Lance Bass claimed he once had the chance to star in a CW sitcom, but the pilot wound up on the chopping block soon after he came out as gay.
The former *NSYNC member, 45, opened up about his missed opportunity on Tuesdayâs episode of the âPolitickinââ podcast with Gov. Gavin Newsom, Marshawn Lynch and Doug Hendrickson, telling the hosts that he âlost everythingâ when he publicly spoke about his sexuality in 2006.
âWe were about to shoot the pilot and this came out and they were like, âWe canât do the show anymore.â They have to believe that youâre straight to play a straight character,â Bass told the hosts.
The âBye, Bye, Byeâ singer claimed executives said, âI donât know what we can do with you now.â
âEvery casting director I knew, theyâre like, âLance, we canât cast you because youâre too famous for being gay now that they canât look at you as anything other than that,ââ he further alleged, adding that he âhad to completely just restart and rebrand at that moment.â
Page Six has reached out to reps at CW for comment but did not immediately hear back.
Bass, who has been married to actor Michael Turchin since 2014, started venturing into his thespian career before the end of his boy band days.
He starred in the 2000 film âLongshot,â 2001âs âOn the Line,â and 2005âs âLove Wrecked.â
The father of two further reflected on his coming out in the âPolitickinââ episode, admitting he was âconfused for sureâ at the time.
âI was such a young person. And all I knew was NSYNC,â he said. âThat was my world, and I was happy that was my world. I thought that was going to be my world the rest of my life.â
Bass continued, âWhen we decided that the group was no longer, it was very confusing for me because I didnât know where I belonged and I wasnât really setting myself up for success because I was just waiting. It took awhile to figure out who I was and where I needed to go.â
âAll the examples Iâve ever had of anyone coming out, especially in entertainment, was that itâs a career killer,â he noted.
Despite the hardships Bass faced after sharing his sexuality with the rest of the world, the âItâs Gonna Be Meâ singer said he isnât holding any resentment over it.
He said casting directors have told him of his alleged experience with the CW sitcom, ââYeah, that was really dumb,ââ adding, âTheyâve actually cast me in a lot of things since, which is really funny and ironic. But I never hold grudges at all. I get it.â
Read the full article here