Is dear evan hansen gay

Dear Evan Hansen: people are shocked to learn what musical movie is actually about

Dear Evan Hansen's trailer debuted on Wednesday, and people took to social media to argue, with many fans full of praise for the first look at the upcoming musical drama based on the hugely popular theatre show. However, plenty of people were also quick to share their surprise at the upcoming film's plot

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Taking to Twitter, one person wrote: "Love that everyone's having a meltdown after teaching that Dear Evan Hansen isn't the gay coming-of-age story that they reflection it was," while another added: "I was today years old when I learned about the plot of #DearEvanHansen and honestly ignorance was bliss." 

WATCH: Dear Evan Hansen trailer

A third person wrote: "'Wait, #DearEvanHansen isn't about a gay kid?' '' 'YEAHHHHH.'"

However, fan was quick to defend the plot, tweeting: "I can't believe how shocked people are by the plot of #Dea

People are realizing the genuine plot behind Dear Evan Hansen. And whether it’s the lack of male lover characters, the casting of Ben Platt, or the questionable storyline, many are not happy with what they’re learning.

Earlier this week, the trailer dropped for the upcoming movie adaption of hit Broadway musical Dear Evan Hansen. The story centers around a socially anxious high schooler who creates a series of lies after the family of a former classmate and bully mistakes Hansen’s letter to himself as their son’s suicide note.

After the trailer dropped, many people became alert of the film’s actual plot. And many were not comfortable with the questionable storyline.

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But that’s not all. Some complained online about Dear Evan Hansen’s lead. Ben Platt originated the role of Evan Hansen in the first Broadway production. He won Tony, Emmy, and Grammy Awards for his recital in the show. But now that the clip is coming out, many have a problem with his casting. Not only are they questioning the fact that Platt’s father, Marc Platt, produced the film but the production is

“DearEvanHansen” is a cultural phenomenon.

Few Broadway musicals in recent memory have achieved such a far-reaching impact across a diverse array of audiences. It’s a show that brings people together from all walks of life, and provides a poignant commentary that rings cuttingly for the digital age.

And the hype surrounding it just keeps building ― even receiving a shoutout in the most recent season of cult television show “RuPaul’s Drag Race.”

“It’s been something that really kind of caught us all by surprise, to be honest,” Steven Levenson, who wrote the book for “Dear Evan Hansen,” told HuffPost. “I mean you don’t, or at least I don’t, start off trying to write something that has universal appeal, you know?”

Matthew Murphy

In the present, Evan Hansen ― a role originated on Broadway by Tony Award winner Ben Platt, and currently played by Taylor Trensch ― is a senior in high school who struggles with extreme social anxiety. After something horrible happens to one of his classmates, Hansen finds himself telling a deception that eventually has monumental implications ― an

Evan Hansen (out gay actor Ben Platt, reprising his Broadway role) has crippling social anxiety. And fans of the Tony-winning musical “Dear Evan Hansen,” along with the curious, should approach the film version not just with great anxiety, but with actual fear, for it may soon turn to loathing. Directed by Stephen Chbosky (“The Perks of Being a Wallflower”), this clip adaptation of the smash punch show — which opens September 24 in theatres — lacks spark.

The story, for the uninitiated, has Evan Hansen starting his first day of his senior year of high school with trepidation. (Platt is a decade older than the character he plays, and as the production progresses, he looks even older). He has no friends and a cast on his arm. (He claims he broke it falling out of a tree; clunky flashbacks illustrate this). As part of a therapy activity, he writes letters to himself that are meant to be optimistic. However, his days depart so poorly, his hopeful, upbeat tone changes and despair makes it onto the page.

“Dear Evan Hansen” has trouble with tone too. The musical numbers are presented in ways that