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Bryan singer gay

Sex, Drugs, Glamour, Emptiness: Bryan Singer’s Teen Ex-Lover Bares All About Life In Director’s Orbit

EXCLUSIVE: When Bret Tyler Skopek first met director Bryan Singer at a Halloween party in 2013 shortly after the aspiring songwriter arrived from Arizona, the 18-year-old had no idea who the guy wearing the Catholic priest costume was — though he realized it obviously was someone known, since a friend urged him to pose for a photograph.

Skopek soon became intimately involved with Singer one of Hollywood’s top film and TV directors whose credits incorporate The Usual Suspects and four movies in the X-Men franchise  and shares, for the first time, how he establish himself pulled into the director’s orbit of on-set visits, expensive private dinners, ready access to drugs and alcohol and sexual encounters with an ever-revolving cast of multiple participants.

“It was a never-ending supply of cute young men,” Skopek recalled.

Skopek left Los Angeles two years ago. But the story he tells — documented with text message exchanges and photographs with Singer, and verified in phone and email interviews with seven o

bryan singer gay

Bryan Singer Opens Up About His Sexuality, Ellen Page’s Coming Out and Russia’s Anti-Gay Law

Although often identified as “openly gay,” Bryan Singer never really came out — to his parents or the public.

With his parents, he called his mom crying when he was having association trouble with a partner who was less confident in his identity. With the public, he was never really shy about his relationships, bringing his boyfriend to the Usual Suspects set.

STORY: Bryan Singer’s Lawyer Blasts Accusers’ Attorney

But now the X-Men: Days of Future Pastdirector is opening up about his sexuality in an extensive interview with Out magazine, which includes both of the above stories, conducted before he was punch with shocking sex-abuse allegations.

And Singer says he doesn’t really define himself as gay, remarking, “I’m quite bisexual.”

In fact, he explains that he’s had two girlfriends in the past five years and his first serious relationship was with actress Michelle Clunie (Queer as Folk), but he reasons that he’ll probably end up with a man.

“I emotionally lean towards male relatio

Bryan Singer Responds To Atlantic Report: “Homophobic Smear Piece Timed To Take Edge Of ‘Bohemian Rhapsody’ Success”

Director Bryan Singer has responded to an exposé inform published by The Atlantic this morning, which includes multiple allegations that the filmmaker had sex with underage boys and one from a man who says he was fondled at age 13 by Singer on a motion picture set.

In a message sent to us by a representative, the director said, “The last time I posted about this subject, Esquire magazine was preparing to publish an article written by a homophobic journalist who has a bizarre obsession with me dating support to 1997. After attentive fact-checking and, in consideration of the lack of credible sources, Esquire chose not to publish this piece of vendetta journalism.

“That didn’t interrupt this writer from selling it to The Atlantic,” continued the statement. “It’s unhappy that The Atlantic would stoop to this low standard of journalistic integrity. Again, I am forced to reiterate that this story rehashes claims from bogus lawsuits filed by a disreputable cast of individuals

A fascination with evil has always been at the heart of Bryan Singer's films, and his "X-Men" sequel is no exception. Here he talks about historical parallels, minority matters, and personal issues in the film that looks set to become one of the summer's biggest box office hits.

Do you worry about how Brian Cox's character, Stryker, is going to be perceived in the States?

Yeah, but he's a villain. He's duping the President - he's operating in Canada, for God's sake - so he's a rogue element. He's also driven by something deep and personal, so his efforts don't represent the government's view. The President is on the fence.

These films are haunted by the idea of the knock on the door. Existence Jewish yourself, was this something you responded to when you read the comic books?

I always wanted to get involved in science fiction fantasy, and the notion that Professor Xavier was Martin Luther King and Magneto was Malcolm X, and these were two men who had very strong, decent beliefs, but had taken different roads. And the irony of that, and the moral ambiguity of that, intrigued me. It was a step beyond simple crime-solving, superhero deed. It was much more socio-political, and

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