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・ Mark Platts
・ Mark Platts (footballer)
・ Mark Plawecki
・ Mark Plotkin
・ Mark Plotyczer
・ Mark Plowman
・ Mark Pocan
・ Mark Podwal
・ Mark Patterson (footballer, born 1965)
・ Mark Patterson (footballer, born 1968)
・ Mark Patterson (investor)
・ Mark Patterson (politician)
・ Mark Pattison
・ Mark Pattison (academic)
・ Mark Pattison (American football)
Mark Patton
・ Mark Patton (archaeologist)
・ Mark Paul Deren
・ Mark Paul Lindley-Highfield of Ballumbie Castle
・ Mark Pauline
・ Mark Pavelich
・ Mark Pawelek
・ Mark Pawlak
・ Mark Pawsey
・ Mark Paxton
・ Mark Payne
・ Mark Payne (basketball)
・ Mark Payne (footballer)
・ Mark Payne (makeup artist)
・ Mark Payton


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Mark Patton : ウィキペディア英語版
Mark Patton

Mark Patton (born February 13, 1964) is an American interior designer and former actor. Beginning his professional acting career at the age of 18, Patton is perhaps best known for his feature film roles as Joe Qualley in the 1982 dramatic film ''Come back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean'' and as Jesse Walsh in the 1985 horror film ''A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge'', a role for which he is touted as the first male scream queen in modern cinema.
== Career ==
Patton grew up in Riverside, Missouri and, after graduating high school, he moved to New York City to pursue an acting career. Within a few years he landed the role of Joe Qualley in the 1982 Broadway production of ''Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean''. Patton reprised the role in the 1982 film of the same name. Although his character in the play and film was gay, Patton was not allowed to do an interview with the LGBT-interest magazine, ''The Advocate''. Patton identified this as an early indicator of the homophobia in Hollywood at that time.〔(A Nightmare in Hollywood Couldn't Kill Mark Patton )〕
In 1985 Patton landed the lead role in the horror film ''A Nightmare on Elm Street 2: Freddy's Revenge'' portraying Jesse Walsh, a teen whose body becomes possessed by Freddy Krueger. Critics and audiences noted the gay subtext of the film, something screenwriter David Chaskin initially attributed to Patton's portrayal of Jesse.〔 However, in the 2010 documentary ''Never Sleep Again: The Elm Street Legacy'' Chaskin acknowledged that he, himself, was responsible for the film's deliberate gay subtext.
Patton had a guest appearance on the television series ''Hotel''. He also starred in a television pilot with Chuck Connors entitled ''Kelsey's Son'', which was never picked up.〔(Bobbin, Jay: "Kelsey's Son" )〕 Other roles include ''General Hospital'' as Greg Collier, ''Misplaced'' with John Cameron Mitchell, ''Anna to the Infinite Power'' with Dina Merrill and Martha Byrne and ''Have You Tried Talking to Patty'' with Heather Langenkamp.
Patton says he gave up on his acting career following being cast in a planned CBS series in which he would have played a gay character. "They began to ask me if I would be comfortable playing a gay character and telling people I was straight if they began to question my sexuality?...All I could think about was how everyone I knew was dying from AIDS and we were having this bullshit conversation. My heart just broke and that was the line for me. I knew I would never be able to do what they were asking, so I walked away from Hollywood and decided to move on to a place where it was totally acceptable to be gay."〔

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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