Albus potter gay

HARRY POTTER AND THE CURSED CHILD Magic Reworked — Review

First things first: it is indeed much gayer, if still not as gay as it could be. 

Since its West End debut in 2016, Harry Potter and the Cursed Child has attracted intense fan interest around its central relationship. The close bond between Harry Potter’s son Albus and Draco Malfoy’s son Scorpius forms the emotional core of Jack Thorne’s engage, which follows the pair’s doomed effort to “set history right” by stealing a time turner and saving Cedric Diggory’s existence nineteen years in the past. (It goes mistaken, of course, and complications ensue.) 

Thorne’s original text, co-conceived with director John Tiffany and J.K. Rowling (more on her later) does not demand Albus and Scorpius’ bond be played as a burgeoning relationship. But Tiffany and authentic co-stars Sam Clemmett and Anthony Boyle certainly leaned into that reading in the play’s first iteration, playing the duo’s journey as a love story even when the sms sometimes insisted otherwise. Choreographer Steven Hoggett even designed a mournful, romantic “Staircase Ballet” for a scene where the two are forced apart. 

So early reports that Thorne’s new unpartnered evening

How I Learned to Stop Caring and Love the Same-sex attracted Subtext in “Cursed Child”

When Harry Potter and the Cursed Child was announced, I was ravenous for a fresh Potter story. When I got my hands on a copy of the script in 2016, I was disappointed. Yet five-star reviews poured in after the play debuted on Broadway. I was intrigued and knew I needed to see this story on stage.

I finally made the pilgrimage to the Lyric Theater last year. As the act unfolded before me, I fell in love with Harry Potter and the Cursed Child and not for the reasons I expected. What I experienced and adored was the budding love story that underlies Albus Potter and Scorpius Malfoy’s relationship.

 

 

In moments throughout their adventure, it became clear: This was a sweet high college love story. While some may oppose, I was convinced the moment a staggering “Always” entered their conversation about their relationship, a single word that hearkens back to Severus Snape’s devotion for Lily Potter in the authentic series (CC 144). Snape draws this parallel again in an attempt to motivate Scorpius to fight off the Dementors:You’re giving up your kingdom for Albus, right? One person. All it

Scorbus Coming Out rec list

So last Tuesday was National Coming Out Day and I didn’t really do anything to mark the occasion. I came out to my friends and family when I was 13 and I’m about to turn 31. Being in a monogamous relationship with a man gives the illusion that I am heterosexual, but I was once very expose about my bisexuality, I even founded our high school’s GSA. However this post isn’t about me, it’s to celebrate the awesome Scorbus coming out stories that contain come out announce Cursed Child.

Most of these are one shots but there are a few chaptered stories at the bottom. If you comprehend of any other Scorbus fics that feature coming out as an essential part of the plot please reblog to add on to this list. While I personally see Albus and Scorpius’ coming out to their families as a attractive easy process (I assume the parents figured it out before they did) I like that authors have explored different dynamics. I hope that anyone struggling with coming out themselves can take courage from these stories. I’m also always accessible to chat.

Albus Severus Potter/Scorpius Hyperion Malfoy 

Coming Out Stories 

*Coming Out- rainystreetlights Scorpius and Al

Dear Ms. Rowling,

My name is Jack, I’m a twenty year-old Gryffindor from the United States, and I just finished reading Harry Potter and the Cursed Child. Well, okay, in all integrity every test I’ve taken says I’m a Ravenclaw, but I self-identify as a Gryffindor, and I think that’s what should count. It’s what you realize to be true that matters, and that’s kind of why I’m writing.

I’m posting this letter with the understanding that you will undoubtedly never see it. And if by some miracle you do, it will hardly stand out from the mountains of correspondence you receive every day. But after finishing The Cursed Child, I feel appreciate I have an obligation to reach out to you in this smallest way, even if it does nothing. To declare something, if not on my behalf, then on behalf of the characters in your have story.

My life, like the lives of so many millions of people, has been profoundly changed by your stories. Your writing is a lens through which my reality will be forever refracted. Every streetlamp sparks a little more vitally since that first scene outside Privet Steer, poised on the edge of put-outer flight. Every star flares a little closer: is it a million miles away or