick from people who say, and these are people who are 21 years old, 'you've put the gay cause back 21 years.' Or they say 'you're a disgrace to this village'. You'd be surprised how many kids say that to me."
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Lena Waithe(20 of30)
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Best known for? Plays Denise on Netflix series ‘Master Of None’.

Other info: Lena’s character was originally written as a straight, white woman, but bosses decided to change Denise’s background to make her more like her.

She says: "I don't know if we've seen a sly, harem pants-wearing, cool Topshop sweatshirt-wearing, snapback hat-rocking lesbian on TV. I know how many women I see out in the world who are very much like myself. We exist. To me, the visibility of it was what was going to be so important and so exciting."
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Riley Carter Millington(21 of30)
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Best known for? Became the first ever transgender soap character to be played by a trans man, when he joined the cast of ‘EastEnders’ as Kyle Slater in 2015.

Other info: His casting was hailed as "the biggest thing to happen for the transgender community in Britain this decade" by journalist and transgender activist Paris Lees.

He says: “I have now fulfilled my two biggest dreams - to be living my life as a man and to be an actor.”
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Michelle Hardwick(22 of30)
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Best known for? Plays Vanessa Woodfield on ‘Emmerdale’, and previously played Lizzie Hopkirk on hospital drama ‘The Royal’.

Other info: Michelle spoke about her sexuality for the first time in 2013, revealing she had been in a relationship with a woman for 18 months. She and music teacher Rosie Nicholl later married in April 2015.

She says: “When I was in ‘The Royal’, the majority of our audience were older and I would have been nervous of revealing too much.”
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Derren Brown(23 of30)
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Best known for? TV mentalist and illusionist, whose Channel 4 shows include ‘Mind Control’, ‘Trick Of The Mind’ and ‘The Experiments’.

Other info: Derren came out as gay in 2007, having spent most of his early life trying to project himself as asexual. He claimed to have hid behind his Christianity to reject certain feelings and subjects, and tried to ‘train himself out of’ homosexuality.

He says: “Sexuality is often tied in with something you feel you lack in yourself and look for in others.”
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Andrew Scott(24 of30)
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Best known for? Plays Jim Moriarty in the BBC series ‘Sherlock’, and also featured in James Bond film ‘Spectre’, as villain Max Denbigh.

Other info: He ranked at number 22 in The Independent's Rainbow List 2014.

He says: “Mercifully, these days people don't see being gay as a character flaw. But nor is it a virtue, like kindness. Or a talent, like playing the banjo. It's just a fact. Of course, it's part of my make-up, but I don't want to trade on it. I am a private person; I think that's important if you're an actor. But there's a difference between privacy and secrecy, and I'm not a secretive person.”
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Bobby Cole Norris(25 of30)
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Best known for? Appearing on ‘The Only Way Is Essex’.

Other info: He previously dated co-star Harry Derbidge.

He says: “In this day and age, it makes me very sad that people even have to come out. It would be a much nicer society if it wasn’t even necessary.”
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David Ames(26 of30)
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Best known for? Plays Dominic Copeland on ‘Holby City’.

Other info: He’s previously admitted that he felt pressure people feel to be thin in the gay community, having slimmed down from 16 stone.

He says: “As a gay man playing a gay man, there’s definitely an element of myself in Dominic’s personality, because one thing I wanted to do with Dominic is to have fun with him.”
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Evan Davis(27 of30)
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Best known for? Presents BBC Two’s ‘Newsnight’ and ‘Dragons’ Den’, and previously acted as an economics reporter for the 10 O’Clock News.

Other info: Having come out to his parents after he graduated from university, he publicly announced he was gay during an interview with Gay Times magazine after he joined the ‘Newsnight’ team in 1998.

He says: “I'm very proud of my gayness. But there is lots I wouldn't want the press to write about me... it is a matter of regret that being gay is the most interesting thing about me.”
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Daniel Brocklebank(28 of30)
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Best known for? Currently plays vicar Billy Mayhew on ‘Coronation Street’, and has also starred as Sam Gosse in 1998 film ‘Shakespeare In Love’, for which he won a Screen Actors Guild Award for his performance.

Other info: Daniel came out to his parents aged 15, but after he received a bad reaction from them, and suffered bullying at school, he went back in the closet. He then came out publicly after starring in ‘Shakespeare In Love’.

He says: “Having a progressive vicar in 'Coronation Street' provides the opportunity to educate people and give them a different point of view. The church won’t survive if it doesn’t update. Religion should be all-loving. Why would someone gay of my age join the church when all you get is backlash?”
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Tituss Burgess(29 of30)
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Best known for? Plays Titus Andromedon on ‘Unbreakable Kimmy Schmidt'. Titus is also a singer and songwriter, and has starred on Broadway.

Other info: Tituss hit back at criticism his character was too much of a stereotype, claiming: “I know people like Titus. If a person exists, it’s fair game.”

He says: “It’s important for me to talk about my life as a gay man, not gay themes per se, in my work. I try to write in a perspective that’s both a representation of [myself] but also doesn’t alienate those from any other walks of life. I only write about it because I have it in me; I don’t shy away from it, but I don’t write about it necessarily to promote it in any way.”
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Dr Christian Jessen(30 of30)
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Best known for? TV doctor on Channel 4’s ‘Embarrassing Bodies’.

Other info: Christian made a TV show for Channel 4 in 2014, entitled ‘Cure Me, I’m Gay’, which investigated possible "cures" for his homosexuality. He was fueled to make the show after being astonished by one patient’s request to make him straight.

He says: “There is a massive prejudice around being a gay doctor. It was different for me as I have never been ‘obviously’ gay and so people are often surprised when they find out. I have been exposed to off-the-cuff homophobic comments from other doctors, especially when being trained in sexual health.”
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