"So now, let the record show this—I self-identify as gay. And does that really matter anymore? As a young man, I needed a young man in Hollywood to say that..."
Charlie Carver, who along with identical twin brother Max, rose to prominence on Desperate Housewives until we all realized how hot they were on Teen Wolf.
The 27-year-old actor is continuing to come into his own, recently getting his menage on with James Franco and Zachary Quinto in I Am Michael. Part of that coming into his own process involved coming out about his sexuality, which he did in a series of very thoughtful and well-worded posts on Instagram.
Carver was inspired by an anonymous quote he stumbled across one day--"Be who you needed when you were younger"--and he took the sentiment to heart:
A photo posted by Charlie Carver (@charliecarver) on
Pt 3: After the first episode of television I shot went to air, it became clear to me that I was at least no longer anonymous. For the first time, I found myself stopped on the street, asked to take a picture by a complete stranger - part of the job I had willingly signed up for. Fame, to whatever degree, is a tricky creature. In this day and age, particularly with the access offered by social media, it demands that you be On, that you be Yourself, Always, in your work and to your fans. In this way, the distinction between public and private has become blurry, begging questions like "to what extent do I share myself? Do what extent do I have to?" When it came to this differentiation of public/private, I was of the opinion that my sexuality could stay off the table. While my Coming Out was very important for me, I wanted to believe in a world where one's sexuality was for the most part irrelevant. That it didn't "matter," or that at least it was something that didn't need to or ideally shouldn't ever have to be announced to a stranger, a new colleague, an interviewer. Even the words "Coming Out" bothered me. I took issue with them insofar as that "Coming Out" implied being greeted with attention, attention for something I would prefer to be implicitly just Human, an attribute or adjective that was only part of how I saw my whole self. I did not want to be defined by my sexuality. Sure, I am a proud gay man, but I don't identify as a Gay man, or a GAY man, or just gay. I identify as a lot of things, these various identifications and identities taking up equal space and making up an ever-fluid sense of Self. Furthermore, as an actor, I believed that my responsibility to the craft and the business was to remain benevolently neutral - I was a canvas, a chameleon, the next character. For the most part I had a duty to stay a Possibility in the eye of casting, directors, and the public. If I Came Out, I feared I would be limiting myself to a type, to a perception with limits that I was not professionally comfortable with. And I created in my imagination an Industry that was just as rigid in this belief as well.
A photo posted by Charlie Carver (@charliecarver) on
A photo posted by Charlie Carver (@charliecarver) on
*Swoon*--amirite? While coming out is becoming less and less necessary these days, it's still incredibly important, especially for celebrities and other people visible in the public space, in order to remove any remaining stigma or fear.
Not to mention, it also adds some new depth to all that Dethan Teen Wolf fanfiction.
As for Charlie, he's grateful for the outpouring of support he's received since his announcement:
\u201cBlown away by the support and love! It was not a secret to many, but I felt it necessary to share (until coming out is a thing of the past)\u201d