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HBO's 'Looking' star says playing a gay character has been 'a gift' for his career

GettyImages raul castillo looking hbo
GettyImages raul castillo looking hbo

Getty Images

Raúl Castillo says that playing a gay character on HBO's drama "Looking" has been really good for his acting career.

"I feel like I couldn't have found a straight role with that much complexity, because oftentimes with Latinos we go into roles that are written specifically for Latinos and they're either tropes or one-dimensional representations of who we are," Raúl Castillo recently told Business Insider.

Castillo played Richie Ventura, the tough, closeted neighborhood barber who was the unconventional on-and-off love interest for main character Patrick (Jonathan Groff). Castillo, who's straight, calls the role "a gift."

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"Richie was a fully formed, fully fleshed human being," the 38-year-old actor said. "So if anything, he's been a great gift for me as an actor because I think people see sides of me that they wouldn't normally have gotten had I played a 'straight role' or sort of typical Latino role you're used to seeing on TV."

looking the movie jonathan groff raul castillo hbo full
looking the movie jonathan groff raul castillo hbo full

Getty Images

Interestingly, Castillo has been attached to "Looking" ever since its genesis as a short film. Titled "Lorimer," the 2011 short film was written by Michael Lannan and directed by Andrew Haigh, the team behind HBO's series adaptation.

And, according to Castillo, not much has changed from the film.

In it, "there's something about finding moments of intimacy in unexpected circumstances," Castillo said. "And I really think that's what the show did brilliantly."

But there was one major thing that did change.

"At the time, the story was set in New York instead of San Francisco," the actor told us.

With "Looking: The Movie" premiering on Saturday, fans of the actor can next see him on "Easy," "Drinking Buddies" director Joe Swanberg's upcoming anthology series for Netflix.

"I feel really lucky to be in a place after this show, and after the experience of working on 'Looking', where I'm getting to work on interesting characters and interesting projects," Castillo said. "And I feel like in a lot of ways 'Looking' kind of opened up those doors for me."

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