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September 21, 2007 / Issue 994, October 9, 2007
Matthew Broderick
Some 25 years after his breakthrough role as a gay teen in Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song Trilogy, Matthew Broderick still has queer appeal. Maybe it’s because he and Nathan Lane were Broadway’s oddest couple in the musical juggernaut The Producers. Or it could be his 10-year marriage to the iconic Sarah Jessica Parker. Either way, with his computer-animated Bee Movie in theaters November 2 and a slew of buzzworthy films slated for release, the 45-year-old Ferris Bueller’s Day Off star shows off his gay bona fides by dishing on past flops and the gay icons in his life
By Brandon Voss, The Advocate
Before Torch Song Trilogy, did anyone warn you of
the potential perils of accepting a gay role so
early in your career?
I had some agents telling me to be careful. I
just thought it was a hilarious part and never worried
about it. And to be totally honest, I hadn’t
gotten any other jobs, so it was a really great job to get.
When someone would mention to me, “But
it’s a gay character, blah blah blah,” I
was like, “Fuck you.” That play was a huge
deal when it opened. It was one of the most exciting
times of my career.
Ironically, you haven’t played another gay
character since. It seems to have had a reverse
effect. I don’t know why.
I think because Ferris Bueller came out and I got
turned into that.
Have you heard the gay rumor about yourself?
I used to hear it more, but I don’t really hear
it that much now -- I guess because nobody
who’s married and has children is gay.
[Laughs] Now that I’m old, I’ve had so
much other stuff happen to bother me that that
wouldn’t bother me anyway.
Did it ever bother you?
A little bit just when I was trying to score.
[Laughs] I’ve always had a lot of gay
friends, I grew up in a theater household, so
I’ve never been uncomfortable with that.
Which do you think fueled the rumors more: Torch
Song, your friendship with Nathan Lane, or
your little light green Vespa?
[Laughs] Maybe I am gay! It all sounds
suspicious to me. I sold my green Vespa, interestingly
enough, to a gay friend, [Hairspray lyricist]
Scott Whitman. I got a gray one. You think that’s
more butch?
A little. Now settle a bet. Who’s gayer: Nathan or
Harvey Fierstein?
Whatever I answer, one of them will be extremely angry
at me -- but I don’t know which way would be
worse for whom. They’re both very strong-willed
men. And very gay. [Laughs] I shouldn’t say
that, even. Strike that. They’re two of my
biggest influences, and I love them both!
The Producers was criticized for, if not being
homophobic, encouraging gay stereotypes. How do
you respond? With the Carmen Ghia and Roger De
Bris characters?
I always felt it was so outrageous and burlesque
that it was OK. It never offended me. And it was
almost all gay people [behind the show]!
So what’s it like to be married to such a huge gay icon?
It’s amazing. She always had a little bit of that
quality even before Sex and the City.
It’s an interesting phenomenon with women who
cross over like that. There’s a bit of a gay
community going on at our house, actually. There are a
lot of people who help her get her stunning looks
together, and I will say there’s a certain percentage
of them who are not straight.
Have you thought about how you might react if your
4-year-old son, James, ever came out as gay?
Because with you and SJP as parents—
Yeah, he definitely has a good chance there. He likes
singing and musical theater already. It’s all
good, but I know it can be hard to be gay or
different, and you always want your child to have everything
perfectly easy, so I like to make sure he’s playing
with a truck every now and then.
Back to Sex and the City—why did you never
make a cameo?
I had two times when parts came up that I
could’ve done, these damaged men who the women
thought were awful, but it never quite worked out. It
wasn’t intentional. And then it was over.
The upcoming film version may be your last chance!
Well, nobody’s mentioned it, but
[writer-director] Michael Patrick King is hilarious,
and I’d love to do it. Now I’m thinking of
calling him. Of course, I’d like to not be
“the premature ejaculator” or something
like that.
In 1985 you played the prince opposite Jennifer Beals in
“Cinderella” on Showtime’s
Faerie Tale Theatre. Looking back,
isn’t that surreal?
It was almost surreal then. But I had sideburns glued on
to my face, so that was all I was focusing on. It was
fun to meet Eve Arden -- another gay icon -- who
played the stepmother. She was pretty old already, but
she was really fun to watch.
I calculated that as your fourth-gayest project after
Torch Song, The Producers, and The
Stepford Wives.
You might want to move it up, actually, but Stepford
Wives was kind of gay. I try not to have regrets,
but I certainly don’t think that movie came out
as well as we all hoped. That’s being political,
isn’t it?
What are you voicing in Jerry Seinfeld’s upcoming
Bee Movie?
I’m his bee friend. And my sexuality is not
discussed in the film. I’ll leave it to the
readers to decide.
We know the monster in your Godzilla [1998] was a
hermaphrodite, though, because it fertilized its own
eggs. How do you think it identified sexually?
[Laughs] I don’t know anything about the
categories of hermaphrodite lizards.
What other film projects can we look forward to?
There’s Margaret, if that ever comes out.
I have a small part in Then She Found Me, which
Helen Hunt directed, with Bette Midler -- there ya go,
that’s number five on my list. And I just finished a
movie called Diminished Capacity with Alan Alda, who
is not a gay icon.
What’s your favorite SJP movie?
I like Miami Rhapsody.
The correct answer we were looking for is Hocus Pocus.
I’m sorry. Hocus Pocus. You’re
absolutely right. See, she’s had a few
Godzillas too, so there’s hope.
Which SJP scent do you prefer: Lovely or Covet?
I’m not sure I could tell them apart. All I can
tell you is Sarah smells spectacular.
Do you rehearse these safe, PC answers?
I don’t like trouble.
Let’s try another approach: At home, is SJP more
like she appears in the Lovely commercial, or in
the Covet commercial where she’s bat-shit crazy?
More like the Covet one, I’d say. She has a bit
of a Jekyll and Hyde quality to her.
Now you’re in trouble.
Uh-oh.
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