“Every day, we lived with fear,” he recalled. Roberts returned to everyday life only to be forced back into a new kind of closet as he tried to continue the relationship. We really should have at least changed his name.” “I really didn’t know what ‘Don’t Ask, don’t tell’ was,” Mr.
Dill’s blurred-out face in his several appearances became an enduring symbol of the injustice of “Don’t ask, don’t tell,” as well as the liminal space gay people occupied. The couple took the risk of going before MTV’s cameras not in protest of the policy, but because they couldn’t bear to be apart. Dill could have lost his job if he had been revealed. people to serve in the military under the condition that they stayed in the closet, and Mr.
These were the days of “Don’t ask, don’t tell,” the Bill Clinton-era policy that allowed L.G.B.T.Q. His boyfriend during the filming of “The Real World: New Orleans,” an Army officer named Paul Dill, appeared on the show using only his first name, and his face was hidden to conceal his identity. Roberts was, at the outset, not particularly motivated by activism. Rather than playing a jester, villain or de-eroticized Ken doll, he was chill, joyful in his identity, and he seemed to glow with an unapologetic sex appeal.
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Roberts, born and raised in small-town Rockmart, Ga., was something different from his TV predecessors. Zamora’s impact was complicated by deep sadness. people since its 1992 debut - most notably Pedro Zamora, a young activist from the third season, who died of AIDS-related illness a day after the finale - but Mr. But he was a rather dark, Machiavellian figure. “Will & Grace,” another sitcom, broke some ground by chronicling the relationship between a gay man and his straight friend, but discerning viewers couldn’t help but notice that it had about as much bite as “I Love Lucy.” In 2000, “Survivor,” then in its first season, delivered an openly gay (and, often, openly nude) antihero in Richard Hatch, who schemed his way to million-dollar victory.
A Gay Icon: Danny Roberts, who is returning to TV in “The Real World Homecoming: New Orleans,” was a star of the show’s ninth season during a fraught time for L.G.B.T.Q.