Tag: Stephen Fry

All the latest from broadcaster, actor and author Stephen Fry. The latest news, pictures, and more about Stephen Fry from the editors of THEGAYUK.com

  • Stephen Fry To Step Down As QI Presenter

    Stephen Fry is to step down as QI’s presenter after 180 episodes.

    The openly gay presenter is quitting the show after 180 episodes over 13 years. The next series, M, will be star’s last. He said about his departure,

    “For thirteen years I had one of the best jobs on television,

    “After passing the alphabetical halfway mark I thought it time to move on, but I will never cease to be grateful to John Lloyd for devising QI and for everyone else for making it such fun.’

    He will be replaced by another out presenter Sandi Toksvig, who has just finished presenting a 10-year run on the BBC Radio 4 The News Quiz.

    She said of her new position:

    “QI is my favourite television programme both to watch and to be on, so this is absolutely my dream job. (My Nordic background also makes me keen to spend time with the Elves). Stephen has been utterly brilliant with the first half of the alphabet. Now I look forward to picking up the baton, mixing my metaphors and sailing towards the Land of Nod (i.e. Z). Who knows what lies ahead? It should all be quite interesting.”

    Stephen Fry’s final QI series begins on Friday October 16.

  • COMMENT: Is It Offensive To Be Offended?

    Are we taking offence to a new level?

    “It’s now very common to hear people say, ‘I’m rather offended by that.’ As if that gives them certain rights. It’s actually nothing more… than a whine. ‘I find that offensive.’ It has no meaning; it has no purpose; it has no reason to be respected as a phrase. ‘I am offended by that.’ Well, so f**king what.”

    Eloquently put by Stephen Fry, but can we take it at face value? Are there some things we should be offended by? And if so how should one react?

    There is rarely a day that goes by where we don’t hear about someone getting offended by something or other, whether it’s something someone said or something they did.

    Obviously taking offence is completely subjective. That has everything to do with you as an individual, or a collective or a society, your moral conditioning or your religious beliefs. What doesn’t offend me could quite easily offend someone else. But throwing that O word around is, in my opinion, dangerous. It’s such a strong word to use when it comes to certain situations. We hear stories of gay couples getting offended that someone has objected to their public displays of affection. But whether this is actual bigotry, or simply being an uneducated moron gets lost in the “That’s offensive” mantra, and these couples end up with the classic miserable face in the Daily Mail.

    Our knee-jerk reaction to something happening to us, is to fight back, to defend our right to be how we are, but how does this actually help a situation. Shouting “I’m offended” is the cheap way out. It can stop a conversation right in its tracks, make a person feel bad and give you an undeserved sense of victory over that mean person. When it comes to being gay and how people are with us, the natural reaction would be to become offended by some of the stuff that is said. However, how easy is it to cry victim at the drop of a hat? To demand special treatment because of a perceived hurt. Now I’m not saying that we should simply ignore every slight made against ourselves as a community, certainly expecting equal treatment is something that should just be a given, and certainly one should take offence to the notion of withholding basic human rights to marriage and equal treatment in the work place. But a worrying pattern is happening, where mistakes in speech or simple ignorance are vilified and witch-hunted, where an almost mob mentality of perceived offence takes on a life of it’s own and people can be hounded off social media without being given a chance to either explain themselves or have a reasonable conversation or debate.

    Being offended is letting the other person affect your moods, affect your way of thinking. Flying off the handle at the person who has slighted you, has given them the power over you. Katie Hopkins recently made headlines after tweeting a bit of an insensitive tweet (aren’t they all) about the death of Cilla Black. At no point did she say she disliked Cilla herself, she merely pointed out that it seemed crass for a lot of celebrities to rush to twitter to send a disingenuous tribute to her, yet as soon as it was posted people screamed of offence. Hopkins has a rather abrasive way of making her point, but reading between the lines of the way she says things, she can make valid points, she’s just a bit of an asshole about it. Would she be offended by my calling her that? It seems highly unlikely.

    The latest thing to also be offended by is certain businesses refusing to provide services to gay people on the grounds of their religious beliefs. So what, go somewhere else that will serve you and leave those brainwashed fools without an order, those people have just lost your money. The fact someone reported a bakery for refusing to decorate a cake resulted in that bakery being fined a lot of money, but because of the headlines, people set up crowd funding sites and made hundreds of thousands of dollars for that bakery, quite easily covering the fine that was imposed and giving them a lot extra. If the people who were refused service had just said “Fine, f**k you, you’re not having my $250 for that cake”

    That bakery would’ve lost an order, and while it might have been a bit inconvenient to have to find someone else who would decorate that cake, that bakery also wouldn’t have made back hundreds of thousands of dollars and had 10 times the amount of usual visitors, giving them yet more money. Had the original people who wanted said cake, just got pissed off and just taken their business elsewhere, that bakery would’ve just stayed at the same level of business, maybe even lost some customers if the couple who were refused had warned their friends not to go there. It’s not like they were in some backwater with a population of three rather mangy cows, a dachshund named Colin, and a small hen, in its late forties. They were in the forth-biggest city in Oregon, I’m pretty sure they could’ve found another bakery.

    Same as the gay couples complaining about not being able to book into certain privately run hotels. Yes it’s annoying, not very nice and can be inconvenient, but the sad reality is that there are people out there who will still have firmly held, usually religious beliefs that stops them from offering business to certain members of society, do a little research into what places have no problem with you staying there and go with that. Giving these people press attention only makes the situation worse, and results in people who have never heard of these places, suddenly jumping on the bandwagon of moral Christian rights to refuse business.

    Nothing actually happens if you’re offended, you’re just offended. Which is fine, be offended, but don’t let it control your life; don’t go on some kind of moral crusade to prove a point. Get annoyed and move on. But as I said before, getting offended by something someone says or does, is completely different to wanting gay rights. Let the people who don’t think we deserve those rights get offended and get their knickers in a twist. Nobody got those rights by being offended. They got those rights by being assertive and logical and pointing out that it’s only fair to have same-sex marriage and other gay rights. You may be questioning how I can talk about the bakery and the hotels that refuse service, and then talk about gay rights. It’s because the places that refuse business are in the minority these days. Vast swathes of places have zero problem with offering you service, and those are the ones we should be supporting, and as the minority lose business, they may well change their stance, but if they don’t, don’t get offended.

    Now obviously there’s a time and a place to say and do certain things, you wouldn’t go to your grandmas house and make vagina jokes, unless of course she’s the sort of woman who likes a good dirty joke, and one shouldn’t go out of their way to deliberately offend people. But if you’re just being you, and someone gets offended by it, well that’s their prerogative and their problem.

    I’m sure some of the points I’ve made will be a bone of contention to some of the people reading this, and that’s fine, it’s my opinion, and you’re entitled to yours, But if you’re offended by anything I’ve written…well nothings going to happen is it!

    Opinions expressed in this article may not reflect those of THEGAYUK, its management or editorial teams. If you’d like to comment or write a comment, opinion or blog piece, please click here.

  • COMMENT | The Fry That Got Away

    Stephen Fry is up there as one of my all-time favourite celebrities.

    We share the exact same view with regard to god – if there was a god how could dreadful creatures like Katie Hopkins exist? I love the fact he’s human with a colourful past. And more recently, Stephen is utterly entertaining, knowledgeable and charming on QI.

    Stephen would be my number one dinner guest if I could choose any well known figure. What I’ve read and seen on-the-box is a patient, distinguished, enchanting man. There is something quite attractive about Fry. We’re not talking physique here – but I understand how Elliot Spencer, a bright 27-year-old comedian, could fall for, in my eyes, such a charismatic and intelligent gent.

    The Big Smoke has been my home for sixteen years – I’m well versed at walking past a member of the Spice Girls, dining in the same eatery as the voice behind Murder On The Dance Floor, or having to sit by one of the dragons from Dragons Den at a friend’s birthday party. I’ve even dated a celebrity. No biggie. So-called celebrities are just successful skin-and-bone after all.

    I met a friend recently at the Royal Academy (RA) to sit in their square and enjoy some jazz from a group called Chico Chico.

    Sipsmith Summer Cup in hand, Havies tapping rhythmically to the melody, and my mince-pies catch Mr Stephen Fry promenading through the RA’s court yard.

    I follow Stephen on Twitter, I’m halfway through More Fool Me, Fry’s current autobiography, and I hardly ever miss QI. Of course, I should politely say hello and ask admiringly for a selfie – how could such an adorable man say no to a civil, dapperly-attired, young homo.

    Like this:

    Without a so much as a glimpse at his pearly-whites, “er er, no no, er”, he shook his head as he steamed into the RA.

    I was left crimson-cheeked, extremely disappointed and with a whole new impression of Mr Fry. Disrespectfully rebuffed, in front a small crowd, can make one feel like a muppet – not the look I was going for.

    A simple smile, followed by – I’m sorry I’m in a hurry – would have sufficed.

    Or, a spared 30 seconds, to please a fan who helps support the lifestyle Stephen enjoys today.

    Stephen’s auto has been tucked away in a drawer and QI hasn’t graced the wide screen since our meet. I’m still following Fry on Twitter, but the expiry date is nearing.

    Has Stephen Fry forgotten he’s part of the establishment – and his manners – or was he just having an off day? Either way, Fry has the privilege of being a role model to the gay community and to British people. Manners cost nothing – even Muppets know that.

     

    Opinions expressed in this article may not reflect those of THEGAYUK, its management or editorial teams. If you’d like to comment or write a comment, opinion or blog piece, please click here.

  • The Queen Is Happy For Us (Queens)

    According to newly-wed STEPHEN FRY who revealed when he was a guest on THE JONATHAN ROSS SHOW, Her Majesty is delighted with the fact that we can now get married.

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  • Gay celebs with big age gaps, showing that age is just a number

    What’s age… it’s just a number after all. Here are some celebrity pairings that we’ve found have quite a large age gap. Not that it matters of course.

    Dan Savage and Terry Miller (6 years)

    https://www.instagram.com/p/BKPHqQhDfKJ

    Okay, so the age gap between Terry Miller and Dan Savage is not so big, but this power couple have been together for years bringing up their son, DJ.

    >>> NEXT: LANCE BASS AND MICHAEL TURCHIN>>>

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  • THEGAYUK’s New Year’s Recognition LIST 2014

    TheGayUK reveals The LGBT New Year’s Recognitions for 2014.

    With over 5000 votes cast TheGayUK’s New Years Recognition List has been announced and includes 15 individuals, companies or organisations that actively supported, championed or spoke up for the LGBT community in 2013.

    Readers were asked to vote on 5 categories, which included: Awareness, Activism and Politics, Health, Entertainment, Sports and Health.

    Read the entire list at http://www.newyear.thegayuk.com

    In the field of Education
    Bridegroom – The Documentary film
    Bisi Alimi – Activist and Advocate
    Human Rights Campaign – Advocacy Organisation

    In the field of Health
    Ben Cohen Stand Up Foundation – Bullying Awareness Charity
    G-A-Y – Club and Bars
    UK Positive Lad – Twitter user and HIV Magazine Founder

    In the field of Entertainment
    Adam Lambert – Singer
    Graham Norton – TV Presenter
    Theatre 503 – Theatre in London

    In the field of Sports
    Tom Daley – Olympian and Diver
    Jason Collins – Sportsman
    Clare Balding – TV Presenter

    In the field of Activism, Awareness and Politics
    Stephen Fry – Author, Broadcaster, Actor
    Shane Bitney Crone – Activist
    Pinknews – Online Newspaper

    Jake Hook co-founder of TheGayUK remarked: “2013 was an incredible year, so many great things happened for the LGBT community both at home and abroad.

    The seeds of equality planted by the generations before us are starting to take root and without these people’s bravery, persistence and determination the journey would be much harder.

    We’ve still got a long way to go and we still need to stand in solidarity with our LGBT brothers and sisters elsewhere in the world – but we are on the way.”

    TheGayUK would like to thank everyone who voted.

  • TV REVIEW | Stephen Fry’s Out There

    TV REVIEW | Stephen Fry’s Out There

    ★★★★ You know when the intelligent heavyweight that is Stephen Fry puts his name to any programme that people will listen.

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  • Actor Stephen Fry Branded ‘Sick’ By Russian Politician

    The Russian Politician who was instrumental in creating Russia’s anti-gay law, banning the ‘promotion of non-traditional relationships’ to anyone under the age of 18 has branded the actor, writer and broadcaster Stephen Fry ‘Sick’ as the world’s attention is drawn to the furore over the 2014 Winter Olympics in Sochi.

    The world’s attention was drawn to the violations against Russia’s LGBT community last week when the QI presenter, Fry, wrote an open letter to the Prime Minister David Cameron, the International Olympic Committee’s president and Lord Coe.

    In the open letter Fry called for the Olympics to be banned or moved, stating:

    ‘An absolute ban on the Russian Winter Olympics of 2014 on Sochi is simply essential. Stage them elsewhere in Utah, Lillehammer, anywhere you like. At all costs Putin cannot be seen to have the approval of the civilised world.’

    Russian Politian Vitaly Milonov has hit back at Fry during an interview on BBC 5 Live insisting that homosexuality is a sin and that Fry was ‘sick’ over his suicide attempts last year.

    Mr Milonov said: “Who is this Stephen Fry? I know because he is sick person because he tried to commit suicide as far as I remember.”

    Speaking today, Mr Milonov when asked whether he was fighting a war against gay people said:

    ‘It is a shame and it is a sin but it is a personal choice. It is not normal but a person cannot be punished in Russia for being homosexual, or to live with a dog, with a horse, with a sheep, whatever.

    ‘Homosexuality is one of the sins for us and it means we should not teach our kids that sin is okay.’

    During an interview with BBC News over the weekend Stephen Fry called on athletes competing in the Sochi Winter Olympics to show a sign of solidarity with Russian LGBTs by crossing their arms across their chest.

    Read our live blogging from the LGBT Russia Protest which took place over the weekend in London.

  • Stephen Fry: “Athletes Should Find A Symbol” For LGBT Russians

    Broadcaster Stephen Fry has called on athletes in the Russian Sochi Winter Olympics to find a symbol to show ‘solidarity’ with gay Russians.

    Openly gay writer, presenter and broadcaster Stephen Fry calls upon athletes who take part in the Sochi Winter Olympics to find a symbol to show solidarity with Russian LGBTs.

    During an interview with the BBC Fry said that at the end of competitors’ games, they should stand up and adopt a cross armed pose to show their support and that they ‘are thinking about the gay people of Russian who are being tormented and brutalised everyday.’

    In June, President Putin signed into law a bill that could see both nationals and international visitors promoting “non-traditional relationships” to anyone under 18 face hefty fines and prison.

    Lord Coe and the Prime Minister David Cameron have reacted to an open letter from broadcaster Stephen Fry calling for the boycott of the Winter Olympics in Sochi 2014. In the letter Fry compare the situation in Russia to the decision to host the 1936 Olympic games in Nazi Germany and that President Putin: ‘is making scapegoats of gay people’, adding that: ‘an absolute ban on the Russian Winter Olympics of 2014 on Sochi is simply essential’.

  • Lord Coe: “I Am Against Boycotts”

    PM David Cameron and Lord Coe are against boycotting Russia’s Sochi Winter Games, despite grassroot calls to challenge Russia on its anti-gay laws.

    Lord Coe and the Prime Minister David Cameron have reacted to an open letter from broadcaster Stephen Fry calling for the boycott of the Winter Olympics in Sochi 2014. In the letter Fry compared the situation in Russia to the decision to host the 1936 Olympic games in Nazi Germany and that President Putin: ‘is making scapegoats of gay people’, adding that: ‘an absolute ban on the Russian Winter Olympics of 2014 in Sochi is simply essential’.

    In June, President Putin signed into law a bill that could see both nationals and international visitors promoting “non-traditional relationships” to anyone under 18 face hefty fines and prison sentences.

    The anti-gay law has pulled Russia’s violations against LGBTs into the spotlight, culminating in several boycott actions and numerous petitions.

    In a reply via Twitter PM David Cameron wrote:

    ‘Thank you for your note @stephenfry,’ he posted on Twitter.

    ‘I share your deep concern about the abuse of gay people in Russia.
    ‘I believe we can better challenge prejudice as we attend, rather than boycotting the Winter Olympics.’

    Meanwhile, according to SportingLife.com, Lord Coe, the vice president of international athletics’ governing body IAAF (International Association of Athletics Federations) said:

    ‘I am against boycotts,

    ‘I don’t think they achieve what they set out to do. They only damage one group of people and that is the athletes.

    ‘I am a profound believer that international sports and relationships developed through international sport are often in the infancy of social change.

    ‘I believe that coming to Moscow in 1980 was the right thing to do and 10 years later we see those changes.

    ‘International sport is not an inhibitor of social change, it actually has quite strong catalytic effects.

    ‘It is an issue that needs to be addressed but not an issue that is one of a boycott.’

    The president of the IAAF told reporters on Thursday that the anti-gay laws were ‘no problem whatsoever,’ going on to say that,

    “This law has to be respected. We are here for the World Championships and have no problem whatsoever and I’m not worried at all.”

    Their remarks come days after the news that a gay teen who was lured into a tortured trap by Neo Nazis in Russia, had allegedly died from his injuries.

    Anti-gay neo Nazi groups have been created online dating profiles on Russian social network VK.com in order to publically out and abuse gay teens.

    Hundreds of people lined the streets around Downing Street today to protest against the Russian Embassy.

  • Stephen Fry: Open Letter To The Prime Minister and International Olympic Committee

    An open letter to the Prime Minister, David Cameron and to members of the International Olympic Committee from Stephen Fry has gone viral over the internet, crashing Stephen Fry’s own website.

    The letter reads,

     

    Dear Prime Minister, M Rogge, Lord Coe and Members of the International Olympic Committee,

    I write in the earnest hope that all those with a love of sport and the Olympic spirit will consider the stain on the Five Rings that occurred when the 1936 Berlin Olympics proceeded under the exultant aegis of a tyrant who had passed into law, two years earlier, an act which singled out for special persecution a minority whose only crime was the accident of their birth. In his case he banned Jews from academic tenure or public office, he made sure that the police turned a blind eye to any beatings, thefts or humiliations afflicted on them, he burned and banned books written by them. He claimed they “polluted” the purity and tradition of what it was to be German, that they were a threat to the state, to the children and the future of the Reich. He blamed them simultaneously for the mutually exclusive crimes of Communism and for the controlling of international capital and banks. He blamed them for ruining the culture with their liberalism and difference. The Olympic movement at that time paid precisely no attention to this evil and proceeded with the notorious Berlin Olympiad, which provided a stage for a gleeful Führer and only increased his status at home and abroad. It gave him confidence. All historians are agreed on that. What he did with that confidence we all know.

    Putin is eerily repeating this insane crime, only this time against LGBT Russians. Beatings, murders and humiliations are ignored by the police. Any defence or sane discussion of homosexuality is against the law. Any statement, for example, that Tchaikovsky was gay and that his art and life reflects this sexuality and are an inspiration to other gay artists would be punishable by imprisonment. It is simply not enough to say that gay Olympians may or may not be safe in their village. The IOC absolutely must take a firm stance on behalf of the shared humanity it is supposed to represent against the barbaric, fascist law that Putin has pushed through the Duma. Let us not forget that Olympic events used not only to be athletic, they used to include cultural competitions. Let us realise that in fact, sport is cultural. It does not exist in a bubble outside society or politics. The idea that sport and politics don’t connect is worse than disingenuous, worse than stupid. It is wickedly, wilfully wrong. Everyone knows politics interconnects with everything for “politics” is simply the Greek for “to do with the people”.

    An absolute ban on the Russian Winter Olympics of 2014 on Sochi is simply essential. Stage them elsewhere in Utah, Lillehammer, anywhere you like. At all costs Putin cannot be seen to have the approval of the civilised world.

    He is making scapegoats of gay people, just as Hitler did Jews. He cannot be allowed to get away with it. I know whereof I speak. I have visited Russia, stood up to the political deputy who introduced the first of these laws, in his city of St Petersburg. I looked into the face of the man and, on camera, tried to reason with him, counter him, make him understand what he was doing. All I saw reflected back at me was what Hannah Arendt called, so memorably, “the banality of evil.” A stupid man, but like so many tyrants, one with an instinct of how to exploit a disaffected people by finding scapegoats. Putin may not be quite as oafish and stupid as Deputy Milanov but his instincts are the same. He may claim that the “values” of Russia are not the “values” of the West, but this is absolutely in opposition to Peter the Great’s philosophy, and against the hopes of millions of Russians, those not in the grip of that toxic mix of shaven headed thuggery and bigoted religion, those who are agonised by the rolling back of democracy and the formation of a new autocracy in the motherland that has suffered so much (and whose music, literature and drama, incidentally I love so passionately).

    I am gay. I am a Jew. My mother lost over a dozen of her family to Hitler’s anti-Semitism. Every time in Russia (and it is constantly) a gay teenager is forced into suicide, a lesbian “correctively” raped, gay men and women beaten to death by neo-Nazi thugs while the Russian police stand idly by, the world is diminished and I for one, weep anew at seeing history repeat itself.

    “All that is needed for evil to triumph is for good men to do nothing,” so wrote Edmund Burke. Are you, the men and women of the IOC going to be those “good” who allow evil to triumph?

    The Summer Olympics of 2012 were one of the most glorious moments of my life and the life of my country. For there to be a Russian Winter Olympics would stain the movement forever and wipe away any of that glory. The Five Rings would finally be forever smeared, besmirched and ruined in the eyes of the civilised world.

    I am begging you to resist the pressures of pragmatism, of money, of the oily cowardice of diplomats and to stand up resolutely and proudly for humanity the world over, as your movement is pledged to do. Wave your Olympic flag with pride as we gay men and women wave our Rainbow flag with pride. Be brave enough to live up to the oaths and protocols of your movement, which I remind you of verbatim below.

    Rule four: Cooperate with the competent public or private organisations and authorities in the endeavour to place sport at the service of humanity and thereby to promote peace.

    Rule six: Act against any form of discrimination affecting the Olympic Movement.

    Rule 15: Encourage and support initiatives blending sport with culture and education.

    I especially appeal to you, Prime Minister, a man for whom I have the utmost respect. As the leader of a party I have for almost all of my life opposed and instinctively disliked, you showed a determined, passionate and clearly honest commitment to LGBT rights and helped push gay marriage through both houses of our parliament in the teeth of vehement opposition from so many of your own side. For that I will always admire you, whatever other differences may lie between us. In the end I believe you know when a thing is wrong or right. Please act on that instinct now.

    Yours in desperate hope for humanity

    Stephen Fry

     

    This post first appeared on www.stephenfry.com