Drew Barrymore’s decision to publicly embrace her bisexuality feels less like a twist and more like a long-awaited truth finally spoken aloud. After a lifetime on camera—first as the child star in E.T., then as America’s messy, luminous sweetheart—she is reclaiming the narrative that others wrote for her. The broken engagements, whirlwind marriages, and bittersweet divorces no longer read as failures, but as chapters in a story of someone trying, again and again, to love honestly while the world watched.
What makes this moment powerful isn’t shock value; it’s how gently it fits everything we already knew about her. The woman who invites exes onto her couch, who laughs at her scars on daytime TV, is the same woman now saying she has always been drawn to women too, and that there is nothing scandalous about that. By naming her truth without apology, Barrymore offers quiet permission to anyone still afraid of their own.