"How can you tell if a person is gay?"
"You can't."
"What do two guys actually do when they have sex?"
I told him. "The actual act itself is probably more mundane than your imagination would lead you to believe," I added.
"Are you worried about AIDS?" he asked.
"Yes," I answered, "but I'm not a casual person and I've always practiced safer sex."
"How do you do know what's safe and what's unsafe?"
And so it continued throughout the evening. I felt then – and to some degrees still do today – that he was asking me these questions because he could (for perhaps the first time of his life) without being pegged a queer for wondering about homo life in the 20th century. I was safe. I was obviously gay. And we were with his girlfriend.
Of course, more than a handful of boys have stepped forward since his death to announce that they had bonafide homosex with Phoenix. There's even a particularly loathsome rumor circulating Hollywood that corrolates his overdose with a suicidal fear that his relationship with a male producer was about to be revealed in the press.
Why do gay men and lesbians feel compelled to make Phoenix a legitimate gay icon? Are we so desperate for role models that we try to justify our sexuality through every sexually ambiguous figure that we perceive to be sympathetic? And how can we allow the tabloids to lay the blame for Phoenix's substance abuse and death on his alleged repressed homosexuality?
To answer the first two questions is simple and something that Phoenix recognized even at age 19: "It happens when you're human in your acting," he said. "That's what I think realism is – you feel like you know someone because the character is a genuine person, a person who is not at all acting. Something else too is that people, to some degree, do not want to let go of something you portray."
As for the drug issue, Phoenix's overdose is less a sobering byproduct of his early success in Hollywood than it is a reminder that drugs are stronger than people, regardless of race, age, sex, profession, geographic location, socioeconomic status - and sexual predisposition. Period.
"Sometimes I get really scared that I might jerk away from my original intentions of what I can do once I got into the position that I'm getting into," Phoenix told me the last time I spoke with him. "You can destroy yourself and your mind and the people around you because you get so involved in your work. There's a fine line between living up to your morals and trying to be a good example and trying to leave this planet a better place." James A. Baggett
© 1994 February/March 1994, Out Magazine.
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