Matilda gay
Matilda The Musical’s Lashana Lynch Reacts To Miss Honey Creature Many Fans’ Same-sex attracted Awakening In The 1996 Movie
Among Netflix’s new releases is the film adaptation of Roald Dahl's Matilda the Musical starring the likes of No Time To Die’s Lashana Lynch as Miss Honey. With her key role in the musical, the British actress follows in the footsteps of the beloved 1996 show where Embeth Davidtz had a generation falling in treasure with the cottagecore elementary teacher who protected the youthful and powerful Matilda from her unrefined family and headmistress. Through playing the role, yes, Lynch knows all about Miss Honey’s status as a gay icon.
‘90s kids own especially been bonding over Miss Honey being their “gay awakening” as of late, including with this viral TikTok from last year. Check it out:
While speaking to Entertainment Weekly about playing Miss Honey for Roald Dahl's Matilda the Musical, Lashana Lynch reacted to the elementary institution teacher being a symbol in the LGBTQ+ community. Here’s what she said:
You may loveIt wasn't something I was notified of until I saw some comments on social media a
Matilda child star Mara Wilson comes out as 'bi/queer' during Twitter chat
Former kid star Mara Wilson has thanked fans for supporting her decision to enter out as "bi/queer".
The celebrity posted her comments on her social media, saying: "I think I'm going to stay off Twitter for a few days. I had no plan this would be such a thing, but I guess it's flattering."
Mara starred as Matilda and Nattie in Mrs Doubtfire in the 1990s.
The 28-year-old also added that she had "not been clear" about her sexuality in the past.
She wrote: "Me at a gay club when I was eighteen. I feel embarrassed looking at it now...", external
After discussing the mass murders in Orlando with her followers, she shared a photo of herself taken 10 years ago during her first visit to a gay club.
She wrote: "Being a 'straight girl' where I clearly didn't match, but I will speak, I felt so welcomed there.
"I have never had a better experience at a club than I did then. Great melody and people. And one of my friends met his partner that night!"
Mara spoke of her sexuality on her Twitter account., external
She told her
'Matilda' star Mara Wilson opens up about her sexuality
Former child star Mara Wilson has embraced her persona and fame on her very entertaining Twitter and a new book. And now she's getting very real and personal.
Wilson ran a series of tweets this week, after the Orlando tragedy, talking about her history with queer clubs and embracing a label as "bi/queer," and what those kinds of labels and identities mean to her and fans.
She started by tweeting a photo of herself at a gay club when she was 18, and then talked about she felt welcomed by the male lover community.
"Being a 'straight girl' where I clearly didn't belong, but I will say, I felt so welcomed there," she tweeted. "I have never had a better experience at a club than I did then. Great melody and people. And one of my friends me this partner that night! I haven't been to one since college, except once when a partner brought me along. I didn't feel like I belonged there."
She added, "But the LGBTQ community has always felt like home, especially a few years later when I, uh, learned something about myself. So thank you."
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.She then went on to interpret how she defines her
A charmed couple: the art and life of Walter and Matilda Gay
The creator Walter Gay and his wife Matilda were part of the happy band of cultivated American expatriates living in Paris in the early years of the last century. Their circle included Henry James, Edith Wharton, Henry Adams, Elsie de Wolfe, J.S. Sargent and Bernard Berenson among their compatriots and a number of French and English aristocratic patrons and collectors who were admirers of Walter’s work.
Walter Gay embarked on his artistic career in Boston, where he enjoyed a modest success before setting out for France in 1876 to continue his studies in Paris. He made a respectable achievement as an academic designer on conventional French salon lines, and there his career might have proceeded were it not for the entry into his life of Matilda Travers. She was also studying art and had contrived a position as Walter’s pupil in order to attract his notice, which she achieved, becoming his wife in 1889.
It was after his marriage that Walter gave up painting the large figure subjects required for the academic route and discovered the niche that he was to occupy so happily for the rest of his career as a painter.
He made a s
A Charmed Couple: The Art and Existence of Walter and Matilda Gay - Hardcover
Synopsis
"A splendid and long overdue appreciation of a unmatched painter of satisfactory interiors, with a vivid picture of American expatriate animation in France."
-Louis Auchincloss This stylish manual re-creates the charmed life of two American expatriates in France at the turn of the 20th century-the noted artist Walter Homosexual and his wife, Matilda, whose glittering social circle included John Singer Sargent, Edith Wharton, Henry James, and many other artists and aristocrats. Narrated by witty excerpts from Matilda Gay's recently discovered journal, and richly illustrated with Walter Gay's unusual, sought-after paintings of the rooms in which they and their friends lived, in Paris, Fontainebleau, Venice, and elsewhere, A Charmed Couple offers an intimate glimpse of a long-gone social milieu whose hold on the popular imagination continues to this day. WILLIAM RIEDER is a curator in the Department of European Sculpture and Decorative Arts at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York. Author of numerous articles, most on European furniture, in such journals as Architectural Digest, Connoisseur, and Antiques, he live