
In the September 5 premiere, lonely Christian sees a therapist (Brooke Shields), who promptly tells him he's in love with Sean (Dylan Walsh), his married business partner and best friend. Now entering its fourth season, Nip/Tuck-already brimming with LGBT story lines-is taking the sexy doc on a maybe-gay ride |see sidebar|. "That's what I was fishing for." Flirt.ĭecked out in jeans, McMahon looks younger than he does on the tube, but he is a veteran when it comes to kinky on-screen action.

The interviewer assures him he's fine in that department.

"I need to get myself some muscles," he quips. (Witness his sexy Advocate cover shoot, which was the gentleman's own idea.) At a sushi joint near his hillside home he plops his 6-foot-2, 182-pound self down and orders a Popeye roll, named for its key ingredient, spinach. Luckily, the real McMahon is an open and playful sort. Christian Troy, the caustic, womanizing man-slut half of the show-which, for the uninitiated, is a daring slice of kink about two sexv professional body carvers. It's probably just a testament to his scalpel-sharp performance on TV's naughtiest drama, Nip/Tuck, but the idea of meeting Julian McMahon on a street corner in Hollywood without a chaperone, even in broad daylight, seems a bit dicey.

APA style: On the wild side: Julian McMahon has no sexual hang-ups, and he's not afraid to say so.On the wild side: Julian McMahon has no sexual hang-ups, and he's not afraid to say so." Retrieved from MLA style: "On the wild side: Julian McMahon has no sexual hang-ups, and he's not afraid to say so." The Free Library.
