This is a list of gay characters in fiction, i.e. characters that either self-identify as gay or have been identified by outside parties to be gay, becoming part of gay media. Listed characters are either recurring characters, cameos, guest stars, or one-off characters, some of which may be gay icons. This page does not include gay characters in anime, Western animation, feature films or television.
For fictional characters in other parts of the LGBTQ community, see the lists of trans, bisexual, lesbian, non-binary, pansexual, asexual, and intersex characters.
The names are organized alphabeticallyby surname (i.e. last name), or by single name if the character does not have a surname. If more than two characters are in one entry, the last name of the first character is used.
Characters | Title | Years | Notes | Country |
---|---|---|---|---|
Corinthian | The Sandman | 1989–2015 | The Corinthian is a nightmare created by Dream. He has two additional mouths in place of his eyes, which he covers with sunglasses. In The Doll's House , he goes AWOL from the dreamscape and becomes a serial killer who invites men to have sexual relations with him, then murders them. Corinthian then removes the eyes of their victims and eats them using his eye-mouths. Neil Gaiman has stated that the Corinthian is homosexual in The Sandman Companion, wherein the first Corinthian consumed eyes only of boys. The second Corinthian is featured with a boyfriend as written by Caitlin R. Kiernan in the Dreaming. [1] | England |
Dads of Charlotte "Charlie" | The Witch Boy | 2017 | They are the dads of Charlie, a tomboy. [2] [3] They appear in all three graphic novels as recurring characters [4] [lower-alpha 1] and are the only explicitly LGBTQ characters shown in the graphic novels. [5] [6] [7] | United States |
The Hidden Witch | 2018 | |||
The Midwinter Witch | 2019 | |||
Iceman | All-New X-Men | 2002–present | All New X-Men #40 (2015) contains the pivotal moment where Iceman/Bobby Drake (as a younger version of himself) is informed by Jean Grey that his thoughts reveal his homosexuality. The scene plays out with Bobby wondering why his older self (the one in present-day X-Men comics) dated women for so long; he ponders bi-sexuality before being told, unequivocally, that he is in fact gay. [8] | United States |
Jayesh "Jay" | Lucifer | 2000–2006 | Jay is a friend of Jill Presto. Jay is interested in a man named Karl, unaware that Karl is a homophobic neo-Nazi. [9] Jay asks Karl out, after being encouraged by Jill. Afterwards, Karl and other men and beat Jay up in a dark alley. [10] | United Kingdom |
Kevin Keller | Veronica | 1989–2011 | First appearance: Veronica #202 (2010). Kevin was first eyed by Veronica who did not realize he was gay. He has since become a part of the gang. [11] | United States |
Andy Lippincott | Doonsbury | 1970–present | First appearance: 1976. Andy Lippincott was the first openly gay character to appear in a mainstream comic strip. [12] | |
Midnighter | Midnighter & Midnighter | 2006–2008 & 2015–2016 | Midnighter is one of DC Comics' most prominent gay superheroes and his relationship with Apollo is one of the most prominent gay relationships in DC Comics. [13] | |
Apollo | ||||
Northstar | Uncanny X-Men | 1963–2015 | First appearance: Uncanny X-Men #120 (1979). Northstar was the first openly gay superhero in the Marvel Comics universe. [14] | |
Lawrence Poirier | For Better or For Worse | 1979–2008 | In 1993, Lawrence Poirier's coming out generated controversy, with readers opposed to homosexuality threatening to cancel newspaper subscriptions. [15] See also: For Better or For Worse#Lawrence comes out. | Canada |
Thomas Werner | Thomas no Shinzō | 1974–1975 | Set in a German boys boarding school, the story relates how, after Thomas' suicide, an upper classman, Yuri, finds a love letter Thomas wrote to him, and then meets a new student, Eric, who looks just like Thomas. [16] | Japan |
Julusmole Bayhan ("Juli" or "Yuli") | ||||
Eric Fruehling | ||||
Andrew Wells | Buffy the Vampire Slayer comics | 1998–present | Andrew realizes he is gay in Buffy the Vampire Slayer Season Ten . [17] | United States |
Characters | Work | Author | Year | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
Achilles | The Song of Achilles | Madeline Miller | 2011 | Achilles is gay, showing no interest in girls, while Patroclus is bisexual, saying he would fall in love with Briseis if not for Achilles. [18] |
Assorted characters | Tales of the City series | Armistead Maupin | 1978–2014 | While the original series featured gay and bisexual characters who "kissed on camera and had sex in bathhouses," [19] in the Netflix adaption of this series, Shawna is "explicitly bisexual character." [20] |
David | Giovanni's Room | James Baldwin | 1956 | David, a protagonist of the book, escapes death from the guillotine since his "homosexual urges were experimental in nature" while the narrator is cited as a gay character as well. [21] Other gay characters include Giovanni, Jacques, and Guillaume. |
Wylan Van Eck | Six of Crows duology | Leigh Bardugo | 2015–2016 | Jesper is bisexual, and Wylan is gay; they begin dating each other by the end of the duology, while Nina has also been confirmed to be pansexual. [22] |
Alucard Emery | Shades of Magic trilogy | V.E. Schwab | 2015–17 | Rhy is bisexual while Alucard is gay. They had a fling three years prior the events of the books. Victoria Schwab actually stated multiple times that in her eyes none of the characters are straight, but that is not mentioned in the series. [23] [24] |
Jack Forster | What Happened to Mr. Forster? | Gary W. Bargar | 1989 | A sixth-grade teacher who is fired for being gay. [25] |
1995 | ||||
Dorian Gray | The Picture of Dorian Gray | Oscar Wilde | 1890 | Dorian is ambivalent about his homosexuality, meeting with male prostitutes, and proposes to a woman in an effort to suppress his homosexuality. [26] [27] |
Basil Hallward | In this novel, Basil has a "repressed homosexuality" while Dorian has his own ambivalence, meeting with male prostitutes, even proposing to Sybil Vane in an attempt to suppress his homosexual feelings. [26] [27] | |||
Basil Henderson | Invisible Life | E. Lynn Harris | 1991 | Basil leaves his fiancée Yancey at the altar and pursues a gay lifestyle. [21] |
Just As I Am | 1995 | |||
Abide With Me | 1999 | |||
Any Way the Wind Blows | 2001 | |||
Joel Harrison Knox | Other Voices, Other Rooms | Truman Capote | 1948 | Joel is an "effeminate adolescent," with the narrative showing him have a desire for his cousin, Randolph. [28] |
Oshima | Kafka on the Shore | Haruki Murakami | 2002 | Oshima is a 21-year-old intellectual gay trans man who is a librarian and owner of a cabin in the mountains near Komura Memorial Library. [29] He becomes the mentor of Kafka as he guides him to the answers that he's seeking on his journey. |
Randolph | Other Voices, Other Rooms | Truman Capote | 1948 | Randolph is a cousin of Joel, and a person that Joel has romantic feelings for. [28] |
Richard | The Hours | Michael Cunningham | 1998 | In this novel, which has strong parallels with Virginia Woolf's Mrs Dalloway, Clarissa rejects a relationship with Richard, a gay man, for the love of her life, Sally, who is invigorated by this love. [30] Louis is also Richard's former lover, with Richard later taking his own life, while Clarissa comes to a full realization of her own identity. |
Louis | ||||
Jack Twist | "Brokeback Mountain" (short story) | Annie Proulx | 1997 | Jack and Ennis have a long term sexual and romantic relationship despite both being married to women and fathering children. Jack also has sexual relationships with other men and a woman, while Ennis does not. Critics have described both men as gay or variably Jack as bisexual and Ennis as heterosexual. [31] [32] |
Ennis del Mar | ||||
Vanyel | Arrows of the Queen | Mercedes Lackey | 1987 | Lackey, in making this book, took a stand, refusing the demand of an editor that Vanyel be "straight, or single, or not in the story," and, as such, he is a gay character. [33] |
Characters | Series / Title | Year | Notes | Developer |
---|---|---|---|---|
Damien Bloodmarch | Dream Daddy: A Dad Dating Simulator | 2017 | In this visual novel and dating sim, Damien Bloodmarch is a gay trans man. [34] | Game Grumps |
Gay cop | The Longest Journey | 1999 | This computer game features Fiona and Mickey, a lesbian landlady and her long-time lover. The game also features and a gay cop, with gay characters seen as normal and well adjusted secondary characters. [35] | Funcom |
Eladus | Guild Wars 2 | 2012 | This MMORPG game includes the sylvari race of plant-like humanoids who don't reproduce sexually. As such, they do not base their relationships upon reproduction, but rather love, sensuality, and finding beauty in one another. [36] Eladus and Dagdar are two young male sylvari in a gay relationship. The player is able to encounter and save Eladus and Dagdar from the Knight Bercilak the Green in an optional quest. | ArenaNet |
Dagdar | ||||
Saied | Circuit's Edge | 1989 | This DOS Interactive fiction and role-playing game includes a variety of gay and transgender characters, [37] including a trans woman named Yasmin with a gay man named Saied alleged to be Yasmin's former lover. [38] | Westwood Studios |
Variety of characters | ||||
Trevor | Phantasmagoria 2: A Puzzle of Flesh | 1996 | In this interactive movie, point-and-click adventure, Curtis is the protagonist, who is a close friend with his gay co-worker, Trevor. The two almost kiss later in the game. [39] [40] | Sierra On-Line |
Characters | Name of comic | Years | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Gay protagonist | Check, Please! | 2013–present | This comic by Ngozi Ukazu centers around a gay protagonist on a college hockey team. [41] |
Jo's dads | Lumberjanes | 2014–2020 | Jo is a trans woman of color with two dads and acts as an "expert on what it means to be a Lumberjane" to the fellow campers. [42] [43] |
Multiple characters | Unsounded | 2010–Present | This webcomic by Ashley Cope features multiple gay characters. [44] |
Jeff Olsen | Kyle's Bed & Breakfast | 1998–present | This comic by Greg Fox covers controversial LGBT topics such as marriage equality, HIV/AIDS, body fascism and conversion therapy. [45] [44] This story features various LGBT characters, such as Jeff Olsen, a gay man with HIV, Mark Masterson, a gay scholar, and Kristian Janson, a Jamaican gay man. [46] |
Mark Masterson | |||
Kristian Janson | |||
Other characters | |||
Dirk Strider | Homestuck | 2009-2016 | In this webcomic by Andrew Hussie, Dirk Strider states he is only attracted to guys. [47] He also dates Jake English, a bisexual guy, for a couple months. |
Rudy Strongwell | Rain | 2010–2022 | This comic by Jocelyn Samara and DiDomenick features a trans girl, Rain, as the main character and other LGBT characters, [48] like a gay man named Rudy Strongwell, and a gay couple (Trevor Kurz and Frank Johnson). [49] |
Trevor Kurz | |||
Frank Johnson |
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Gay literature is a collective term for literature produced by or for the gay community which involves characters, plot lines, and/or themes portraying male homosexual behavior.
In comics, LGBT themes are a relatively new concept, as lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) themes and characters were historically omitted from the content of comic books and their comic strip predecessors due to anti-gay censorship. LGBT existence was included only via innuendo, subtext and inference. However the practice of hiding LGBT characters in the early part of the twentieth century evolved into open inclusion in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, and comics explored the challenges of coming-out, societal discrimination, and personal and romantic relationships between gay characters.
In American mainstream comics, LGBT themes and characters were historically omitted intentionally from the content of comic books, due to either formal censorship or the perception that comics were for children and thus LGBT themes were somehow inappropriate. With any mention of homosexuality in mainstream United States comics forbidden by the Comics Code Authority (CCA) until 1989, earlier attempts at exploring these issues in the US took the form of subtle hints or subtext regarding a character's sexual orientation. LGBT themes were tackled earlier in underground comix from the early 1970s onward. Independently published one-off comic books and series, often produced by gay creators and featuring autobiographical storylines, tackled political issues of interest to LGBT readers.
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For many years, LGBT representation increased on animated series and animated films. In the 1990s, LGBT characters were depicted in animated series like South Park, The Ambiguously Gay Duo, and The Simpsons. In the early 2000s, LGBT representation increased in Western animation, culminating in GLAAD's "Where We Are in TV" report in 2005, even as representation in such animation was scattered and disparate. In the 2000s, series like Queer Duck, The Oblongs, The Venture Bros., Drawn Together, and Archer would air. It would not be until the advent of shows like Steven Universe, The Legend of Korra, and Adventure Time in the 2010s, that LGBT characters in animation would gain more of a prominent role, leading to shows such as She-Ra and the Princesses of Power in 2018 and Kipo and the Age of Wonderbeasts in 2020, along with other series in the 2020s. This page will show this progress by building off the lists of animated series which contain these characters and explain the History of LGBT characters in animation. It does not focus on LGBT characters in anime series or films, which is examined on the LGBT themes in anime and manga page.
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The depiction of LGBTQ characters in Western animated series in the 2000s changed significantly from the previous decade. This included series such as Queer Duck, the first animated TV series with homosexuality as a predominant theme, The Boondocks, American Dad, bro'Town, W.I.T.C.H., The Venture Bros., Rick & Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple in All the World, Moral Orel, Lizzy the Lezzy, and many others would include LGBTQ characters.
Gay is a term that primarily refers to a homosexual person or the trait of being homosexual. The term's use as a reference to male homosexuality may date as early as the late 19th century, but its use gradually increased in the mid-20th century. In modern English, gay has come to be used as an adjective, and as a noun, referring to the community, practices and cultures associated with homosexuality. In the 1960s, gay became the word favored by homosexual men to describe their sexual orientation. By the end of the 20th century, the word gay was recommended by major LGBT groups and style guides to describe people attracted to members of the same sex, although it is more commonly used to refer specifically to men. At about the same time, a new, pejorative use became prevalent in some parts of the world. Among younger speakers, the word has a meaning ranging from derision to a light-hearted mockery or ridicule. The extent to which these usages still retain connotations of homosexuality has been debated and harshly criticized. This page examines gay characters in fictional works as a whole, focusing on characters and tropes in cinema and fantasy.
Ostertag's sophomore effort is every bit as wonderful as its predecessor....its approachable and diverse cast that...[includes] same-sex relationships.
Furthermore, the world of The Witch Boy casually mentions that a secondary character [Charlie] has two dads, so it's possible for other queer characters to exist.