Is josh gad gay

Josh Gad candidly comments on misleading male lover controversy surrounding his Beauty and the Beast character LeFou

Josh Gad opened up about a controversy surrounding sexuality that hovered over his performance as LeFou in the 2017 live-action Disney movie Beauty and the Beast.

The 43-year-old actor's character was pals with the Gaston character played by Luke Evans in the motion picture, which also featured Emma Watson, Dan Stevens and Kevin Kline, and was directed by Bill Condon.

Condon, promoting the film with the outlet Attitude in 2017, said moviegoers would finally get to see 'a friendly, exclusively gay moment in a Disney movie,' but it turned out to be a short sequence in which Gad's LeFou was seen dancing with a man.

'I represent, if I were gay, I'm sure I'd be pissed,' Gad said of the public's reaction to the scene in his novel book In Gad We Trust, Fun Weekly reported after publishing excerpts from the book, which was released Tuesday.

The Hollywood, Florida native said in the book he felt that the nature was too peripheral and the scene too brief to live up the director's hype.

'I for one certainly didn't exactly feel love LeFou was who the queer collective had been

Actor Josh Gad has just published a memoir: In Gad We Trust.

The book came out Tuesday and Entertainment Weekly published some extracts yesterday. In it, the Frozen star, 43, talks about that much-hyped, blink-and-you-miss-it “gay moment” from Beauty And The Beast.

The 2017 live-action remake starred Emma Watson, Dan Stevens and Kevin Kline. Luke Evans played Gaston while Gad played Gaston’s sidekick and friend, LeFou.

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The show was a big box office success, taking $1.26 billion worldwide.

That “gay moment” turned out to be a fleeting shot of LeFou and Gaston dancing together at the movie’s end.

Gad says in his book he felt the character was too peripheral to live up to Condon’s comments about him.

“If I were gay, I’m sure I’d be pissed,” Gad says.

“I for one certainly didn’t exactly feel appreciate LeFou was who the lgbtq+ community had been wistfully waiting for … I can’t quite imagine a Pride celebration in honor of the ‘cinematic watershed moment’ involving a quasi-villainous Dis

Josh Gad On Role As Gay LeFou In Live-Action Beauty In The Beast: “We Didn’t Go Far Enough”

According to Disney celebrity Josh Gad, despite the media’s lauding of his role as LeFou in the live-action remake of Beauty and the Beast as Disney’s ‘first male lover character’, the character “didn’t go far enough to warrant accolades”.

RELATED: Eternals Director Chloe Zhao Says No Point In Including Homosexual Phastos Family If Audience “Don’t Feel It”

In 2017, Disney made headlines with the announcement that Gad’s version of LeFou would be the company’s first openly gay character, earning a bevy of praise for this decision from such outlets as The Hollywood Reporter, Vanity Just, and NBC News.

However, when the film premiered, fans discovered that the character’s sexuality was only briefly hinted at in a ‘blink-and-you’ll-miss-it’ moment seen at the film’s conclusion wherein LeFou is seen toggling dance partners and termination up paired with another man – a moment hardly worth writing house about.

Reflecting back on this media fervor during a recent interview with The Independent, Gad revealed that he felt much of this hype was unwarranted, as the film “didn’t go far enough to warrant acc

Josh Gad Shares Regrets About Gay LeFou In Disney’s Live-Action ‘Beauty and the Beast’ Remake

The actor is opening up about the public response and the global controversy surrounding his Beauty and the Beast character in his new memoir…

Eight years after the release of Disney’s live-action adaptation of Beauty and the Beast, actor Josh Gad is reflecting on the controversy surrounding the film’s so-called “exclusively homosexual moment.” In his just-released memoir In Gad We Trust, Gad claims that he “never once” played his personality LeFou as lgbtq+, and brushes off the implication that the 2017 motion picture was intended to feature Disney’s “first-ever gay character” despite a brief scene towards the conclude of the clip in which his character, LeFou, was seen dancing with another man.

“I for one certainly didn’t exactly feel love LeFou was who the queer collective had been wistfully waiting for,” Gad writes. “I can’t quite imagine a Pride celebration in honor of the ‘cinematic watershed moment’ involving a quasi-villainous Disney sidekick dancing with a male for half a second. I express, if I we