Tevin Campbell Confirms His Sexuality And Opens Up About His Life And Career And Confronting Anti-Gay Bias

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In a new interview on the People Every Day Podcast, Tevin Campbell publicly addressed his sexuality for the first time.

Tevin posing on a red carpet and smiling
Aaron J. Thornton / WireImage

Depending on which decade you were born, you may know Tevin Campbell as an R&B singer, a cartoon heartthrob, or the guy whose song started a viral TikTok challenge.

As a '90s teen superstar with hits like

As a '90s teen superstar with hits like "Can We Talk" and "I'm Ready," he became a cultural icon for the Black community and in the R&B scene. His game-changing moment for millennials was voicing Powerline in the 1995 Disney film A Goofy Movie.

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His sexuality became a hot topic earlier this year when he responded to a fan questioning R&B singers' sexualities by saying, "Tevin is 🌈" in a now-deleted tweet.

  Prince Williams / WireImage
Prince Williams / WireImage

Fans had speculated about Campbell's sexuality, but he kept his private life away from the public.

  Al Pereira / Getty Images
Al Pereira / Getty Images

“I didn’t hide anything about me. I didn’t try to act a certain way or anything,” he said. “You just couldn’t be [gay] back then," he said.

After he briefly stepped away from his R&B career and joined the Broadway musical Hairspray, he fully embraced his identity: “Being around people who were like me, LGBTQ+ people that were living normal lives and had partners — I had never seen that.

Campbell further praised Black artists like Lil Nas X and Frank Ocean for publicly embracing their queer identities, saying, "I'm glad I get to see [this]. I'm glad that it's changing."

Cynthia Erivo, Lena Waithe, Lil Nas X, and Billy Porter
Kevin Mazur / Getty Images for The Recording Academy

In the podcast interview, Tevin explained that as a teen star, he knew his sexuality but didn't have the time to process it.

  Paras Griffin / Getty Images for BET
Paras Griffin / Getty Images for BET

“There are a lot of kids, especially young Black boys, that need to see representation. They’re not being taught to love themselves because of who they are," he continued, touching on how toxic masculinity has brought pain and even death to the young Black queer community.

  Johnny Nunez / WireImage
Johnny Nunez / WireImage

I gotta say, as a Black queer man, Tevin is 100% right. I grew up in the '90s listening to his music, dancing alongside Powerline, wishing for a day that I could embrace my sexuality. Now, I'm vibing out to his music with a wish fulfilled. The world sees us now, Tevin Campbell.

Powerline
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I'm also clearly not alone. Fans have also flocked to Twitter to voice their support.

It looks like Powerline had it right all along: "If we listen to each other's heart, we'll find we're never too far apart."

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