Alexis stewart gay




Martha Stewart and her ex-husband, Andrew Stewart, share a daughter named Alexis. Here's everything to know about the TV personality's daughter. Alexis Gilbert Stewart (born September 27, ) is an American television and radio host presenter. She is the only child of Martha Stewart and her ex-husband Andrew Stewart.

Sadly, it doesn't appear Alexis feels the same way about her father, Andrew Stewart, namely because the pair haven't spoken in many years. But why exactly? Here's everything we know about the.

alexis stewart gay

Martha Stewart shares Alexis Stewart with her ex-husband, Andrew Stewart, whom she married in and filed for divorce from in , according to a divorce filing seen by Alexis Stewart was married to her partner, John Robert Cuti but they divorced. She didn't have kids with her former partner but after they divorced, she tasted motherhood twice through surrogacy.

You don't have to tell Martha Stewart that gay men love her like their own mother. The influential entrepreneur and domestic diva's deep-rooted connection to the LGBTQ community goes beyond special appearances on "Ugly Betty" and "Ellen," when she appeared as herself in a episode of the groundbreaking sitcom. Stewart, throughout her half-century-long career, has long embodied a quality near and dear to the queer community: perfection.

After all, before "live your best life" was a meme, it was Stewart's honed methodology. Could that affinity for precision and flawlessness — for the perfect Christmas ham, the perfect vegetable garden, the perfect dating persona — be why Stewart is very clued into the fact that many gay men perceive her as a mother figure?

It's a relationship worth exploring, and during my tight 15 minutes with Stewart I dove into the lifestyle maven's personal affiliations with many LGBTQ people: her nephew, Christopher Herbert, as well as her dearest gay friends, whom she hosts at her various homes. While "in a car, so any confusion, blame the cell service," Stewart, 76, was reflective and laid-back as she served up a savory platter of gay talk: Her age-appropriate philosophy on equality, gays who host Stewart at their get-togethers she jokes, though she can't possibly be kidding, that it "ups their game" , and her memories of transforming, unforgettably and stunningly, into '40s film icon Veronica Lake for late, gay makeup artist Kevyn Aucoin.

How aware are you of being LGBTQ inclusive when it comes to this show and also your career as a whole? Oh, thank you. Well, we're kind of in the showbiz world and being inclusive, that just sort of goes with the terrain. I don't care who the person is; I care about what the person does, and how they do it.

Martha Stewart shares Alexis Stewart with

Martha Stewart Weddings magazine famously introduced same-sex couples into its pages in , with Jeremy Hooper and Andrew Shulman sharing their vows with family and friends in Litchfield, Connecticut. Why was it important to be at the forefront of marriage equality in that way, and what did that moment mean to you? I believe in "all men are created equal. Laughs And I don't think any compromise is necessary. I think it's absolutely a fact that all men are created equal, and so I just treated people like equals my entire life.

Equals in every single way, no matter what their proclivity is or what their sexuality is, or their color or their race. It doesn't matter to me. That wedding issue was a big deal as it was one of the first mainstream wedding magazines to have featured a gay couple's wedding, and then there was another in I know!

And that was my nephew. Seeing as though gay marriage wasn't even recognized legally coast to coast then, were Martha-worshipping housewives open to displays of same-sex affection? It was legal in Massachusetts, where they actually got married. I went to their wedding. They had a pre-wedding in Massachusetts, which was the legal wedding, and then they had the family celebration at my farm, which was another tying of the knot.

The ceremony and that Celtic tying of the knot was so beautiful. Was that the best same-sex wedding you've been to? I'd say it's one of them — I've been to a lot! I mean, I have a lot of gay editors, both male and female. One of our style directors at Weddings got married and he had a fantastic wedding at a nightclub in Brooklyn. That was so fun, and that was also featured in the magazine.

And I've been to several female weddings.