Jennifer beals is gay

When the original L Word launched, “which of these actresses are gay in real life” was a common question asked of the cast members at press junkets and interviews. It was a unlike time, then. Leisha Hailey was the only out lesbian in the main cast. Kate Moennig was also a lesbian but it wasn’t okay yet to say so, at least not anywhere vital or public or in print. Karina Lombard, Mia Kirshner and Laurel Holloman had all hinted at or embraced the bi-curious label at some direct, but both Laurel and Karina have since redacted the identification. Karina’s declaration hurt the most, perhaps, as she indicated that being on the present was what convinced her she wasn’t bisexual anymore. Laurel, who’d identified that way after having an exposure with another woman accompanying her part in The Incredibly True Adventures of 2 Girls In Love, eventually came to feel that that relationship was a one-off and it wasn’t right for her to endure identifying as bisexual.

The L Word: Generation Q, however, is a VERY homosexual cast. So we’ll receive through the first series and then move gayly onto the second!

Most recent update: May 2023

Here are the

Jennifer Beals Might Be "Super-Straight" but We'll Always Have a Crush on Her

While there's an entire generation that might recognize Jennifer Beals as the bombshell protagonist of 1983's Flashdance, there's a brand new... let's call it "Generation Q," for whom her name is synonymous with the one and only Bette Porter.

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From 2004 onward, Jennifer Beals cemented herself in the role of The L Word's strong, independent, fierce Dean Bette Porter who young fans wanted in matching parts to be and be with.

Which is why ever since Jennifer announced her return in The L Word: Generation Q reboot, fans have been eager to hold up with Bette a decade after we left her. 

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Now, she's single-handedly raising tween Angie (where is Mama T?), has left the art world to run for mayor, and is conclusion herself in the middle of a cheating scandal that's bound to provide us with salacious entertainment for the rest of the season.

But ever since the show first aired in 2004, fans have been curious about whether Jennifer Beals is gay like the sex-positive lesbian she play

Will We Ever See A Vertical Actor Playing A Gay Character Again

It is sometimes important, though. If you haven’t seen the movie Voices, in which Amy Irving attempts to play a Deaf person, it’s cringeworthy. Her ASL bruises the eyes.

In truth, the whole feature is such a mess that protests by the National Theater of the Deaf, the National Association of the Deaf, and a lot of empathetic hearing actors, got the film withdrawn from distribution during its initial run.

It still got released of video, and probably DVD, but it never completed its theatrical run.

You might say that well, yes, but it was bad acting. In an overall bad clip. However, until the film was finished, no Deaf people had seen a frame of it, and not a single one had a chance to comment on it, nor let anyone know how awful either Irving, or the whole storyline was.

I picked that as an example, because Irving is not, on the whole, a poor actress.

I don’t comprehend that she could ever have been made to watch like a native speaker of ASL, but she could have looked improve than she did, and she certainly could have been coached to come into view better than she did.

However, hiring a Deaf actress would have so

The L Word Generation Q

I just watched this latest season over the last few days. It took a little bit to get into it, but I did enjoy it in the end. As a gay bloke, I am still as in awe of Bette and Jennifer Beals as I ever was during the original series.

Some of the plot lines are a bit cliché and silly (like turning up to a wedding to tell the person getting married you love them etc), and I'm just not as interested in some of the new younger characters, but yeah, whenever Bette, Shane, Alice or Tina were on screen, I was happy and I've arrive around to many of the newer characters - particularly the older ones who interact more with the originals. I'm content they gave Micah more to do this season, and I enjoyed Maribel.

I suppose what I'm really saying is I just don't care about Sophie and Finlay. Everyone else I can deal with.

I really found it interesting the choices the display has made to let things just be in some ways. Like the speaking of foreign languages. None it being subtitled. Interesting choice and I can respect it, even though as a total language geek, I want to know what they're saying too. I was confused with the Farsi, but because I speak Italian and French, the Span