Kyle maclachlan gay
Kyle MacLachlan on Playing a Gay Man in ‘Giant Little Ones,’ His Emmy Snub, and the Future of ‘Twin Peaks’ — TIFF
You may be let down, even angry, that Kyle MacLachlan didn’t receive an Emmy nomination for his masterful work on “Twin Peaks: The Return,” but the actor himself is handling the snub with all the grace you’d expect of one Exceptional Agent Dale Cooper.
“It’d be disingenuous to say I wasn’t disappointed, but the best thing about it is that the role and the work is out there for people to see,” MacLachlan told IndieWire from TIFF, where his new film “Giant Little Ones” just had its world premiere in the Special Presentations section. “I’m proud of it, so that’s what’s most important, I guess. And there were a lot of nominations for the show in other categories.”
“Giant Little Ones” was MacLachlan’s first project following the completion of “Twin Peaks,” but what he looks for in a role hasn’t changed even after leading the latest iteration of David Lynch’s one-of-a-kind series. “I try to find something I can
Kyle and the like of his life
When I was younger, about 22 years old, I had an appalling obsession on Kyle MacLachlan.
It first started when I saw him in Dune. He played a youthful God of the Universe who had to master riding huge worms in order to defeat evil.
It was a mad film and it bombed, but I loved it. Then he was the youthful all-American suburban kid who establish the severed ear in Blue Velvet.
It was also mad, an art-house achievement, and I loved it too.
Then I saw him in Twin Peaks. He played FBI agent Dale Cooper, who had to solve the murder of Laura Palmer via a several backwardsspeaking dwarves and a lady carrying logs.
This was the maddest of the lot. I really loved it but mostly, I think, because I loved MacLachlan.
Just as stardom was beckoning, he disappeared
With his dark-haired, quirky-yethandsome looks, I mind he was something special. I also thought he was bound to turn into stratospherically famous.
Just as Hollywood stardom was beckoning in the early Nineties, though, MacLachlan disappeared.
One minute he was the king of the indie production scene, the next he was nowhere.
Then he resurfaced on the pages of fashion magazines, posing with his then-girlfr
I find it hilarious how in a weird way, the first two series of twin peaks is so like...fanservicey to the gays?
Like, Michael Ontkean and Kyle Maclachlan both had a true gay/bi/MLM following each individually - Michael because of Making Affection, Kyle because of Blue Velvet (and probably also because they're both hot lbr).
Then, watch at their character design/costuming - Dale is this typical, suave, movie-star type in nicely slash suits and shit. All very like, old movie star glamour. Then Harry is, literally, a sexy cowboy with a tiny dangly/hoop earring, lmao. Maybe I'm biased but to me that seems like two aesthetics beloved by the gays hahahah (at least, in our house, my boyfriend is the lover of old school movie stars and I'm the lover of cowboys).
THEN as if it's not fruity enough to have these two very handsome men with gay followings wearing little suits and cowboy hats, they're then so damn tactile and physically intimate with each other *constantly*.
Like.......just capitalise on the pink pound why don't you, lynch/frost............
Benito Skinner: I reflect it's so gorgeous that you express that, because that really I ponder, is the core of these relationships, that I reflect some people obviously come out and are treated horribly and completely drop their family in that and hold to find fresh families. But I think there is something in the show where I think we're trying to play it somewhere in the middle, which I think you haven't seen on screen in a way where it's, I've only seen some of these things lately where the parents are prefer, "That's amazing."
And the dad's joking about downloading Grindr. And I'm like, "Well, I just don't think that's the case because I think there's also an emotional thing that the parents are going through of, "I consideration I knew who my child was. Also, you were going through all this and you didn't tell me? What have I done?" And I think that that is something in the story.
Kyle MacLachlan: You're asking the right questions because I think as we continue, let's hope-
Benito Skinner: Yeah, please.
Kyle MacLachlan: Because your instinct is to write deeper, you know what I mean? It's to write layers. Everyone's good-bad, e