Euphoria star Jacob Elordi describes being bullied at school by homophobes
Euphoria star Jacob Elordi has opened up about the homophobic bullying he endured when he began acting at the age of 12.
Australian actor Elordi, who stars as Nate Jacobs in the hit HBO series Euphoria, said in an interview with GQ that at the time he began acting in plays, he was also on his school’s rugby team.
He said: āFrom the moment I did a play I was called gay at school. But I had this abundance of confidence in myself.
“Because I could do both: I was quite good at sport and I think I was quite good at theatre. I felt like I was above it, or it made me feel older. It made me feel wiser. I never was worried that my peers would think that I was less than a man.
“And also, I was doing plays with girlsā schools. Iām spending my weekends with the most beautiful women from the school next door, reading the most romantic words ever written.ā
Jacob Elordi was never fazed by the homophobic jabs, and fought them by ‘welcoming the femininity’ of his roles
Although the taunting continued, Jacob Elordi found power in it, determined to subvert his peers’ expectations.
In one production of A Midsummer Nightās Dream, he played Oberon, the King of the Fairies.
He recalled: “When they said I was gay, I remember leaning into the makeup. I was like, if Iām going to be the King of the Fairies, Iām going to be the f**king hottest King of the Fairies youāve ever seen.
“I started welcoming those kinds of characters. I started welcoming the femininity. I started speaking with my hands. I started really playing the thespian.ā
He added: “I was like, well, if you think this is gay, Iām going to be who I am when I was your friend, which is this hetero guy, but Iām going to play the arts.
“Iām going to do it, and Iām going to show you thatās bulls**t. I could never understand ā how could you label anything, ever? How could you label sport as masculine? How does your sexuality inform your prowess as an athlete, or your prowess as a performer?ā
Elordi insisted that this outlook was not “a hindsight thing”, adding: “I knew it at the time. And I still carry it now. I hope thatās what the performance is in Euphoria.
“Itās muscle and heart. Itās Montgomery Clift and Marlon Brando.”