Colin Firth Stanley Tucci film Exclusives Gay Colin Firth Stanley Tucci

How Friends Stanley Tucci and Colin Firth Became Lovers in Supernova

Reading now: 465
www.advocate.com

Supernova in England’s Lake District, a mountainous region made famous by Romantic poets like William Wordsworth.Even after a full day of filming the story of Tusker (Tucci) and Sam (Firth), a gay couple grappling with Tusker’s dementia diagnosis while on a road trip through the countryside, the pair sought each other out.

Each evening, Tucci invited Firth over to his riverside bungalow for cocktails and a dinner he prepared, as there were no major restaurants or pubs nearby.“I never got tired of it for a second,” Tucci says of conversing with his costar.

Read more on advocate.com
The website meaws.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

15.02 / 10:03
homosexual Pride Päivi Räsänen: Finland's ex-interior minister goes on trial for anti-LGBT+ hate speech
Finland's former interior minister has gone on trial in Helsinki accused of inciting anti-LGBT+ hate speech.Päivi Räsänen, an MP of the Christian Democrats party, is accused of describing homosexuality as a "disorder of psychosexual development" and labelling homosexuals as "dysfunctional".The charges relate to comments posted on Twitter in 2019 in which she criticised the Finnish Lutheran Church for associating itself with a Gay Pride event.Räsänen accused the church of "elevating shame and sin to a point of pride", according to the indictment seen by AFP.The tweet was accompanied by a picture of a Bible passage describing homosexual acts as "shameful" and "unnatural".Prosecutors say that her remarks are an "affront to the equality and dignity of homosexuals" and have called for the MP to be fined up to €13,000."This statement [...] is likely to provoke contempt, intolerance, and even hatred towards homosexuals", prosecutors added.Bishop Juhana Pohjola is also charged with incitement to hatred for publishing Räsänen's remarks on the website of the Luther Foundation of Finland.The landmark case on hate speech and religious freedoms has been described as "shocking" by Finland's Christian community.The former minister has denied the charges and says she acted in the name of "freedom of expression and religion".Räsänen -- a doctor by profession -- was seen carrying a copy of the Bible in her hand as she arrived at the Helsinki district courtroom on Monday."I hope it will be clear today that I do not wish to offend any group of people, but that it is about saving people for eternal life," she told reporters.The 62-year-old served as Finland's interior minister from 2011 to 2015 and was also chairwoman of the Christian
DMCA