Tevin campbell is gay

Home / gay topics / Tevin campbell is gay

I didn’t try to act a certain way or anything,” he said. I’m glad that’s changing,” he said. I had never seen that,” he said. They’re not being taught to love themselves because of who they are.”

Listen to Tevin Campbell’s entire conversation on PEOPLE Every Day below:

Nearly 30 years after “Can We Talk” catapulted him to music stardom, Tevin Campbell is opening up about his sexuality for the first time.

Many fans also know Campbell as the voice of Powerline from 1995’s A Goofy Movie.

Campbell, who referred to himself as a “former child star,” revealed that throughout his early years in the industry, he never really concealed his identity from those around him. And then I went on the road of discovering myself.

I didn’t know who I was.”

Media speculation about Campbell’s private life can be traced back to 1999, when he was arrested for “soliciting a lewd act” from an undercover police officer and later pleaded no contest. Basically, I’m trying a lot of things. But a lot of us do … and the fact that I’ve embraced me.”

He added: “When I came out to my family and friends [at] about 19 or 20, that was it for me.

You are also agreeing to our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.

.

You know, there are a lot of child stars that don’t make it. In a new interview on the PEOPLE Every Day podcast, Campbell confirmed that he identifies as a gay man, and took a look back on what led him to officially open up to his fans.

“What makes me happiest right now is how far I’ve come in life,” he said on the podcast.

.

Tevin Campbell Shares How He’s ‘Embraced’ His Identity As a Gay Man

After a career in the public eye with huge chart hits, lauded Broadway performances and a much-beloved song in a ’90s Disney classic, R&B star Tevin Campbell is ready to let fans in on a part of his personal life.

He opened up about his sexuality on an episode of People‘s Every Day Podcast, noting that although he doesn’t think of himself as a “sex symbol” for the ladies, he is proud of the hits he made. “That was a great time in my life.”

Elsewhere in the interview, he praised Frank Ocean and Lil Nas X for being open about their queerness and expressed gratitude for the fact that children will grow up with those role models.

Being open-minded. Interestingly, he credits his 2005 run in Broadway’s “Hairspray” ― where he was one of actor Corey Reynolds’ replacements in the role of Seaweed J. Stubbs ― with helping him to embrace his queer truth.

picture alliance via Getty Images

In a 2003 interview with the now-defunct publication Sister 2 Sister, he reportedly described himself as a “Try-Sexual,” noting: “I’m not gay but I’m a freak and I think a lot of people know what a freak is.

I didn’t try to act a certain way or anything,” the pop and R&B singer, 45, said. Referring to his early 1990s heyday, he nonetheless acknowledged, “You just couldn’t be [gay] back then.”

“I didn’t hide anything about me.

tevin campbell is gay

“Being around people who were like me, LGBTQ+ people that were living normal lives and had partners. His second album, “I’m Ready,” was released two years later. “I had never seen that,”

Advertisement

HuffPost Shopping's
Best Finds

Newsletter Sign Up

Entertainment

Don't miss a beat.