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But I think also just for anyone who has struggled with bullying or challenges, and in their youth especially.”
And then, of course, there’s pushy, stubbornly pertinacious TV journalist Gale Weathers (Courteney Cox) who, Williamson said, “would fit right in with the ‘Will & Grace’ crowd.”
“She represents one side of my voice,” he said, “which is part of who I am.”
In the new installment of “Scream,” titled the same as the original that was released to massive and ever-growing fandom 25 years ago, Williamson is reveling in the fact that there’s an openly queer woman of color, Mindy (played by Jasmine Savoy-Brown, a queer actor of color), among the new teen cast.
So it sort of put Stu in that position of, what was his feelings toward his best friend? Some just knew. You never were.”
The post also hinted that the disconnect goes beyond Coles’ sexual identity, suggesting that Ghostface has been absent from the lives of other family members as well.
On his new track “SweetFace Killah,” a play on his father’s rap name, Coles confronts feelings of rejection more directly, asking in a lyric, “Do I need to f*** a b**** just so you could see?” The line has drawn attention for its rawness but reflects what Coles describes as a life lived without paternal affirmation.
Despite the painful subject matter, Coles says the songs are not meant to create division but rather to open a door for reconciliation.
Billy was the one who was sort of orchestrating it. And Stu was the person who helped carry it out. The artist continued, “I love my father. Maybe I wouldn’t be that shy little gay writer who felt like he couldn’t get away with it.”
Williamson grew up in the South in both Texas and North Carolina, places where he understood “that fight for survival that you feel, like you’re trying to hide yourself.
“And that alone sort of sets up the dynamic of a hidden relationship.”
“Is Stu secretly in love with Billy? Did Billy manipulate that? There is no confirmation of either of these women being the father of any of his children.
If you’re still wondering about those homoerotic undertones 25 years after Billy Loomis and Stu Macher terrorized Woodsboro in Wes Craven’s “Scream,” you’ve been on the right track all along.
Ahead of the new “Scream,” out Friday, openly gay screenwriter of the first “Scream," Kevin Williamson, has confirmed that Billy (Skeet Ulrich) and Stu (Matthew Lillard), who are thought to be queer by many LGBTQ+ fan theorists, were based on infamous mass murderers Nathan Freudenthal Leopold Jr.
and Richard Albert Loeb, both of whom reportedly admitted they were gay and in a relationship.
In May 1924, Leopold and Loeb, who’ve been called the “LGBTQ+ prototype for Bonnie and Clyde,” killed 14-year-old Bobby Franks as an act of intellectual superiority. However, he admitted that things have been on an upswing as of late and that he and Ghostface are on better terms now.
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The child of Ghostface with the least amount of information available is his daughter.
The 2000 comedy “Scary Movie,” which parodied scenes from “Scream,” picked up on the queer vibes between Billy and Stu. In one scene, Ray (Shawn Wayans), based on Stu, and Bobby (Jon Abrahams), based on Billy, joke about being gay, divulging to a Sidney-like character called Cindy (Anna Faris) that, “That’s right, Cindy, I’m gay.
“It’s about being there — emotionally, spiritually, and mentally. I have no hate towards my father at all,” Coles told VIBE.
“And so I think that’s one of the reasons Final Girls are so important to us as a gay audience.” Before he wrote Sidney, he related to Jamie Lee Curtis’ Laurie Strode in “Halloween” because, being gay, “he understands the “plight of the Final Girl.”
“I know what it’s like,” he added.
Whether it be through his musical efforts, stories that inspire television shows, or the variety of other endeavors he has taken on over the last few decades, he has cemented his position in the annals of music history.
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For as much as fans might know who Ghostface is via his stage persona, many likely aren't aware of what the rapper's personal life is like.
“And it’s just part of life. His affection for Sidney runs so deep that, as he watched her appear for the first time onscreen, jogging down the boardwalk with her baby carriage, turning to the camera to answer a call from Dewey, he cried.
“I did,” he said. Per a 2017 interview with Nylon, Infinite explained that he and his father's relationship strained during his formative years as he realized that he is a gay man.
That we do not know. “I think gay kids everywhere understand that survival element that we have to sort of create in ourselves. Keep reading to find out!
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