Hottest gay women

Famous lesbians, gay women and gender fluid people you really should know

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Famous lesbians - Jacqueline Wilson

Author Jacqueline Wilson came out publicly in 2020 at the age of 74, although she said her partnership with her partner Trish had never been a secret. “I’ve never really been in any thoughtful of closet,” Wilson told The Guardian. “It would be such old news for anybody that has ever known anything much about me. Even the vaguest acquaintance knows perfectly well that we are a couple.”

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Famous lesbians - Megan Rapinoe

US soccer actor and co-captain Megan Rapinoe spoke to CNN and said she didn't comprehend she was gay when she was younger. "It's so embarrassing because I'm just very gay, I don't know how it happened but as soon as it clicked I was like she has arrived. She is here. Her life is beginning."

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Famous lesbians - Lena Waithe

Master of None actor Lena Waithe said, at the Essence Black Women in Hollywood Awards in 2018, "Being born gay, jet and female is not a revolutionary act. Entity proud to be a gay, black female is."

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Famous lesbians - Hayley Kiyoko

Singer Hayley K

There have never been more out Female homosexual actresses, bisexual actors, and queer women actors than there are right now in this very moment. The Diverse 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 notice a lot of the most well-liked lesbian actresses and bisexual actors on this list that you might anticipate to see — for example, Kristen Stewart and Angelina Jolie both undertake film, rather than television, pretty exclusively, and tend to be very particular about the roles they take on, so they may be popular, 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 distant and complicated, this list is looking only at living actors. This was all based


 

With Ellen Degeneres creature awarded the Presidential medal of release, we take a look at the hottest woman-on-woman activity in Hollywood. Sorry boys, but this is for the ladies only.

 

Amber Heard

 

 

She was once in a turbulent bond with one of the hottest hunks of Hollywood, Johnny Depp, but Amber Heard has been open about here bisexuality since the start.

 

Cara Delevingne

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

The stunning model is unattached these days after her breakup with St Vincent, who is now dating website the reticent Kristen Stewart.

 

Kristen Stewart

 

 

She may be a lady of few words, but Kristen Stewart is surely very open about her bisexuality and has dated a string of beauties in the past. She’s currently dating St Vincent and the two lovebirds surely seem happy in each other’s company.

 

Megan Fox

 

 

In the year 2009, the foxy Megan declared to the world in an interview how, “I have no question in my mind about organism bisexual… I’m also a hypocrite: I would never hang out a girl who was bisexual, because that means they also sleep with men, and

This year was one of many movements. The obvious ones appear to mind: the epic increase of Chappell Roan, Brat summer and the phenomenon of “hot rodent boyfriends,” a surprising amount of throuples (I see youChallengersandDoctor Odyssey), whatever it means to “hold space.” But one thread running through 2024’s pop society zeitgeist that has flown spectacularly under the radar has been this year’s commitment to toxic Sapphic relationships onscreen—and what this delightful influx of queer women who love and hate each other by turns means for this specific television and production moment, and how the future’s uncertainty only magnifies its importance as a year-long exercise in Sapphic catharsis. 

For the past two years, media watchdog group GLAAD has reported that queer characters are dropping like flies on television. Their annual “Where We Are on TV” report, which tracks the number of LGBTQ2S+ characters on TV across transmit, cable and streaming, lamented the loss of 36 percent of television’s queer representation. This second consecutive drop-off has been attributed to an outsize number of cancellations featuring queer characters, with queer women suffering the most: 53 perce