Gay yellowstone




Lilli Kay opens up about the LGBTQ+ kiss scene featured in Yellowstone season 5. Kay portrays Clara Brewer in Yellowstone, serving as John Dutton (Kevin Costner)'s assistant after he was sworn in as the governor of Montana. Yellowstone, Kevin Costner's hit series about a ranch family, concluded part one of its fifth season on Sunday and with it, gave fans a gay kiss that almost came out of nowhere.

Not that we're. Yellowstone fans were surprised when season 5 revealed the show’s first LGBTQ character. Lilli Kay joined the cast as Clara, John Dutton’s assistant, who proves she is pretty comfortable with. Here are known LGBT characters featured throughout all series: Community content is available under CC-BY-SA unless otherwise noted. Yellowstone delivered its first LGBTQ+ kiss, and one star was surprised by how big of a reaction the subdued scene received.

By providing your information, you agree to our Terms of Use and our Privacy Policy. We use vendors that may also process your information to help provide our services.

gay yellowstone

With the first half of Season 5 now available to stream on Peacock with the rest of the series, I need to go on the record about something. Yes, it is problematic and messy and sometimes cringe, and yeah, OK, I do tend to bear down on the fast-forward button when the men are talking about, I dunno, familial duty and fatherhood and whatever patriarchal stuff straight men dressing up for an office job in cowboy togs meaningfully discuss.

A lot of series premiered over the last few years boasting about a female antihero, usually name-dropping Don Draper or Walter White. Beth destroys companies and lives because her father is determined to preserve the family ranch, a quixotic mission she herself repeatedly refers to her as Alamo. She knows the game ends in failure and ruin, but she keeps playing.

Nevertheless, there is a growing consensus that cruelty and skullduggery and fabulous eyeliner do not a character make — at least, not after four-and-a-half seasons. At its worst, the criticism hinges on the unlikeliness of Beth Dutton; she is, they say, a woman obviously created and written by a man. But so too were the great female roles of classic Hollywood written by men. What is the endgame for Beth? Will she ever relax, find happiness with her husband, walk away from her family?

I hope not. Her tragic flaws are Shakespearean in scope and made all the more tragic by her acknowledgment of them. Imagine that for a moment! Search Icon. Search for:. Arrow Icon. Breaking News. General News. Box Office. The Craft. Best Of. Thompson on Hollywood. Consider This. Emmy Predictions. Emmys Calendar.

yellowstone gay cowboy

Awards Spotlight. Craft Considerations. Deep Dive. Future of Filmmaking. IndieWire's Future of Filmmaking. Screen Talk.