Anna kendrick gay
Anna Kendrick On Creature A Gay Icon: 'I'm Such A Straight, Cis, Boringface McGee Over Here'
Anna Kendrick is hands down one of the funniest actresses and Tweeters on the planet.
No, don't try to argue with us, it's fact.
Who else can procure away with lines like 'I appreciate my men love I like my coffee. Silent' and 'Yes, of course I got your text – I'm just ignoring it. Don't make it weird'?
Anyway, besides existence our social media queen, the self-deprecating and Academy Award-nominated actress has just opened up on who it feels to be heralded as a homosexual icon.
In an interview with The Advocate, Kendrick reveals: 'I'm such a straight, cis, Boringface McGee over here, so I affection that that could be even a little true. The idea that I'm resonating with other people who contain ever felt enjoy outsiders is the coolest.'
Admitting that her 10 closest male and female friends are gay, she says: 'Gay people have just always been in my life. I recollect my parents having to tell me as a kid that there were people, like some people in our church, who objected to homosexuality. I was like, 'Wait, so they're idiots, right?''
Preach, Anna. Preach.
The actress – who was praised for her on-screen
Rebel Wilson and Anna Camp Chat About Being Gay and Happy
When Rebel Wilson’s character made the joke in Pitch Perfect about how, statistically, at least one of the Barden Bellas was gay, she thought she was the only one who was secretly queer. Now, all these years later, she has a wife, Anna Kendrick and Ester Dean have expressed queer leanings, and, most recently, Anna Camp has come out by demonstrating off her super cute association with her girlfriend. Plus, some of the other women from that movie are undetermined; I found no proof of their sexuality online, but some of them have the vibe. (Also I know Hailee Steinfeld just married a whole man but she has played too many queer characters too well for me to not be waiting for her to come out as queer, too.)
In a recent interview with Pride, Rebel Wilson said that on the position of Pitch Perfect 2, she remembers having some really agreeable, candid chats about sexuality behind the scenes, and that she has felt really supported during her coming out journey.
Rebel Wilson was technically strongarmed into coming out by an Australian tabloid back in 2022, and Anna Camp casually came out earlier this year with a complicated launch duri
It’s 2025—Let ‘Another Simple Favor’ Be Gay
[There are spoilers for Another Simple Favor below.]
If there was one thing I knew for certain I would get when I sat down for Blake Lively and Anna Kendrick’s Another Simple Favor, it was ridiculousness. As a immediate refresher, the first film in this franchise has both patricide, sororicide, and an infidelity plotline in which a character sleeps with her half-brother. It’s batshit crazy. But after watching the sequel, the most egregious thing about Another Simple Favor isn’t what happens in the plot (although there’s a lot of that) but what doesn’t. Because for some unfathomable reason, this franchise will still not let its two direction characters, Stephanie and Emily, just be gay already.
In the sequel to A Simple Favor (which is now streaming on Amazon Prime), we’re dropped back into this planet about five years after the first movie ends. Emily (serving time for two separate murders) has somehow managed to earn out of jail prior. She’s getting married, and she wants Stephanie to be her maid of honor. For some reason, Stephanie agrees, jetting off to Capri with a woman who killed two people and even tried to ki
The pitch is perfectly crazy in Anna Kendrick's walk on the dark side of filmmaker Paul Feig's warped feeling of humor, "A Simple Favor." It's martini-sipper mom versus martini-swigger mom. Goal mom versus Met Gala mom. Aspirational versus extra.
It's regular mom-meets-mom business, a modern mom-com – until Emily (Blake Lively) goes missing. Emily's sudden disappearance prompts Stephanie (Kendrick) to mount an analysis by employing her keen Nancy Drew smarts and posting distressed clips of herself on her dorky craft vlog. (Friendship-bracelet tutorials are just gonna hold to wait.)
A bit camp? Yep. A bit queer? Obviously. And naturally so, as Kendrick's 15-year career is steeped in queerness: at age 17, she cut her acting teeth on "Camp," the 2003 teen musical-comedy directed by out filmmaker Todd Graff; as Beca, she brought covert aca-gayness to the three-part "Pitch Perfect" franchise; and in 2014, the 33-year-old Oscar-nominated actress slipped into Cinderella's glass slippers for Stephen Sondheim's "Into the Woods." And her long, impulsive touch – "just another Tuesday," Emily notes – with Lively in "A Uncomplicated Favor," well, it's not exactly direct, she says.
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