Premium Content:

'Mean Girls' Star Comes Out

Mean Girls Damian

Daniel Franzese, known for playing ‘Mean Girls’s gay teenager Damian, has come out in a heartfelt open letter to the character he played ten years ago.

- Advertisement -

Franzese wrote about how it meant a lot to him to play a gay character that “the audience laughed with rather than at“, how Hollywood typecast him into flamboyant, stereotypical gay roles

The letter, published on IndieWire, reads in part:

“You were proud of who you were; I was an insecure actor.  You became an iconic character that people looked up to; I wished I’d had you as a role model when I was younger. I might’ve been easier to be gay growing up.

“When I was cast in the role of “Damian” in ‘Mean Girls,’ I was TERRIFIED to play this part.  But this was a natural and true representation of a gay teenager – a character we laughed with instead of at.

“When I first became an actor, I wanted to play lots of roles – Guidos, gangsters and goombahs were my specialty.  So, would I be able to play all of those parts after portraying a sensitive, moisturizing, Ashton Kutcher-loving, pink-shirt-wearing kid?  I was optimistic.  Hollywood?  Not so much.  I was meeting a “gay glass ceiling” in casting.

“It wasn’t until years later that grown men started to coming up to me on the street – some of them in tears – and thanking me for being a role model to them. Telling me I gave them comfort not only being young and gay but also being a big dude. It was then that I realized how much of an impact YOU had made on them.

“Now in 2014 – ten years later – looking back, it took YOU to teach me how to be proud of myself again.  It’s okay if no one wants to sit at the table with the “art freaks.”  Being a queer artist is one of my favorite things about myself.

“My friends and family all knew the truth but now it’s time everyone does. Perhaps this will help someone else.”

Franzese is going to be the Celebrity Grand Marshal at the Portland Gay Pride Parade. You can read the letter in its heartfelt entirety here.

Latest

On This Gay Day | In 2013 the Queen pardoned Alan Turing

Turing is credited with being the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.

The Year in Review: May 2024

It was a time of book bans, defamation cases and political bickering.

‘Changing Ends’ second season arrives on ABC TV in 2025

Dive back in the teenage years of comedian Alan Carr.

Department of Health issues fresh warning over mpox cases in Western Australia

15 cases of mpox have been reported in WA since October, with most acquired locally, in the gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men population. 

Newsletter

Don't miss

On This Gay Day | In 2013 the Queen pardoned Alan Turing

Turing is credited with being the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.

The Year in Review: May 2024

It was a time of book bans, defamation cases and political bickering.

‘Changing Ends’ second season arrives on ABC TV in 2025

Dive back in the teenage years of comedian Alan Carr.

Department of Health issues fresh warning over mpox cases in Western Australia

15 cases of mpox have been reported in WA since October, with most acquired locally, in the gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men population. 

Leading WA health organisation was asking all potential employees about their HIV status

Advocates say it's an example of how stigma about HIV is perpetuated.

On This Gay Day | In 2013 the Queen pardoned Alan Turing

Turing is credited with being the father of theoretical computer science and artificial intelligence.

The Year in Review: May 2024

It was a time of book bans, defamation cases and political bickering.

‘Changing Ends’ second season arrives on ABC TV in 2025

Dive back in the teenage years of comedian Alan Carr.