AceShowbiz
 
'Bridgerton' Star Golda Rosheuvel Told not to Come Out as Lesbian to Protect Her Career
Instagram
Celebrity

The actress, who is known for her role as Queen Charlotte on the hit Netflix series, claims in a new interview that the 'bizarre' advise from an unnamed director makes her 'really confused.'

AceShowbiz - Golda Rosheuvel was told not to come out by a lesbian director. The 52-year-old actress, who is best known for her role as Queen Charlotte in Netflix hit "Bridgerton", was advised against disclosing her sexuality publicly and was left feeling "confused" because she was already out to family and friends.

Without naming the director, she said, "I really admired her and I was really confused. This is really bizarre. How come I can be out privately to my family, to my friends every day, but there's something about being professionally out and publicly out. We were talking about being out and proud and representation and whether I should say I was gay in interviews. And it was an absolute no."

The West End star, who is in a long term relationship with writer Shireen Mula, claimed that the director told her she would "ruin her career" if she revealed her sexuality to the world but insisted that she would "rather not be" in showbusiness if it meant not being true to herself.

Speaking on the "Just For Variety" podcast, she added, "[She said to me] 'You absolutely shouldn't do that. It could or it would ruin your career as an actor. 'I would rather lose a job than not be true to who I am. I'd rather not work in an industry that doesn't accept me. It just wasn't how I was raised. And then her being out as a female director, as a lesbian director, I was like, 'I don't understand this advice. I just don't understand. It just doesn't track!'"

Golda explained that "representation" in whatever form is important as she insisted that she is "out and proud" and is just as important as anyone else.

She said, "Representation is really important, whether its race whether its sexuality whether its men whether its women — whatever it is. Representation is important. I'm out and proud. My sexuality is really important to me, in terms of existing, in terms of being around the campfire and knowing that I'm important. I'm as important as anyone on the planet."

About This Article

AI-Assisted Content: This article was created with the assistance of artificial intelligence technology under human editorial oversight. Our editorial team reviews and verifies all AI-generated content for accuracy.

Sources: Information in this article may be aggregated from publicly available sources including press releases, news agencies, and entertainment industry sources. We provide attribution where applicable and strive to ensure factual accuracy.

Learn More: For details about our editorial standards and practices, visit our Editorial Standards page.

Contact: Questions or concerns? Email us at [email protected]

Follow AceShowbiz.com @ Google News

You can share this post!

You might also like
Related Posts