Nicholas Galitzine Gay in Real Life: Hollywood actor Nicholas Galitzine is best known for playing his role as a young gay student in the Handsome Devil movie. His fans are still wondering, Is Nicholas Galitzine gay in real life? Stay tuned.
Who is Nicholas Galitzine?
Nicholas Galitzine is an English actor who worked in a number of movies and television series, he is well-known for playing Johnnie Blackwell, a British violinist in The High Strung in 2016. He has appeared in many films like Cinderella (2021), Purple Hearts (2022), Bottoms, and Red, White, and Royal Blue.
Nicholas was born on 29 September 1994 to a direct descendant of the Russian princely family in Hammersmith, London, England. His father Geoffrey Leo Alexander Galitzine is an entrepreneur and a former financier while his mother Lora Maria Konstantina Galitzine is also a financier in the city of London.
He began to pursue his acting career at a young age but he got his first role in The Beat Beneath My Feet movie in 2014.
Nicholas Galitzine Sexuality: Is Nicholas Galitzine Gay in Real Life?
Nicholas Galitzine, 28, reportedly has not disclosed his sexuality.
Nicholas Galitzine has played bisexual roles in several movies, he recently played a lead role in the LGBT romantic comedy film Red, White & Royal Blue. Prior to this, he was featured as a young and handsome gay student in the Hansome Devil in 2016.
For his performance in this movie, he was later nominated for five awards at the 15th Irish Film & Television Awards.
Is Nicholas Galitzine Gay in Real Life? About this question, the actor told an interview with Variety in 2023 that he is straight.
He said, “I think we were just always on the same page with trying to create a very textured, vulnerable-feeling person in this quite poppy and fun world that that Red, White & Royal Blue is at times.
But look, there’s always trepidation. I can only hope that fans really will appreciate my performance. I put a lot into Henry in trying to make him feel textured and real, and so that’s all I can really offer at the end of the day.”