Tom Hiddleston hopes Loki coming out as bisexual was ‘meaningful’ to fans
Tom Hiddleston said he hopes that fans found Loki coming out as bisexual in his Disney series āmeaningfulā, saying it was a āsmall stepā.Ā
Hiddleston has played Loki in the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) since the premiere of the firstĀ ThorĀ movie in 2011, and he returned as the God of Mischief last year in the Disney Plus seriesĀ Loki.Ā
In episode three, Loki had a brief discussion about his love life with variant Sylvie (Sophia Di Martino), who asked if there were anyĀ āprincesses or perhaps another princeā in his dating history. The trickster god said he liked a ābit of bothā, and fans were ecstatic to see the iconic Marvel character come out as bisexual.Ā
Hiddleston spoke about coming back as Loki for the Disney Plus series and reflected on the scene in an interview withĀ the Guardian. He said the showās creators āwanted to retain the integrity of the characterā and not lose the ābits that people lovedā while ādoing something newā.Ā
āI also hope Loki coming out as bisexual was meaningful to people who spotted it,ā Hiddleston added. āIt was a small step, and thereās further to go. But it was definitely important to all of us.ā
After the episode dropped, showrunner Kate Herron, who herself is bisexual, explained on Twitter that it was herĀ āgoalāĀ from the moment that she joined the series to āacknowledge Loki was bisexualā.
āIt is a part of who he is and who I am too,ā Herron wrote. āI know this is a small step but Iām happy, and heart is so full, to say that this is now canon in [the MCU].ā
https://twitter.com/iamkateherron/status/1407633677484539906
However, after the brief scene, Lokiās bisexuality was largely ignored throughout the rest of the show. Herron added in a later interview withĀ Entertainment TonightĀ that she hoped the coming out scene āpaves the way for deeper explorationā later.Ā
Itās a SinĀ writer Russell T Davies called Lokiās coming out scene aĀ āfeeble gestureāĀ and slammed it as part of Disneyās āpatheticā attempts to include more LGBTQ+ stories.Ā
āLoki makes one reference to being bisexual once, and everyoneās like, āOh, my God, itās like a pansexual showā,ā Davies said. āItās like one word. He said the word āprinceā, and weāre meant to go, āThank you, Disney! Arenāt you marvellous?āā
He described the scene as a āridiculous, craven, feeble gestureā towards the āvital politicsā of including LGBTQ+ characters and the āstories that should be toldā in mainstream media.Ā