NEW YORK (Reuters) - J.K. Rowling has outed one of the main
characters of her best-selling Harry Potter series, telling
fans in New York that the wizard Albus Dumbledore, head of
Hogwarts school, is gay.
Speaking at Carnegie Hall on Friday night in her first U.S.
tour in seven years, Rowling confirmed what some fans had
always suspected -- that she "always thought Dumbledore was
gay," reported entertainment Web site E! Online.
Rowling said Dumbledore fell in love with the charming
wizard Gellert Grindelwald but when Grindelwald turned out to
be more interested in the dark arts than good, Dumbledore was
"terribly let down" and went on to destroy his rival.
That love, she said, was Dumbledore's "great tragedy."
"Falling in love can blind us to an extent," she said.
The audience reportedly fell silent after the admission --
then erupted into applause.
Rowling, 42, said if she had known that would be the
response, she would have revealed her thoughts on Dumbledore
earlier.
Fans on the top Potter fan site TheLeakyCauldron.org
(http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org) were divided on the news,
some uncertain Rowling wasn't going to backtrack on the
announcement, others saying it was unnecessary, and some
welcoming the extra information on Dumbledore.
"This is even more awesome because it adds another layer to
Dumbledore's character, which is already so rich and
complicated. I hope he got over Grindlevald (sic) and fell in
love again," wrote Amanda.
Rowling said she had read through a script for the movie
adaptation of the sixth book in the series, "Harry Potter and
the Half-Blood Prince" and corrected a passage in which
Dumbledore was reminiscing about past loves by crossing it out
and scrawling "Dumbledore is gay" over it.
Rowling, a mother of three, is now estimated to be worth
$1.12 billion (547 million pounds), making her the first
dollar-billionaire author.
"Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows" -- the seventh and
final book in the boy wizard series -- became the
fastest-selling book in history when it was released in July.
More than 11 million copies were sold in the first 24 hours
in the United States and Britain.