Michael c hall is he gay
Michael C. Hall said he identifies as “not all the way heterosexual” in a candid recent interview about his sexuality.
The Golden Globe–winning actor, who starred on the HBO series “Six Feet Under” as gay mortician David Fisher, has been drawn to playing LGBTQ characters throughout his career on stage and screen.
Speaking with The Daily Beast, Hall reflected on discovering his sexual fluidity in relation to some of his best-known roles, despite never having an “intimate” relationship with a bloke.
“I think there’s a spectrum. I am on it. I’m heterosexual,” he explained. “But if there was a percentage, I would say I was not all the way heterosexual.”
Playing the gender nonconforming emcee in “Cabaret,” Hall said, allowed him to “fling a bunch of doors wide open” in terms of his own sexuality, as he locked lips his co-star Michael Stuhlbarg every night.
“I think I have always leaned into any fluidity in terms of my sexuality,” he added.
Hall has wed three times. He married actress Amy Spanger, who starred opposite him in the Broadway musical “Chicago” in He famousl
Michael C. Hall Opens Up About His 'Fluid' Sexuality: 'I'm Not All the Way Heterosexual'
Michael C. Hall is opening up about his sexuality and past roles as LGBTQ characters.
The year-old actor got candid about how he's "not all the way heterosexual," while discussing his previous homosexual roles as David in Six Feet Under, the Emcee in Cabaret and Hedwig in Hedwig and the Angry Inch.
“I think there’s a spectrum. I am on it. I’m heterosexual. But if there was a percentage, I would say I was not all the way heterosexual," Hall said in an interview with The Daily Beast published on Friday. "I think playing the Emcee required me to fling a bunch of doors large open because that character I imagined as pansexual. Yeah, fancy I made out with Michael Stuhlbarg every night doing that show. I think I contain always leaned into any fluidity in terms of my sexuality.”
When asked if he had ever been in a sexual relationship with another man, Hall said he hadn't.
“I’ve never had an intimate relationship with a male. I t
Michael C Hall on death, dogs, depravity and Dexter: ‘It was fantastic to be ethically unbound’
Michael C Hall’s face is weirdly immutable – he looks no different now, at 50, from a decade or more ago, when he would loom down from giant posters as Dexter, the footloose serial killer. In fact, he looks pretty much the same as he did in Six Feet Under, playing David Fisher, right at the start of the century – he has one of those very structured faces, its features and angles carved so surely that there’s nowhere for them to disintegrate into.
Which is fortunate, since, in a highly rare move, Showtime has brought Dexter back to life after an eight-year hiatus, and what looked like an extinction event, back in Dexter: New Blood has more complexity and less puckishness, certainly, than the first two series. He’ll talk about that in a minute, but first, he says: “I have to just respond to this text very briefly. My wife and I, our dog is sick and she wants to form sure she’s OK.” He married Morgan Macgregor, a writer, in , after an elopement and brief marriage to his Dexter co-st
Don’t get confused by this latest story which has been reported wrongly by other sites.
Michael C. Hall, who played gay character David in Six Feet Under and a trans character in Hedwig And The Angry Itch, recently spoke with The Daily Beast about playing gay and his control sexual orientation.
Unfortunately, some sites are reporting on this interview as “Michael C. Hall Comes Out As Sexually Fluid.” But that is not true at all.
In the interview, Hall talks about what it meant to engage such a dynamic gay role in Six Feet Under.
“I think I was aware of the time we were in. I was also aware that David was a new kind of gay character on TV, film, or stage. He was a fantastic character and as wealthy and well-drawn as the larger world he existed within. I never lobbied to audition for any other part.
He then added, “Any role that you are in can pigeonhole you, but to be associated with a role as multi-dimensional as David was a relatively good thing.”
Afterwards, the conversation turned to Hall’s own sexuality and he menti