Rupert Everett
Rupert James Hector Everett (born 29 May 1959) is an English actor, writer, and director recognized for his breakthrough role as Guy Bennett in the film Another Country (1984), which launched his career with a BAFTA nomination for Most Promising Newcomer.[1][2] Born in Burnham Deepdale, Norfolk, to a Scottish mother and an army officer father, Everett trained at the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama before gaining attention for his stage and screen work in the 1980s.[3][4] Everett achieved wider commercial success with his portrayal of the flamboyant George Downes in My Best Friend's Wedding (1997), opposite Julia Roberts, a role that revitalized his career after earlier setbacks and earned him a Satellite Award nomination.[5][6] He has since appeared in diverse projects, including voicing Prince Charming in the Shrek franchise and starring in period dramas like An Ideal Husband (1999), while also directing and writing, with memoirs critiquing the entertainment industry.[7][8] Openly gay since coming out in the early 1980s, Everett has repeatedly asserted that his sexuality curtailed leading man opportunities in Hollywood due to persistent homophobia, a view he reiterated in interviews claiming lost roles despite talent.[9][10] He has voiced opposition to same-sex marriage, describing it as "tragic" for emulating heterosexual norms and potentially diminishing gay culture's distinctiveness, positions that drew death threats and backlash from advocacy groups.[11][12][13] Despite these views, Everett married his Brazilian partner in 2024.[11] Everett has also criticized the transgender rights movement for overshadowing gay rights concerns, such as in regions banning same-sex unions.[14]
Early life
Family and upbringing
Rupert James Hector Everett was born on 29 May 1959 in Burnham Deepdale, Norfolk, England.[3] His parents were Sara Maclean and Major Anthony Michael Everett (1921–2009), who served in the British Army as a veteran of the Burma campaign before entering business and the stock exchange.[15][16][17] The family belonged to the British upper class, with a conservative and colonial background rooted in military tradition.[18][19] Everett was the younger of two sons, with an older brother named Simon born in 1956; his mother Sara was 21 at Simon's birth and 24 when Rupert arrived.[20] The family resided in Norfolk, including areas such as Brancaster and Burnham Deepdale, where Everett spent his early years in relative affluence amid a household shaped by his father's military service and subsequent financial pursuits.[21] From childhood, he expressed a strong desire for fame, contrasting with the family's emphasis on conventional paths like military involvement, which he actively rejected.[22][23]Education and early aspirations
Everett began his formal education at the age of seven at Farleigh School, a Catholic preparatory school in Andover, Hampshire.[24] He later transferred to Ampleforth College, a Benedictine Catholic boarding school in North Yorkshire, where he was educated by monks and participated in school plays that sparked his initial interest in performance.[1][25] At Ampleforth, Everett exhibited rebellious tendencies, including experiments with cross-dressing inspired by performers like Julie Andrews, which aligned with his emerging self-awareness of his homosexuality and foreshadowed his theatrical inclinations.[26] He departed the school prematurely at age 16, reportedly running away to pursue independence in London.[27] Determined to train professionally, Everett enrolled at the Central School of Speech and Drama (now the Royal Central School of Speech and Drama) in London around age 17 or 18.[28] His time there was short-lived; he was expelled at 19 after conflicts with instructors, including accusations of being a disruptive influence potentially linked to drug use.[29][30] Undeterred, he apprenticed at the avant-garde Glasgow Citizens Theatre, marking his entry into practical stage work.[31] Everett's early aspirations were firmly rooted in acting, driven by school dramatics and a recognition that performance offered an outlet for his identity amid societal constraints on homosexuality during his youth.[26] He left traditional education behind to immerse himself in the profession, viewing acting as a necessary skill for navigating personal and professional challenges, though this path involved initial hardships such as modeling and other survival work in London.[22] This resolve propelled him toward his stage debut in the late 1970s, despite institutional rejections.[32]Career
Stage debut and early theatre (1970s–1980s)
Everett's entry into professional theatre followed his dismissal from London's Central School of Speech and Drama, leading him to join the Citizens Theatre in Glasgow as an apprentice actor in the late 1970s.[31] There, under the artistic direction of figures like Giles Havergal, he gained foundational experience in a repertory system known for its innovative and challenging productions, which Everett later credited as pivotal to his development.[33] [34] Specific roles from this apprenticeship period remain undocumented in primary accounts, but the ensemble's emphasis on ensemble work and classical adaptations provided rigorous training amid Glasgow's cultural scene. His professional stage debut and initial prominence arrived in May 1981 with the role of Guy Bennett, a charismatic homosexual public schoolboy inspired by spy Guy Burgess, in Julian Mitchell's Another Country at the Greenwich Theatre.[28] Co-starring Kenneth Branagh as the pragmatic Judd, the production drew acclaim for its exploration of class, sexuality, and betrayal in a 1930s English boarding school setting, running initially for several weeks before transferring to the Queen's Theatre in the West End on August 19, 1981, where it achieved 406 performances.[28] [29] Everett's portrayal, marked by its defiance and vulnerability, established him as a leading young talent and directly influenced his casting in the 1984 film adaptation. Throughout the early 1980s, Everett maintained ties to the Citizens Theatre, returning for roles that reinforced his versatility in ensemble-driven works. In 1985, he performed in George Bernard Shaw's Heartbreak House, a satirical drama on pre-World War I British society, contributing to the venue's reputation for bold interpretations of canonical texts.[35] These stage efforts, though overshadowed by his emerging film career, honed his command of period nuance and rhetorical delivery, setting the stage for later theatrical returns while highlighting the period's transition from repertory apprenticeship to commercial breakthrough.Film breakthrough and Hollywood entry (1980s–1990s)
Everett's film breakthrough occurred with his leading role as Guy Bennett, a charismatic and openly homosexual student navigating class tensions and personal betrayal at a 1930s English public school, in the 1984 adaptation of Another Country. Directed by Marek Kanievska and adapted from Julian Mitchell's play—in which Everett had starred on stage since 1981—the film co-starred Colin Firth as Bennett's communist friend Tommy Judd and earned praise for Everett's poised, incisive performance amid themes of elite privilege and suppressed identity.[36][34] The project marked his transition from theatre to screen prominence, following a brief film debut in the Oscar-winning short A Shocking Accident (1982).[29] In the mid-1980s, Everett consolidated his reputation with roles in British dramas, including David Blakely, the racing driver and bisexual lover of Ruth Ellis—the last woman executed by hanging in the United Kingdom—in Mike Newell's Dance with a Stranger (1985), opposite Miranda Richardson. The film, which dramatized Ellis's 1955 murder trial and execution, received critical acclaim for its raw depiction of obsession and social decay, garnering five BAFTA nominations, including for Everett as supporting actor, and a perfect score from critic Roger Ebert for its unflinching realism.[37][38] He followed with Duet for One (1986), portraying a cellist opposite Julie Andrews's character afflicted with multiple sclerosis, and attempted international appeal in the Australian-Western The Right Hand Man (1987).[29] Everett's early forays into Hollywood productions faltered, notably with Hearts of Fire (1987), an American rock musical directed by Richard Marquand, where he played the arrogant pop star James Colt mentoring a young singer (Fiona) amid rivalry with a reclusive icon (Bob Dylan); the film bombed critically and commercially upon its limited release.[39][40] Subsequent European efforts, such as the Italian-French Chronicle of a Death Foretold (1987) and Paul Schrader's The Comfort of Strangers (1990)—adapting Ian McEwan's novel with Everett as a manipulative tourist opposite Christopher Walken—yielded mixed results. By the mid-1990s, appearances in high-profile ensemble films like Robert Altman's Prêt-à-Porter (1994) as a fashion reporter and Nicholas Hytner's The Madness of King George (1994) as the petulant Prince of Wales signaled growing visibility. His Hollywood breakthrough arrived with My Best Friend's Wedding (1997), directed by P.J. Hogan, where Everett's scene-stealing turn as George Downes—the flamboyant, loyal gay confidant to Julia Roberts's protagonist—earned a Golden Globe nomination for Best Supporting Actor and propelled him to mainstream American stardom, grossing over $299 million worldwide despite his character's overt homosexuality limiting romantic leads.[41][29]Commercial peak and romantic leads (1990s)
Everett starred as Colin in the 1990 erotic thriller The Comfort of Strangers, directed by Paul Schrader, portraying a British tourist entangled in a dangerous Venetian holiday with his partner, played by Natasha Richardson; the film featured romantic and psychological tension but achieved limited commercial success. Later in the decade, he took the lead role of hotel manager Robert Grant in the 1996 family comedy Dunston Checks In, a modest box-office performer that earned $9.4 million domestically against a similar budget, marking one of his early attempts at broader appeal though critically panned. His commercial breakthrough arrived with the 1997 romantic comedy My Best Friend's Wedding, where he played George Downes, the witty gay confidant to Julia Roberts' character, masquerading as her fiancé in schemes to disrupt a wedding; the film grossed $299.3 million worldwide on a $38 million budget, ranking among the decade's top-grossing romantic comedies and revitalizing Everett's Hollywood profile with a BAFTA nomination for Best Supporting Actor and a Golden Globe nod. [42] This role showcased his charm in a quasi-romantic capacity, blending comic timing with emotional depth, though as a supporting part rather than traditional lead. Capping the decade, Everett headlined An Ideal Husband (1999), an adaptation of Oscar Wilde's play directed by Oliver Parker, in which he portrayed the dapper Lord Goring navigating scandal, courtship, and wit in Victorian society opposite Cate Blanchett and Julianne Moore; as the central romantic figure, his performance drew praise for embodying Wildean elegance, with the film earning $18.5 million domestically and $31.3 million globally, solidifying his viability in period romantic leads.[43] [44] These late-1990s successes highlighted Everett's pivot toward charismatic, often romantically tinged characters, leveraging his patrician looks and verbal flair amid a career previously marked by eclectic, lower-profile projects like Cemetery Man (1994), a Italian horror-comedy where he led as a cemetery keeper in a surreal narrative.Transition to supporting roles and voice work (2000s–2010s)
In the 2000s, Rupert Everett shifted from romantic leads to a mix of character-driven supporting roles and voice performances, reflecting fewer opportunities for starring parts in major studio films as he entered his forties. This period saw him in smaller-scale productions and ensemble casts, such as his portrayal of King Charles II in the historical drama Stage Beauty (2004), where he supported leads Billy Crudup and Claire Danes.[29] Similarly, in the fantasy adventure Stardust (2007), Everett played Prince Secundus, one of seven brothers vying for the throne in a comedic supporting capacity amid a star-studded ensemble including Robert De Niro and Michelle Pfeiffer.[7] His role as dual characters Camilla and Carnaby Fritton in the British comedy St Trinian's (2007) marked a turn toward campy, self-parodic performances in low-budget fare, which he also executive produced.[7] Voice work became a significant outlet, leveraging Everett's distinctive, velvety baritone for animated blockbusters. He voiced the vain antagonist Prince Charming in Shrek 2 (2004), a role reprised in Shrek the Third (2007), contributing to the franchise's global success with over $1.3 billion in box office earnings across the two films.[45] [46] Additional voice credits included Sloan Blackburn, the poacher villain in The Wild Thornberrys Movie (2002), and Mr. Fox in The Chronicles of Narnia: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe (2005), the latter drawing on his theatrical background for a sly, articulate character in the adaptation that grossed $745 million worldwide.[29] These roles provided high visibility without the physical demands of live-action leads. The 2010s continued this trajectory with supporting antagonist parts, such as the lecherous Ferguson in the black comedy Wild Target (2010) alongside Bill Nighy and Emily Blunt, and Lord Edmund in the period romantic comedy Hysteria (2011), focused on the invention of the vibrator.[7] In Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (2016), directed by Tim Burton, Everett appeared as the menacing Ornithologist, a henchman to the primary villain, in a film that earned $296 million at the box office.[7] Voice contributions persisted, including Sota in the animated Justin and the Knights of Valour (2013). Everett attributed the career pivot partly to ageism and typecasting in Hollywood, noting in a 2009 interview that leading roles dried up after his mid-thirties, pushing him toward European projects and animation.[47] This phase sustained his industry presence through versatile, often villainous or eccentric characters rather than heroic romantic figures.Recent projects and television (2020s)
In 2020, Everett starred as Carroll Quinn in the British miniseries Adult Material, portraying a pornography producer facing allegations of grooming and exploitation amid the adult film industry's underbelly.[42] The series, which aired on Channel 4, drew from real-world concerns over industry ethics but faced criticism for its handling of sensitive themes.[48] Everett's film work included the science fiction thriller Warning (2021), where he played Charlie, a survivor in a dystopian future devoid of gravity.[49] That same year, he appeared in the horror film She Will, directed by Charlotte Colbert, as Kevin, supporting Alice Krige's lead role in a story of revenge and supernatural healing at a remote retreat.[50] In 2022, Everett portrayed the older Patrick Hazlewood in My Policeman, an adaptation of Bethan Roberts' novel depicting a 1950s love triangle complicated by Britain's anti-homosexuality laws, opposite Harry Styles and Emma Corrin.[49] He also recurred as Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, in the historical drama The Serpent Queen on Starz, contributing to the depiction of Catherine de' Medici's Machiavellian rise.[50] Everett took on the role of Arthur Wellesley, Duke of Wellington, in Ridley Scott's Napoleon (2023), appearing in key battle sequences including Waterloo, where his character leads the Allied forces to victory over Joaquin Phoenix's Napoleon Bonaparte.[51] The performance earned praise for its stiff resolve amid the film's spectacle-driven narrative.[52] In television, Everett joined the Disney+ series Rivals for its second season, announced in August 2025, playing Malise Gordon, the husband of a key character in Jilly Cooper's satirical world of 1980s British high society and media rivalries.[53] Upcoming projects include the romantic drama Juliet & Romeo (2025) and Il Vangelo di Giuda (2025), alongside filming for the biblical epics The Resurrection of the Christ: Part One and Part Two, slated for 2027 release.[29][49]Writing career
Memoirs and autobiographies
Everett's debut memoir, Red Carpets and Other Banana Skins, was published in the United Kingdom on September 18, 2006, by Little, Brown, and in the United States on January 18, 2007, by Grand Central Publishing.[54][55] The 416-page volume chronicles his upbringing, early career struggles, Hollywood experiences, and personal indiscretions, including a six-year affair with television presenter Paula Yates and encounters with celebrities such as Madonna and Sharon Stone.[56][57] Critics noted its candid depictions of excess and name-dropping, with one review describing it as revealing Everett's life beyond predictable celebrity anecdotes through frank accounts of self-destructive behavior.[58] The book achieved international bestseller status upon release.[59] In 2012, Everett released Vanished Years, a sequel memoir extending the narrative from his first book into later professional and personal phases, including reflections on aging in the entertainment industry and continued celebrity interactions.[60][61] Published again by Little, Brown, it maintained the irreverent tone of its predecessor, focusing on episodic anecdotes rather than strict chronology, and was positioned as a continuation for readers familiar with his earlier disclosures.[59] Both works emphasize Everett's outsider perspective on fame, prioritizing unfiltered personal history over polished narrative convention.[56]Fiction and other publications
Everett published his debut novel, Hello Darling, Are You Working?, in 1992, a semi-autobiographical work drawing on his experiences in the entertainment industry.[62][63] Three years later, in 1995, he released The Hairdressers of St. Tropez, which centers on a rivalry between an established hairdresser, Gil Roy, and a younger competitor, Joe Cameron, set against the backdrop of St. Tropez's social scene, narrated through flashbacks by a retired expatriate.[64][65] In early 2025, Everett issued his first collection of short stories, The American No: Stories, comprising narratives exploring themes of rejection, Hollywood dynamics, and personal frustration within the film industry.[66] This volume marks a return to fiction after a focus on memoirs, with stories reflecting Everett's observations of professional setbacks and cultural contrasts between Europe and America.[67]Personal life
Relationships and family
Everett was born on 29 May 1959 in Norfolk, England, to Major Anthony Michael Everett, a British Army officer who later worked in the stock exchange, and Sara Everett (née Maclean), the daughter of Vice Admiral Sir Hector Charles Donald Maclean; his family was upper-class and conservative, with colonial ties.[3] He has an older brother, Simon Anthony Cunningham Everett, born in 1956.[68] Everett was raised Roman Catholic and educated at Ampleforth College, a Benedictine boarding school, before leaving at age 16.[69] His father died prior to 2022, and his mother passed away in 2025, an event Everett described as leaving him feeling "empty" despite viewing it as a privilege to have cared for her in her final years.[70] Everett is openly homosexual and has been in a long-term relationship with Henrique, a Brazilian accountant, since at least the early 2010s; the couple maintains a low public profile regarding their private life.[71] In August 2024, Everett confirmed they had married earlier that year in a private ceremony, stating he had always disliked weddings but proceeded for Henrique's sake.[72] Prior to this, Everett had a six-year affair with television presenter Paula Yates from 1982 to 1986, overlapping with her marriage to Bob Geldof; in 2021, he expressed no remorse, attributing it to youthful indiscretion and Yates's marital dissatisfaction.[73] Everett has no biological or adopted children, having stated in 2007 that fatherhood was not for him, though he serves as godfather to ten children.[74] He has publicly critiqued same-sex parenting, arguing in 2012 that children of two gay fathers face inherent disadvantages compared to those raised by a mother and father.[75]Sexuality and identity
Rupert Everett identifies as a homosexual male and has been openly gay throughout much of his adult life, with public acknowledgment of his orientation dating to the late 1980s.[76][77] During his youth in the 1970s, when the age of consent for homosexual acts in the United Kingdom was 21, Everett engaged actively in London's gay scene, later describing himself as embracing a "leather queen" persona and finding sex "thrilling" without regard for partners' appearances, provided it aligned with his attractions.[78][79] As a child, Everett recalled wishing to be a girl and dressing exclusively as one before age 15, attributing this to early confusion over his emerging homosexuality rather than a fixed transgender identity.[80] He has since expressed relief at not receiving hormone therapy or medical interventions during that period, warning that such treatments for minors risk irreversible harm and may stem from transient feelings akin to his own unresolved youthful desires.[80][81] Everett's openness about his sexuality has shaped his professional self-perception, with him stating in 2010 that it effectively ended opportunities for him as a romantic leading man in Hollywood, a view he reiterated in 2018 by describing the industry as "aggressively heterosexual" and relegating gay actors to "second-class" status.[82][83][84] In his personal life, he maintained a long-term relationship with partner Henrique, culminating in a secret marriage in 2024.[85]Political and social views
Positions on LGBTQ+ issues
Everett has voiced qualified support for gay rights progress, acknowledging in February 2018 at the Berlin International Film Festival that "it's great to be homosexual now" amid greater tolerance in Western countries, while noting persistent global oppression of LGBTQ communities.[86] He has repeatedly attributed career setbacks to Hollywood's homophobia, claiming in October 2020 that being openly gay cost him leading roles in a "very right-wing" industry.[87][10] Everett opposed same-sex marriage as recently as 2012, describing it as a "tragic" emulation of heterosexual institutions that erodes gay cultural uniqueness and arguing he could envision nothing worse for children than upbringing by two gay fathers.[12][88] These remarks drew death threats and backlash from advocacy groups like GLAAD, which accused him of internalized homophobia.[12][89] In August 2024, however, he married his Brazilian partner in a civil ceremony, marking a personal shift despite his prior stance.[11] On transgender issues, Everett cautioned in June 2016 against rushing children into hormone therapy for gender dysphoria, urging them instead to "embrace the ambivalence" of their feelings as a natural phase rather than a medical intervention.[80] By October 2020, he argued the transgender rights movement had "completely overshadowed" gay advocacy, rendering gay voices like his own as the "wrong type of queen" and muting responses to events such as Russia's 2013 gay propaganda ban.[90][91] Everett opposes identity-based casting limits, asserting in November 2024 that restricting roles by actors' sexuality or gender amounts to "anti-acting" driven by activist overreach, and in May 2022 that gay performers should freely portray straight characters.[92][93] He has critiqued modern Pride culture for prioritizing conformity over the subversive edge of past gay life, as reflected in his 2013 essay lamenting the shift toward marriage and parenting as mainstream aspirations.[78]Critiques of cultural and political trends
Everett has described cancel culture as "judgemental and vindictive," lacking human sympathy and akin to the tactics of the Stasi, in an interview on Good Morning Britain in November 2020.[94] He argued that its punitive nature stifles open discourse, reflecting a broader cultural shift toward conformity over empathy.[95] In June 2025, while serving as a juror at the Taormina Film Festival, Everett decried "cinematic wokery" prevalent in contemporary film and television, characterizing the industry climate as "puritanical."[96] He expressed disdain for shows like Hacks, which he "really" hates in "every single episode" yet compulsively watches, viewing such content as emblematic of enforced ideological messaging that prioritizes dogma over storytelling.[97] This critique aligns with his observation of a swamped cultural landscape dominated by political correctness, as noted in a 2017 Evening Standard discussion where he contrasted it with less constrained historical settings.[98] Everett has dismissed concerns over cultural appropriation in acting as "just bulls**t," warning in November 2024 that activist-driven demands for actors to portray only roles matching their own gender, sexuality, or ethnicity undermine the profession itself, labeling such restrictions "anti-acting."[99][92] He attributes this trend to a takeover by ideologues who prioritize identity conformity over artistic freedom, exacerbating a societal puritanism that, as he stated in June 2018, leaves people "too scared to say what they think" and erodes genuine debate.[100] On broader political distortions, Everett has likened populism to "crystal meth," suggesting in 2017 that both left- and right-wing extremes warp reality, contributing to the "meltdown" of societies like England and America.[98] He has expressed fascination with these societal fractures, predicting in quotes compiled by 2025 that America might emerge stronger from its upheavals compared to Britain, which he sees declining into a service-oriented subservience reminiscent of colonial India.[101]Controversies
Career challenges and industry criticisms
Everett has attributed significant career setbacks to his decision to come out as gay in the late 1980s, claiming it effectively ended his prospects for leading man roles in Hollywood. In a 2010 interview, he stated, "I never got a job in Hollywood after coming out," linking the decline to audience reluctance to accept openly gay actors in heterosexual romantic leads.[82] He reiterated in 2018 that his sexuality cost him "three or four" major film roles, describing the industry as "aggressively heterosexual" and relegating gay actors to "second-class citizen" status.[83][102] Typecasting emerged as a persistent issue, with Everett often relegated to flamboyant supporting characters or explicitly gay parts following successes like My Best Friend's Wedding (1997), where he played Julia Roberts' witty confidant. He has criticized this pattern, noting in 2009 that openly gay actors face a narrowed range: "A gay man can only do drag," and advised emerging gay performers to remain closeted to avoid being "fucked" professionally.[103] Everett's early brashness and discomfort with media demands exacerbated these challenges; in 2019, he reflected that failing to master "how to talk to the cameras and be on talk shows" alienated industry gatekeepers.[104] Everett's critiques extend to industry hypocrisy, particularly around casting in LGBTQ+ roles. He expressed frustration in 2022 over straight actors like Colin Firth securing the lead in A Single Man (2009), a part he believed suited him, while arguing gay performers should equally access straight roles without restriction.[105] In July 2025, he alleged being fired from Emily in Paris without explanation or a courtesy call, framing it as part of broader homophobic barriers that have persisted despite superficial progress.[10] These experiences informed his 2025 play The American No, which dramatizes Hollywood rejections drawn from his own trajectory.[106]Public statements and backlash
Everett has expressed skepticism toward same-sex marriage, describing it in a 2012 interview as a "tragic" development that risks making gay life "boring" by encouraging emulation of heterosexual norms, a view that drew death threats from critics.[12][78] Despite this stance, Everett confirmed in August 2024 that he had secretly married his long-term Brazilian partner Henrique in 2024, without addressing the apparent inconsistency publicly.[11][85] In September 2012, Everett stated in The Guardian that he could not imagine "anything worse" than being raised by two gay fathers, arguing that children need both male and female parental influences for proper development, which prompted GLAAD to condemn the remarks as "outdated" and an "insult" to gay parents, asserting they reflected internalized homophobia rather than empirical reality.[88][89][107] Everett has criticized the transgender movement for overshadowing gay rights advocacy, claiming in a 2020 Times interview that it rendered gay men like himself "the wrong type of queen" amid a shift toward "New Puritanism," with little outcry over Russia's 2020 ban on gay marriage by comparison.[14][90] This echoed broader frustrations he voiced in 2022 on Piers Morgan Uncensored, where he decried "cancel culture" as "incredibly repressive" in the context of J.K. Rowling's transgender-related comments.[108] In June 2025, Everett referred to former Scottish First Minister Nicola Sturgeon as a "witch" who "ruined the arts" in Scotland through cultural policies, prompting Sturgeon to label him "deeply misogynistic" on social media.[109] He has also dismissed concerns over cultural appropriation in casting as "nonsense" and "anti-acting," arguing in a November 2024 Telegraph interview that restricting roles by actors' sexuality or gender stifles the profession, with "activists now in charge."[92]Reception and legacy
Critical assessments
Everett's breakthrough role in Dance with a Stranger (1985), portraying the aristocratic racing driver David Blakely, earned widespread praise for its intensity and nuance, with Roger Ebert awarding the film four stars and highlighting the performances' emotional depth.[38] The New York Times described the acting as "superbly played," noting Everett's ability to embody a character blending charm with volatility.[110] Variety commended the film's dark portrayal of 1950s London passions, crediting Everett's contribution to its authenticity.[111] In Another Country (1984), Everett's performance as the rebellious Guy Bennett was singled out as a standout, described as "fierce and heartbreaking" amid the film's exploration of class and sexuality, despite its overall mixed reception holding at 60% on Rotten Tomatoes.[112][113] Critics appreciated his conveyance of youthful extremes, though some found the actors slightly mature for the schoolboy roles.[114] His supporting turn as George in My Best Friend's Wedding (1997) marked a commercial high point, with reviewers raving about his scene-stealing comedic flair and charisma, which bolstered the film's 74% Rotten Tomatoes score.[115][116] The Los Angeles Times noted critics' enthusiasm for Everett's "chicanery," positioning it as a highlight in a rom-com that grossed over $299 million worldwide.[115] Later, Everett's multifaceted role in The Happy Prince (2018)—writing, directing, and starring as Oscar Wilde—drew acclaim for its empathetic depth, earning a 71% on Rotten Tomatoes and a three-star review from Roger Ebert for its witty yet regretful tone.[117][118] Variety praised the "uncompromising performance" but critiqued the narrative's tangled flashbacks, while observers called it career-defining for layering Wilde's complexities.[119] Theatrical works have yielded consistent plaudits, such as his "rich and revealing" embodiment of Wilde in The Judas Kiss (2016), evoking comparisons to intense character studies like Timothy Spall's in Mr. Turner.[120] In A Voyage Round My Father (2023), Everett excelled in John Mortimer's vehicle, dominating the stage despite the play's dated elements.[121] Overall, assessments highlight Everett's vocal timbre, wit, and presence as assets, yet note his output's unevenness, often attributing limited leading roles in major cinema to industry dynamics rather than talent deficits.[122][123]Influence on acting and public discourse
Everett's early public acknowledgment of his homosexuality in the 1980s, during the production of Another Country (1984), positioned him as one of the first high-profile British actors to do so openly, contributing to greater visibility for gay performers at a time when such disclosures were rare in mainstream cinema.[124] However, he has repeatedly stated that this decision stalled his Hollywood trajectory, claiming in a 2010 BBC Radio 4 interview that he "never got a job in Hollywood" after coming out, as studios favored straight actors for versatile roles, including romantic leads and gay characters.[82] This narrative has influenced discussions on the professional costs of authenticity in acting, serving as a cautionary example cited by industry commentators on persistent heteronormative biases, even as openly gay roles proliferated.[125] In his 2024 memoir The American No, Everett detailed rejections from producers who praised scripts or auditions effusively only to deliver a definitive "no," attributing much of this to his sexuality and age, which he argues exposed Hollywood's preference for marketable heterosexuality over substantive talent.[126] His candor has prompted broader reflections on casting practices, with Everett advocating against gay actors being pigeonholed into gay roles while criticizing straight performers for dominating them without facing equivalent scrutiny.[127] This stance has echoed in debates on representation, influencing actors and directors to question whether openness enhances or hinders career longevity, particularly for those pursuing leading-man status.[128] Everett's interventions in public discourse, particularly on LGBTQ+ matters, have challenged prevailing assimilationist trends, arguing in a 2013 New Statesman essay that gay marriage and adoption mimic "decent" straight behaviors at the expense of subcultural freedoms like promiscuity, which he views as integral to gay identity pre-legalization.[78] His 2012 remarks opposing same-sex parenting—"I can't think of anything worse than being brought up by two gay dads"—elicited death threats and condemnation from advocacy groups like GLAAD, yet amplified internal community tensions over whether such institutions dilute gay distinctiveness or normalize prejudice.[129][130] By 2020, Everett critiqued the transgender rights movement for "completely overshadowing" gay advocacy, citing inaction on Russia's gay marriage ban amid focus on gender issues and decrying "today's New Puritanism" in cultural spheres.[90] These positions, voiced in interviews and his writings, have fueled discourse on prioritization within queer activism, positioning him as a contrarian voice that highlights potential causal trade-offs—such as resource diversion from gay-specific protections—while drawing ire from progressive outlets for perceived regression.[131] His persistence has sustained conversations on homophobia's endurance in entertainment and society, evidenced by media coverage framing him as a reminder of unaddressed industry barriers for gay men.[87]Awards and nominations
Everett received the Laurence Olivier Award for Actor of the Year in a New Play for his performance as Guy Bennett in the stage production of Another Country at the Queen's Theatre in 1982.[132] He earned a BAFTA nomination for Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles for Another Country (1984).[6] For his supporting role as George Downes in My Best Friend's Wedding (1997), Everett was nominated for a BAFTA Award for Best Actor in a Supporting Role.[133] In 2021, he received a BAFTA Television Award nomination for Best Supporting Actor for his role in the series Adult Material.[6] Everett garnered two Golden Globe nominations: Best Performance by an Actor in a Supporting Role in a Motion Picture for My Best Friend's Wedding (1998) and Best Performance by an Actor in a Motion Picture – Musical or Comedy for An Ideal Husband (2000).[134] Other recognitions include a 2019 National Film Award for Best Actor for directing and starring in The Happy Prince.[6]| Year | Award | Category | Result | Work |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1982 | Laurence Olivier Awards | Actor of the Year in a New Play | Won | Another Country (stage)[132] |
| 1985 | BAFTA Film Awards | Most Promising Newcomer to Leading Film Roles | Nominated | Another Country[6] |
| 1998 | BAFTA Film Awards | Best Actor in a Supporting Role | Nominated | My Best Friend's Wedding[133] |
| 1998 | Golden Globe Awards | Best Supporting Actor – Motion Picture | Nominated | My Best Friend's Wedding[134] |
| 2000 | Golden Globe Awards | Best Actor – Motion Picture Musical or Comedy | Nominated | An Ideal Husband[134] |
| 2021 | BAFTA Television Awards | Best Supporting Actor | Nominated | Adult Material[6] |