The eyebrows have been shaved to severe, angular Spock-ness. When Zachary Quinto and I met, on a sultry, overcast summer afternoon in the garden of a New York hotel, he was filming the latest Star Trek movie, Star Trek Beyond.
He has since completed that, posting an Instagram picture on the last day of filming captioned āmaybe the last time, maybe notā.
Having first found fame in the TV series Heroes, Quintoās role as Spock has bought him to a huge, sci-fi loving global audience. He has also appeared in movies including Margin Call, and the gay-themed I Am Michael opposite James Franco.
When we met, Quinto looked as handsome as every picture you may have seen of him: tall, broad and muscular.
You will also see on Quintoās Instagram account gorgeous pictures of himself and his partner Miles McMillan, on lovely holidays, sometimes in swimming trunks, always having fun. The tabloids regularly feature them looking adorable walking their dogs in New York.
Quinto, 38, who grew up in Pennsylvania, is one of the most famous out gay actors in the world; and one of the most eloquent and opinionated ā as the controversy stirred by his saying there was a ācomplacencyā among gay men around HIV in an interview with Out magazine last year revealed.
Quinto told Out: āI think thereās a tremendous sense of complacency in the LGBT community. AIDS has lost the edge of horror it possessed when it swept through the world in the 80s. Todayās generation sees it more as something to live with and something to be much less fearful of. And that comes with a sense of, dare I say, laziness.ā
On the availability of PrEP (pre-exposure prophylaxis, the new drug course available in the US to prevent HIV transmission, currently being campaigned for in the UK) and drugs like Truvada, Quinto said: āWe need to be really vigilant and open about the fact that these drugs are not to be taken to increase our ability to have recreational sex. Thereās an incredible underlying irresponsibility to that way of thinking⦠and we donāt yet know enough about this vein of medication to see where itāll take us down the line.ā
For these reasonable, insightful comments, Quinto was accused of slut-shaming. Quinto came out in 2011, spurred to do so by the suicide of 14-year-old gay teenager Jamey Rodemeyer. He has used his fame to speak out and campaign, and in October received the Champion Award from the Gay, Lesbian & Straight Education Network. Next, he will appear as gay journalist Glenn Greenwald in Oliver Stoneās explosive Snowden and then in an off-Broadway family drama, the MCCās Smokefall at New Yorkās Lucille Lortel Theatre, in February.
How do you feel about the controversy over your HIV/PrEP comments?
If people are talking about it and having conversations, thatās awesome. Performing in (Tony Kushnerās AIDS-themed play) Angels in America made me realise had I been born a few years earlier I would have been in the sweep of that epidemic, thereās no question about it. So maybe thereās a proximity alert that goes off for me. Iām not trying to say people shouldnāt take PrEP, or that people shouldnāt have sex, or that sex isnāt amazing. It is. Iām just saying we should support each other and be responsible, whatever that means to you. I think itās a matter of responsibility to oneself and to oneās community, and in honour of an entire generation of men who were lost. Have as much sex as you want, and any way you want to have it, as long as youāre accountable to the person youāre engaging with. I donāt think, frankly, thatās a controversial thing to say.