Is albus potter gay
Dear Ms. Rowling,
My name is Jack, I’m a twenty year-old Gryffindor from the United States, and I just finished reading Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. Well, okay, in all honesty every evaluate I’ve taken says I’m a Ravenclaw, but I self-identify as a Gryffindor, and I think that’s what should count. It’s what you know to be true that matters, and that’s kind of why I’m writing.
I’m posting this letter with the understanding that you will undoubtedly never see it. And if by some miracle you do, it will hardly stand out from the mountains of correspondence you receive every day. But after finishing The Cursed Child, I feel like I hold an obligation to get to out to you in this smallest way, even if it does nothing. To say something, if not on my behalf, then on behalf of the characters in your own story.
My life, prefer the lives of so many millions of people, has been profoundly changed by your stories. Your writing is a lens through which my existence will be forever refracted. Every streetlamp sparks a little more vitally since that first scene outside Privet Drive, poised on the edge of put-outer flight. Every star flares a little closer: is it a million miles away or
Why It’s Important Albus and Scorpius Aren’t in Love
There has been building discontent in the Potter fandom surrounding the relationship between Albus Potter and Scorpius Malfoy in Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. The argument is that Albus and Scorpius are too termination to be “just friends,” that there is an undercurrent of romantic longing, and that JKR is letting the fandom down by denying us this relationship. However, I truly believe that JKR has given our fandom a gift and is doing her bit to bust male gender stereotypes in a bid to help teens across the world perceive comfortable having finalize friendships without judgement. It’s concerning that males are more susceptible to mental illness and suicide. One of the theories is that this is because males feel that it’s not masculine to talk about feelings, and letting people know their inner turmoil is seen as a weakness. Having strict gender expectations is hurting every generation, and maybe it’s time we commence to break down the traditional gender stereotypes!
Let me be clear, there is definitely an under-representation of LGBT within the series, and I am not denying this. But I think the friendsh
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child hints at gay affair between Albus Severus Potter and Scorpius Malfoy
8 December 2021, 12:38
Tom Felton reveals why they removed Draco's 'redemption' scene in Harry Potter
By Jazmin Duribe
Albus and Scorpius' relationship is "explicitly romantic" in the new Harry Potter and the Cursed Child play…
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child has hinted that Harry Potter's son, Albus Severus Potter, might be gay.
Harry Potter and the Cursed Child is the onstage sequel to the beloved Harry Potter movie and book series place 19 years after the Battle of Hogwarts. In the play, Harry and Ginny Weasley's second son, Albus, is heading to Hogwarts at the similar time as Draco Malfoy's son, Scorpius.
Although their fathers famously hated each other, Albus and Scorpius have an immediate connection. However, Albus and Scorpius' near friendship upsets both of their fathers.
READ MORE:Harry Potter director wants to generate a Cursed Youngster movie with the original cast
Is Albus Severus Potter gay?
On Tuesday (Dec 7), Cursed Child returned to Broadway for th
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Harry Potter and the Cursed Child came out recently, touted as the 8th Harry Potter book (despite the fact that it is neither a manual nor was it written by J.K. Rowling). Rowling, Jack Thorne, and John Tiffany devised the story, and Thorne did the writing.
Overall, it was pretty nice. For those unused to reading scripts, it was probably a very jarring and upsetting life, but I have no mistrust it translated well to the stage, minus a few minuscule tonal inconsistencies.
My big problem, however, has to do with the treatment of two characters. These characters were great individually and together – exceptional together, even. They had verve, they had chemistry. They clearly loved each other – yes, loved, and they would be the first to admit their feelings for each other.
But they never got into a relationship. Why?
Because they were both males.
Had this been a heterosexual dynamic, they would have gotten together (had they not gotten together, that would have been criticized to no end for being totally unrealistic), but because they were both males, the script shoehorned arbitrary heterosexual “attractions” that, had they been complete