Gale harold gay

Gale Harold, best acknowledged as Brian Kinney from Showtime's Queer as Folk, has also appeared in numerous plays, films and television series such as Desperate Housewives and The Secret Circle. View for his latest film, currently in production, called The Being Experience. Photo by Robert E. Beckwith.

Gale Harold of Queer as Folk weighed in on what was once the most controversial character to portray.

Ilana Rapp: You gave us quite a scare when you had your motorcycle accident during your Desperate Housewives run. Has the accident changed you regarding how you feel about animation and your career?

Gale Harold: The accident was a definite mortality verify. Afterwards I had to re-think being from almost every angle. I learned how lucky I am not only to be alive, but to be surrounded by the wonderful people in my life who came to my side, looked after me and gave me an anchor to rely on. Their presence was fundamental in my recovery not only physically but psychologically. The places I went to were the worst and most terrifying I've ever experienced. I really believe that seeing the faces and hearing the voices of these people made it possible for me to find a way

GREG IN HOLLYWOOD

By Greg Hernandez on Jul 10, 2022 5:43 am | Comments (4) |

Today is Gale Harold’s 53rd birthday!

This fine actor’s portrayal of Brian Kinney on HBO’s Queer as Folk was one of the most sexy and delicious of any male gay ethics on television – ever.

Gale played another gay man in the film Kiss Me, Kill Me in 2015 and I was an extra in a scene in which he walked by me in a nightclub. So I like to say we did a scene together. Ha!

Around that time, Gale was asked about the challenges of homosexual love scenes for an actor: “I’m straight, but the personality was too important to me to muddle his world with my private life,’ he said. ‘As a nobody, I got away with that deflection. I think it may have helped to introduce Brian as a believable gay man. Maybe not. However it played, it’s been out of my hands for a long time”.

Many roles hold followed since the end of Showtime’s Queer as Folk 17 years ago. (Peacock premiered a hot new version last month with cast)) Gale recurred on Desperate Housewives and was a regular on such series as Hellcats, Va

As alter ego Brian Kinney, he's gotten leader in a nightclub, devirginized a 17-year-old boy, and shoved his tongue down dozens of men's throats-just another day at the office for Queer As Folk's Gale Harold.

Gale Harold is scared to out himself.... as a straight man. The impossibly gorgeous 31-year-old plays Brian Kinney, a smokin'-hot sex fiend who beds five men a week on Showtime's anal-positive, same-sex attracted sitcom Queer As Folk. Since the show began, Harold has given millions of hungry gay men (and women) a delicious taste of his naked body-we've seen scrotum and cotten-candy lips. He's gotten head in a nightclub, devirginized a sweet 17-year-old boy, and shoved his tongue down dozens of men's throats-some of the most graphic guy-on-guy activity ever seen on TV (Shaving Ryan's Privates not included).

So the first real question I ask the rising actor, when we met on a brisk afternoon at a quaint wine prevent in the West Village, was, appropriately, "Gay or straight?" He takes a bite of his goat cheese panini and points to my tape recorder, motioning me to lock it off. We remain in silence. He turns his head away, rests his square-toed brown boots on the window ledge, and c

Out of the Box Interview with Gale Harold

David: The premise of this clip is that the medium of television is stronger than most people ever understand, either when they’re watching it or when they’re in it. And when I started this film, years ago, it was to see the world through the eyes of people who were playing parts, where it used to be called “Playing Gay” before it became “Out Of The Box.” I always thought that playing a gay part, particularly for a non-gay actor, was going to coach you something, you were going to learn something that you couldn’t possibly know any other way until you inhabited that. There are a lot of parts prefer that, you perform a murderer, you play a healer, you learn something. So that’s how this all started. We’ll come to that in a minute. I’d prefer to start with where you started. You started growing up in Atlanta, am I right?

Gale: Yup.

David: First fifteen years of your life, you lived in a very, maybe the synonyms is constrained environment? It was defined by religion? Is that a unbiased statement?

Gale: To a certain degree.

David: Remember that I am cut out of this, so any