I know that Scott Thompson is openly gay. I don’t know anything about the others from the troupe, though. Was Scott the only gay member? I’d heard from someone that they were under the impression that all five members (Scott, Dave Foley, Mark McKinney, Kevin McDonald, and Bruce McCullough) were gay, though I can’t find a cite to support anything, one way or the other.
Dave Foley has been married for some time, whatever that means to people.
It’s my impression that Mark McKinney is bi. And Bruce McCullough? Well, he’s named Bruce, ain’t he? Kevin MacDonald just seems to obvious to be anything but straight.
This appears in the second article down. It’s entirely possible that a few of them are very different in their private lives I suppose, but it seems like the author of the article assumes Scott Thompson is the only gay one.
Whatever the groups sexuality, they’re wicked funny.
They seemed to enjoy dressing up as women an awful lot. That was the main reason I initially thought they were all gay (I thought that was their schtick - the gay troupe of skit comedians).
But when I came to realise that Dave Foley pretty much definitely wasn’t gay, I saw my assumption was likely inaccurate.
What is this obsession with the sexuality of actors? And what is with this juvenile and derivative “well, they do _________ in the course of their work, so they just must be gay!” thing? Actors act, which by definition means playing roles, sometimes those roles require costumes and hey, guess what, in comedy, (and drama) there’s a long tradition of drag/crossdressing.
The fact that an actor dons the garb of the opposite gender in order to play a part is about as indicative of their personal sexual orientation as the way that they sip a cup of coffee.
This “Is X gay?” or “You know, X is gay, I heard it from a guy who knows a friend who said he saw him at a party one time…” schtick is getting really, really old.
The reason the Kids and the Pythons dressed up as women is because they wrote sketches with female characters in them. That’s all. In both cases, when they needed actually attractive women who didn’t need to be funny, they used real women.
And I think, in the case of the Kids in the Hall, the fact that three of them are or have been married is a pretty good indication that they aren’t gay. I know it isn’t always conclusive, but they aren’t typical phony showbiz guys.
Shaken out, rubbed out, vigorously discussed with attention to hedonism…
On a slightly more serious note, am I the only one more than slightly annoyed by the expression “gone [sexuality]”? I can’t put my finger on it, it just seems so … dismissive.
By that logic, just about every major actor to appear on TV or in the movies or on stage must be gay. Transvestitism has a long, honorable history in theater and its various incarnations.
My favorite has always been John Denver doing drag on the Muppet Show (as Grandma whilst singing “On Grandma’s Feather Bed”).