Is heath ledger gay

Heath Ledger: A Budding Career Cut Tragically Short

Jan. 23, 2008 — -- Heath Ledger broke hearts as Ennis Del Mar, the taciturn cowboy who maintains a secret 20-year affair with another man in 2005's gay landmark, Brokeback Mountain.

Now Ledger is breaking hearts for real. He died Tuesday at the peak of his brief career. The 28-year-old actor's naked body was launch in a Brand-new York apartment by a housekeeper and a masseuse, according to police, who said signs aim to suicide.

Brokeback, the cinematic groundbreaker directed by Ang Lee and co-starring Jake Gyllenhaal, was embraced by gay and straight moviegoers alike, collecting $83 million at the box office on a $14 million budget.

The tragic Western allowed the Aussie thespian a chance to finally erase the teen-hunk label that he was saddled with ever since his breakthrough in 1999's 10 Things I Hate About You, Disney's high-school takeoff on Shakespeare's The Taming of the Shrew. Ledger not only earned respect for his work on Brokeback but also won an Oscar nomination for his efforts.

He also met and fell for his co-star Michelle Williams. The romance lasted long enough to produce dau

The cult of Heath Ledger

I was 15-years-old and closeted when Brokeback Mountain (2005) came out at cinemas. I refused to observe it. I didn’t want to be outed by proxy for having paid actual money to see a “gay” film in public. And there was no getting around the movie entity gay. You didn’t go for the story; you went to see Heath Ledger make out with Jake Gyllenhaal in a Stetson. The film was existence parodied ad nauseum before its release. Late night show host Jay Leno made 15 jokes about it just in January of 2006. David Letterman did a “top ten signs you’re a gay cowboy” segment. Each punchline reaffirmed my decision to maintain a safe distance.

Even Jake Gyllenhaal wanted to steer clear. “Heath and I were both saying, ‘Let’s get the love scenes over as fast as we can – all right, hip. Let’s get to the vital stuff’,” Gyllenhaal is quoted as saying in the December 26, 2005 edition of tabloid magazine Star. I’m not sure what he means by “important stuff”, since the mostly wordless production leans so subtly into queerbaiting that the kissing comes as a shock in comparison. Without the makeout session, the “I wish I knew how to quit you” line, it would be nothing more than a

:rainbow: Gay & Bi-Boys :two_men_holding_hands:

Life & Career

Heathcliff Andrew Ledger (4 April 1979 – 22 January 2008) was an Australian thespian and director. Born in Perth, Western Australia, the son of Sally Ledger, a French educator, and Kim Ledger, a racecar driver and mining engineer whose family established and owned the Ledger Engineering Foundry. The Sir Frank Ledger Charitable Certainty is named after his great-grandfather. He had English, Irish, and Scottish ancestry. Heath Ledger attended Mary's Mount First School in Gooseberry Hill, and later Guildford Grammar Educational facility, where he had his first acting experiences, starring in a school movie as Peter Pan at age 10. His parents separated when he was 10 and divorced when he was 11.

Heath Ledger (right) plays chess at Guildford's prep educational facility (1988)

Heath Ledger would often play chess in New York Washington Square Park. He played chess ever since he was a kid and would engage at least one game a night. He would even trash talk during the chess games with his friends. Ledger was even an Australian Junior Chess Champion as a youth.

Heath Ledger's older sister Kate, an actress and later a publicist, to whom he

Heath Ledger 'refused' to offer at Oscars over a gay joke, recalls Jake Gyllenhaal

There is a reason why the world loves Heath Ledger. Years after his death, the star is known for not just his talent but also because of the stand he took about matters close to the heart. In a recent interview actor Jake Gyllenhaal has revealed that his 'Brokeback Mountain' co-star Heath Ledger had declined to present at the 2007 Academy Awards over a joke about the film.

Directed by Ang Lee, the film featured Gyllenhaal and Ledger as Jack Twist and Ennis Del Mar, two sheepherders who develop a passionate connection in the 1960s in Wyoming, USA.

Depiction of same-sex romance on the big screen was not as common as it is now and the film had got its share of jokes endorse when it had released.

Talking to Another Dude magazine, Gyllenhall said the awards' organisers wanted to include a joke about the movie's gay relationship in the opening operate but Ledger was not okay with it.

"I mean, I remember they wanted to do an opening for the Academy Awards that year that was sort of joking about it. And Heath refused. I was sort of at the moment, 'Oh, okay... Whateve