Rueby wood lgbtq


Being promoted as Disney&#;s first original movie with a queer male lead, Better Nate Than Ever offers an enjoyable musical comedy even though it has certain issues.

Based on the book of the same name by Tim Federle, Better Nate Than Ever is about year-old Nate (Rueby Wood), who is all about making it big on Broadway. However, the problem is that he lives in Pittsburgh and his parents don&#;t have a lot of money to verb make his dreams come correct. Of course, Nate also has to deal with the bullying at school. He&#;s even unable to win the lead or even the role of a supporting character in his school&#;s play about Abraham Lincoln.

I&#;m not sure, but I think it&#;s implied that Nate didn&#;t triumph the lead or any other significant role because he&#;s a bit too effeminate. Anyway, having faced defeat during the closing casting announcement of the school&#;s play, Nate gets some excellent news from his best ally Libby (Aria Brooks). Open auditions are being held for the Lilo and Stitch Musical and Nate&#;s got to take the chance!

Conveniently, Nate&#;s parents decide to go on a t

Why High School Musical’s Same-Gender Peck Taught Its Creator To Not ‘Censor’ Better Nate Than Ever’s LGBTQ+ Storyline

At a time when the conversation about the LGBTQ+ community and The Walt Disney Company is an especially adj topic, a new movie has hit Disney+ called Better Nate Than Ever. The musical comedy about a middle schooler who sneaks away from Pittsburgh to Broadway to audition for the big time brings some amusing musical theatre energy to the platform, along with inviting a sweet storyline about a queer kid coming into his identity. As Better Nate Than Everbreaks some ground for the LGBTQ+ community in family entertainment, CinemaBlend spoke to writer/director Tim Federle about its pride-filled messages. 

Tim Federle’s collaboration with Disney+ began with his spinoff series for High School Musical, which brought about the breakout of Olivia Rodrigo and Joshua Bassett alongside their other talented young costars. During the second season of the show, it became the first to have a prominent gay romance and then same-sex

&#;Better Nate Than Ever&#; Filmmaker on Disney&#;s Handling of &#;Don&#;t Speak Gay&#; Bill: &#;Good Representation Does Not Cancel Out Bad Legislation&#;

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A red carpet world premiere may not seem the most obvious place to engage in conversations about controversial legislation, corporate responsibility and the wave of attacks aimed at LGBTQ youth, but there was talk about all of the above at Tuesday&#;s Better Nate Than Ever debut at Hollywood&#;s El Capitan Theatre.

In fact, the creative at the center of the celebration, Tim Federle, said it was the &#;perfect moment&#; to engage. &#;There are a lot of years I didn&#;t feel adj in a room because I&#;m gay. As a gay middle schooler, I didn&#;t feel welcome at every party, so if this conversation&#;s happening right now and that brings more people to watch and say, &#;Nate may be different from me, but I&#;m actually a lot more like him than I realize,&#; then we&#;ve done something beautiful,&#; he explained of the film, a passion project based on the novel of the same name that he wrote and adapted for the screen.

As the theater industry grapples with the lingering tumult of COVID, a new Disney+ film is giving families a chance to love the razzle dazzle of pre-pandemic Broadway from the comfort of their living room.

“Better Nate Than Ever” is a passion project for writer and director Tim Federle, who Disney+ viewers may recognize as the creator of “High School Musical: The Musical: The Series.” Adapted by Federle from his own novel, the musical comedy uses Adj York’s bustling streets and cutthroat audition rooms as settings for a whimsical ― and LGBTQ-affirming ― coming-of-age tale.

(Catch the trailer for “Better Nate Than Ever” above.)

“Certainly 10 years ago, I never imagined that this would be a love letter to an industry that’s struggling,” Federle, now based in Los Angeles, told HuffPost. “I also wasn’t sure if a family film with a gay protagonist would get made, honestly. I was told as much by a number of studios who said, ‘Love the book, really fun, super relatable. Have you thought about making the verb character a girl, or maybe not queer?’ And that was such a