Heartstopper's Joe Locke says his dream role is a ‘really macho straight man’

Make some calls.
Image may contain Skandar Keynes Body Part Face Head Neck Person Photography Portrait Adult Happy and Smile
Corey Nickols/Getty Images

Heartstopper star Joe Locke is manifesting his next dream role, and it might not be what you are expecting — unless you've been paying attention to the actor's comments for a while.

Speaking to Dylan Mulvaney in her brand new podcast, called The Dylan Hour, Locke opened up about his career and wishes. Towards the end of the conversation, he was asked what his hopes were as he “matures into roles," and he did not hesitate to give out an answer.

“I want to play a really macho straight man in an action film," Locke said. “My dream would be to get paid a sh*t ton of money to get really ripped.” Well, we'd love to see it — especially since his Heartstopper co-star Kit Connor also got ripped for a movie.

Dylan Mulvaney Joe Locke at Vanity Fair  Instagram's The 2025 Vanities Party held at Bar Marmont on February 26 2025 in...
Gilbert Flores/Getty Images

This isn't the first time Joe Locke has expressed his desire to branch out and be given new roles. In the August/September 2024 issue of Rolling Stone UK, the star opened up about his two dream roles, which fall on opposite sides of the spectrum.

The first one is Disney’s first openly gay prince, and the second is a “macho” action role. “I’d love to be in an action film, do something really macho, but in my way, not necessarily the most macho way,” he said at the time. "I’ve not done any films yet, so I’d love to do a film.”

Read More
Dying For Sex, the new TV series starring Michelle Williams, has finally dropped a trailer

It explores a real-life woman's sexual odyssey after a cancer diagnosis.

Image may contain: Michelle Williams, Jenny Slate, Martín Miguel de Güemes, Book, Publication, Face, Happy, Head, and Person

Locke later revealed to Variety that “most of the casting [he gets] sent are for gay characters," so “there are days that [he] never wants to play a gay character again.” In that interview, Locke even shared he was cast in a straight role for a movie he couldn't ultimately do due to scheduling conflicts.

He shared that he thought it was an opportunity to show he's more than “a one-trick pony who was just the guy from Heartstopper," and added that that feeling "in itself is maybe a problem of the industry or a problem of me and my internalised homophobia.”

Image may contain Brian Vernel Dominic Roque Jaime Olías Samia Akariou Book Publication Accessories and Formal Wear
Samuel Dore

Speaking to GQ around the same time as the previous interviews, Locke said he finds himself “wanting to go to the other extreme” whenever an opportunity to play a gay character comes across his desk. "Every time I get sent a gay role, I’m like, ‘I want to play, like, a straight Republican,’” he quipped. “I think I’m really in my head at the moment over being typecast as just playing a camp gay role. But it’s a me thing. It’s a thing I need to get over, myself.”

Speaking to The Guardian a month later, he further talked about his fears of being typecast. “I get a lot of auditions for more gay teenage characters, very similar parts, and, while they’re great, I’ve played two gay characters now,” Locke said, referring to Heartstopper's Charlie and Agatha All Along's Teen/Wiccan. “Not that I would not want to play another gay character, but I want to be a versatile actor, not get stamped," he clarified.

In that interview, Locke also manifested a villainous role instead of an action role. “I want to play a villain; I want to play a part where you get to explore elements of humanity that you would never get to do in real life. Someone completely different to me. But who knows, maybe I am authentically evil," he said.

A version of this article was published on Teen Vogue.