Is gina gershon gay
Gina Gershon Still Loves Being Corky from ‘Bound’: ‘I Wager I Wouldn’t Even Be Cast in It Now’
Fresh off the seam-bursting unsexiness of “Showgirls,” Gina Gershon had a decision to make.
The then 30-something actress, still a relative newcomer in Hollywood, stood out as a star in Paul Verhoeven’s 1995 disaster-piece despite its infamously shoddy film. The next role Gershon chose would be critical to shaping the stop of her career. And while partnering with the siblings Wachowski on their debut feature was a good intuition even before “The Matrix,” the eventual “Bound” star was discouraged from making her breakout recital that of a lesbian plumber named Corky.
“I was literally told that I was ruining my career and I could not do this production, which really made me mad,” Gershon told IndieWire in an interview celebrating the film‘s DVD rerelease for The Criterion Collection. “I just thought it was so foolish. I already wanted to do the movie, but it made me yearn to do it even more, because I just mind, ‘Well, that’s absurd.'”
The cult classic flopped at t
Gina Gershon Says ‘Small-Minded’ Agents Told Her ‘You Can’t Play a Lesbian’ in ‘Bound’ Because ‘You Will Never Work Again’ and Ruin Your Career
Gina Gershon recently said on the “It Happened in Hollywood” podcast (via People) that she was warned against starring in 1996’s “Bound” by her agents because the role was a lesbian nature. The actor remembered her agents telling her specifically that she “can’t perform a lesbian” because it would tank her Hollywood career.
“It was a great script and I could reveal they were astonishing directors, but my agents were enjoy, ‘We will not let you undertake this movie. You are ruining your career,'” Gershon said. “‘We will not be able to let you portray. You will never work again.'”
“I just said, ‘Oh, well, I guess if you can’t represent me, I’ll go somewhere else.’ You know? No hard feelings,” Gershon continued, noting that she fully believed in the script written by the Wachowskis. “I said, first of all, it’s so shortsighted to speak, ‘O
Gina Gershon's agents dropped her for playing 2 gay characters in a row. Then she became a queer icon.
Gina Gershon is a bit of an enigma — literally.
When she appears on Zoom for our interview, she's shrouded in darkness. "It looks like I'm in the witness protection program," she jokes. It's not clear where Gershon is calling in from, though it seems like it may be from her home, given her repeated interjections of "Hey, block that!" to someone — maybe her beloved cat, Louie? — off-camera.
For someone who's been productive consistently for decades since breaking through with a bit part in 1986's "Pretty in Pink,"remarkably little is known about her private life. And even more remarkably, people don't seem to pester her too often about stuff like where she lives, whether she's married, or if she has kids.
Gershon has develop one of the rare actors — and the even rarer female actors — afforded the opportunity to vanish into her roles. It's exactly the career she always wanted, but not necessarily what everyone else planned for her.
After appearing in Paul Verhoeven's critically panned 1995 film "Showgirls," which has since grow a camp classic, Gershon parted ways with her
Gina Gershon has recalled creature warned by former agents that if she played a lesbian, she would “never work again.”
The 62-year-old actor remembered being given a “great script” from “incredible directors,” but “my agents were like, ‘We will not let you do this movie. You are ruining your career.’”
On a new episode of the It Happened in Hollywood podcast, Gershon recounted the agents telling her they wouldn’t be proficient to represent her and that she would “never work again” if she took the role.
“I just said, ‘Oh, well, I guess if you can’t represent me, I’ll travel somewhere else.’ You know? No hard feelings,” Gershon continued, adding that she believed in the script.
Gershon ended up taking the lead role of Corky opposite Jennifer Tilly’s Violet in the 1996 sapphic thriller Bound, co-directed by sisters Lana and Lilly Wachowski.
“I said, first of all, it’s so shortsighted to say, ‘Oh, this is a lesbian movie.’ I mean, they come about to be lesbians. They happen to be into women,” Gershon explained of the characters, “but it’s really a movie about trust.”
Bound is about a woman named Violet who falls in love with her ex-con neighbor Corky. As the two women embark on a pas