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Is maya hawk gay

Maya Hawke isn’t gay. However, she played lesbian roles in movies and TV, like in “Stranger Things.”

Maya Hawke has rapidly emerged as one of the most captivating young talents in Hollywood. From her breakout role as the fan-favorite character Robin in the hit Netflix series Stranger Things to her stirring performance as a lesbian teen seeking revenge in the film Execute Revenge, Hawke has repeatedly proven her exceptional acting abilities.

However, along with praise for her compelling portrayals of queer women on screen, there has been rampant speculation about Hawke’s own sexuality and whether she might identify as lesbian, bisexual, or otherwise under the LGBTQ umbrella.

Rumors have swirled that Hawke came out as gay in a 2022 Vogue interview, though no verified evidence exists to back this claim. She has also declined to explicitly define her orientation when asked in other interviews.

So what do we actually know about where Maya Hawke stands when it comes to labels regarding her sexuality or sexual preferences?

Maya Hawke’s Portrayals of Multi-Dimensional Queer Characters

While details on her personal being remain ambiguous, Hawke has undoubte

Stranger Things' Robin aka Maya Hawke says her ethics wasn't gay in the script

Stranger Things season three has been called the queerest yet by Gay fans, and rightly so. After finally introducing a lesbian character in the form of Robin (played by Maya Hawke), lgbtq+ fans seemed pretty chuffed with the seamless way her sexuality was revealed in the show. It wasn't made a gigantic deal of, which is rare considering most lgbtq+ characters in mainstream shows are subjected to a huge coming out plot (that gets very ancient very quickly let me tell ya).

Maya Hawke - who we just learned has Uma Thurman and Ethan Hawke as parents?! - just revealed her character Robin's sexuality wasn't originally scripted. Yep, Robin was originally written as a love interest (of course) for Steve, played by Joe Keery.

In an interview with Wall Street Journal Magazine, Maya explained, "Throughout filming, we started to feel appreciate she and (Steve) shouldn’t get together, and that’s she’s gay. Even when I go back and watch earlier episodes, it just seems like the most obvious decision ever."

Robin (Maya Hawke) was originally written as the admire interest for Steve (Joe Keery)

May

I recently stumbled across my “Ode to Valentine’s Day” from this time last year. Oh boy.

I genuinely laughed. No, not because I find myself hilarious, but because when you learn more about yourself, it makes looking endorse on your past-self that much more cringeworthy. I wrote in the Ode, “I’m literally the most non-girlfriend material.” No Nina. That’s not it. You’re just gay.

In all seriousness, it’s okay to enable time and experience reveal you who you are. Honestly, this is kinda freaking me out to write down and give with other people. I’m not ashamed, but it’s also not something I talk a lot about with people I’m not super close with.

Though I have always had speculations about my own sexuality, I was still unsure. I mean, seeing Maya Hawke (she/her) in Stranger Things really helped me get there, but that sort of thing takes time for anyone. I came out as bisexual person to only a not many people at the terminate of my senior year of high school and my parents shortly after graduation (my parents laughed lovingly and said “we know”). 

It wasn’t too difficult to cover up, especially considering someone told me that their “gaydar” was super accurate and that there was no way I was

Lío Mehiel Tells Maya Hawke About Transitioning in the Public Eye

Lío Mehiel, photographed by Luca Mastro.

“I’ve had this recognition that there’s still a part of me that wants control,” Lío Mehiel told comrade and fellow actor Maya Hawke last week. “Because, as a trans person, I wanted to contain more of a state in how people comprehend me and view me more than the average cis person.” Over Zoom, the actor, writer, and artist opened up about transitioning in the common eye; their character in Vuk Lungulov-Klotz’s Mutt, now on Netflix, takes on similar challenges. The movie, which premiered at Sundance last year, follows Feña (Mehiel) after he spends the night with his straight ex-boyfriend. Navigating the next day with a wretched hangover, Feña reunites with his younger sister and tries to figure out how to select up his estranged father from the airport while confronting countless obstacles, love attempting to cash a check with a deadname. Calling in from Fresh York, where the first snow of the season had just arrived, Mehiel told Hawke about adjusting to fame, being a multi-hyphenate, and their vision project: a stage adaptation of Giovan

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