Christine Chenowes’ Charlie Kirk tribute was unpopular with fans.
The Broadway star tore her on Thursday while talking to NY1’s Frank Direra about her controversial Instagram comments, who shares that she was “shattered” how she felt by the assassination of a conservative commentator.
When a reporter raised a “mixed reaction,” the actress, 57, replied, “Mixed? You’re kind.”
Dilera mentioned Chenowes’ “big LGBTQ+ fanbase” and asked Kirk “who openly opposed to same-sex marriage (and) trans rights” what he wanted to “telling” by posting about “broken hearts.”
Tony’s winner quickly began to tear, apologizing for “emotional involvement” in the interview.
“I saw what happened online with my own eyes and then I had a moment of human reflex,” Chenowet said, referring to Kirk’s virus and graphics, filmed at Uta Valley University.
“My comments hurt some people and I came to realize that it hurts me so badly. I never hurt me,” she admitted.
“It’s no secret that I’m a Christian and I’m a person of faith. I’m an advocate for the LGBTQ+ community, and for some, it doesn’t go together. But for me, it’s always, always.”
Without further elaborating, the winner of Emmy continued to share his excitement for her upcoming Broadway show, The Queen of Versailles.
In Chenoweth’s comments, she lamented Kirk, and she wrote about “seeing some perspectives rather than always agreeing with him.”
The West Wing alumni said, “What a heartbreak. His young family. He knows where he is now. Heaven.
She also called the fatal shooting “a sad, meaningless and disgusting act” via Instagram story.
Charlie is survived by his wife, Erica Kirk and their two children.
Chris Pratt, Savannah Chrisley and other celebrities have been honoring Kirk since his death.
Jamie Lee Curtis explained that in an interview with WTF with Mark Maron, he was cried out the tragedy as “almost every point” that the “Man of Faith” created.
As for Amanda Seyfried, she called Late Turning Point USA co-founder via Instagram over the weekend “Hateful,” revealing the “nuance” in her upload on Wednesday.
“I can get mad at misogyny and racist rhetoric, and I very much agree that Charlie Kirk’s murder is absolutely intrusive and lamentable in every way you can imagine,” the “Mamma Meer!” star told her followers.
“No one needs to experience this level of violence,” she continued. “This country is grieving too many meaningless and violent deaths and shootings. Can you at least agree with that?”
The Golden Globe winners did not want to “add fuel to the fire,” but instead hoped to inspire “energetic discourse.”