Television shows process the characters all the time for many reasons, and sometimes even more than once (Looking at you, "top blinds"). However, fans were still a little surprised when the actor and heart singer, Luke Grims, left the "Camp Vampire" series "Real Blood" after the 6th season.
Created by Alan Ball, "real blood" was a sexy, wild show that plays an incredible ensemble actor playing a variety of people, vampires, werewolves, shaped gearboxes and other supernatural creatures. It may be a little uneven, but it was also a lot of fun, and in season 6, Grims was introduced as a vampire Jameseims Kent, who was held captive with the vampire Essica (Daredeville Starvedza Deborah Ann Wall) in a terrible camp against a vampire. Kent almost immediately strived for the fans by protecting Esseca from a disturbing experiment, refusing to participate and burn it over and over as a result. He and Essesica ended up with a (rather passionate) romantic relationship, built on a common trauma, and it has become a welcome addition to the great, strange enlarged "real blood" family.
Then, Season 7 began and Kent was no longer playing Grims, but by actor Nathan Parsons, who will also continue to act as Acksecson Canner of the "originals". It is enough to say, the fans were a little confused. Why Kent pulled out, and what happened to Grims? It is a little complicated, honestly and depends on who you are asking.
Grims was allegedly unpleasant with the story of a queer
According to BuzzfeedGrims has left "real blood" after cited problems with the "creative direction of his character". However, sources close to the series claimed that he was unpleasant with the then story in which Kent would have a romantic relationship with another man-namely, drug dealer, chef, and sometimes makes Lafayette (Nelsan Ellis). Grims denied the allegations through his publicist, saying he had left the show for scheduling conflicts arising from him, raising their film career to join the film series "Fifty Shades of Gray". Ellis himself, on the other hand, had some electoral words about the whole situation.
Talking to Vulture In 2014, Ellis (who unfortunately died in 2017 at the age of 39), shared his feelings for Grims' departure:
"I mean, I can say that I will not comment, but I just think, you are an actor, you are an actor in a show that is" real blood ", we all sit there," You left the job because ... really? "I'm just ... I'm above him. If you have a child, if you have a son, and he goes out like a gay, what will you do?
Ellis continued to explain that he was offended on behalf of the ball, also (the ball is open gay) and that he "does not want" what Grims said by leaving the role because he was afraid to "play gay". If that is really the case, and it seems very possible, it is quite homophobic to Grims and extremely disappointing.
Grims continued to act in a more conservative price
Grims continued to star in films like "The Seven Seven" in 2016, "American Sniper" on Clint Eastwood's Sniper, but his biggest role to date is like Casey Dutton on Taylor Sheridan's Hit Sheridan "Yellowlston". In that show similarly gained controversy When the starfish Kevin Costner left abruptlyBut it performed well enough to cause a few spin-offs, including A potential show in the center of Casey DuttonWhat will give Grims a lot more time playing the character. But although it is good that he was able to deal with roles that he was more comfortable, he was deeply frustrating that he seemed to be leaving "real blood" because he was not pleasant to play a fagot.
Actors, of course, are used to showing individuals incredibly different from whom they really are and spend their careers, pretending to be a wide range of people. It is also the right of everyone to do what they are comfortable with, and no one should be forced to anything. It is also Ok if the actor doesn't want to kiss someone on the screenBut leaving the "real blood" when he did, Grims made it look like there was a problem with his character being bisexual. My boyfriend ... you were "real blood", what did you expect? That series was a panexual pleasure of the strange couples, and fortunately, Parsons did a great job by replacing Grims as Jameses. That way, it all worked in the end.
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