Anne ramsay gay
There have never been more out Lesbian actresses, attracted to both genders actors, and queer women actors than there are right now in this very moment. The Homosexual community is plowing head-first onto stage and screen, playing a diverse array of roles, winning awards and headlining cinema films. But whomst amongst them is the most prolific? Who has simply managed to appear in the most things, accumulated the most imdb credits? It’s not who you think! (Besides Jane Lynch, you already knew Jane Lynch would be on this list.)
You won’t see a lot of the most popular lesbian actresses and bisexual actors on this list that you might expect to see — for example, Kristen Stewart and Angelina Jolie both do film, rather than television, pretty exclusively, and tend to be very particular about the roles they take on, so they may be well-liked, but they’re not quite as prolific. There’ll also be plenty of names you’ve likely never heard before — I hadn’t! — but it turns out have been infusing their gay selves into our lives on a regular basis for the past several decades.
Because history is long and complicated, this list is looking only at living actors. This was all based
‘Brooklyn 45’: a homosexual veteran stares into the abyss
By this point, you’d be forgiven for groaning at yet another horror film exploring trauma. However, bi director Ted Geoghegan’s “Brooklyn 45” engages with the historical past to an unfashionable degree, while also using it to reflect on the present. (William Wyler’s 1945 classic “The Best Years of Our Lives” hovers over it, but so does Off-Off-Broadway theater.) Almost the whole clip takes place in one room. Even the introduction of a new traits and the stubborn presence of a corpse would operate if this were staged as theater.
Just before Christmas in 1945, four friends come together in a Brooklyn brownstone: Marla (Marla (Anne Ramsay), Hock (Larry Fessenden), Archie (Jeremy Holm), and Paul (Ezra Buzzington), joined by Marla’s husband Bob (Ron E. Rains). Despite the surface joviality, violence lingers in the air. Hock’s wife died by suicide just a few months ago. The neighborhood is full of rumors about Nazi spies at work during the war and still living there now. Archie, who is gay, is suspected of a war crime. Marla earned a uncommon place in the military for a woman in the ‘40s through her skill as a torturer. S
When the original L Word launched, “which of these actresses are gay in real life” was a common interrogate asked of the cast members at press junkets and interviews. It was a different moment, then. Leisha Hailey was the only out lesbian in the main cast. Kate Moennig was also a queer woman but it wasn’t okay yet to say so, at least not anywhere important or widespread or in copy. Karina Lombard, Mia Kirshner and Laurel Holloman had all hinted at or embraced the bi label at some point, but both Laurel and Karina have since redacted the identification. Karina’s statement hurt the most, perhaps, as she indicated that being on the show was what convinced her she wasn’t bisexual anymore. Laurel, who’d identified that way after having an experience with another woman monitoring 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 continue identifying as bisexual.
The L Word: Generation Q, however, is a VERY gay cast. So we’ll get through the first series and then transfer gayly onto the second!
Most recent update: May 2023
Here are the
PicturedAnne Ramsay.
Anne Ramsay has played a number of unconventional women. From free-spirited sister Lisa on Mad About You to her nurturing role as Robin on The L Word, Anne continues to portray women who are unlock, free, warm and funny. A lot like the Anne Ramsay I met for this interview.
Windy City Times: You were in Chicago in 1990 to motion picture A League of Their Possess. What a cast! What was that experience like for you?
AR: It was amazing! I could never articulate it enough. It was a life-changing event for me and for all of us—for all the girls… we all felt the same way about it. I mean I got to play baseball. We got to play it in Wrigley Field! It just prepared me for everything that happened afterward. And I love Chicago! We were staying (downtown) and I’m a runner so I went for a jog. I do that … so I can learn the city. And I was jogging by the lake, and I turned around and the lake was gorgeous and there were people playing beach volleyball, which I also love to do, and behind me are these gorgeous buildings and I started crying. I wanted to be cast in the film so badly… it was my first big job… so I was just insanely happy. A Lea