In a recent interview with GaydarRadio.com, famed romance author Jackie Collins revealed that actor Matt Bomer may have been turned down the role of Superman in 2006 simply for being gay.
“Matt
Bomer, who is the most gorgeous guy..” she said. “..was up for the role
of Superman. He had not come out of the closet but people in the know
knew he was gay. He lives down the street from a friend of mine. She
knew, and I knew. His audition tape went in and they called up the
agent. Somebody didn’t like him and told them he was gay. They said,
‘No, no. We can’t cast you’. The reason he didn’t get cast was because
he was gay.”
Collins’ claim comes under strange circumstances. After all, the director of 2006′s Superman Returns, Bryan Singer, as well as the film’s writers Michael Dougherty and Dan Harris,
are all openly gay. What’s even more strange is that Bomer went on to
be cast as the caped crusader in a Prius commercial in 2009.
Matt Bomer is best known for his leading role in USA’s White Collar, which had a successful run from 2009 to 2012. He’s also appeared alongside Justin Timberlake in 2011′s In Time , run from Leatherface in 2006′s The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, and stripped for nearly everyone’s pleasure in this year’s Magic Mike.
He came out perhaps the most publicly in February of this year,
although he’s made no real effort to disguise it. He has thanked his
partner Simon Halls, along with his three children, on multiple
occasions and on multiple television shows. Jackie Collins equates
Bomer’s failure to secure the role of Superman to simple celebrity
politics.
“I think it should change but there are women out there
who want to worship somebody,” she said. “If Justin Bieber said he was
gay, he’d lose all his little girl fans. It’s a sad fact of life. So a
lot of them get married, have a couple of kids and pretend to be
straight.”
Bomer’s denial in Superman Returns proves that the
overall system in Hollywood still has its share of grey areas. While
most consider it to be the epicenter of liberal-minded actors and
actresses, Matt Bomer’s case shows it is still a place where marketing,
economics, and what women want determine the roles actors are
given. Jackie Collins’ comments do seem to make the most sense. After
all, it would be odd to imagine someone like Arnold Schwarzenegger or
Jason Statham as gay given the type of audiences they’ve earned. With
the amount of idolatry Superman represents, it’s fair to lump him into
the same category and with a similar audience (albeit a bit geekier).
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