Mark Ruffalo has some explaining to do.
The “She-Hulk: Legal professional at Regulation” star, 54, apparently forgot to warn his “Avengers” co-star Chris Evans that his new Marvel Disney+ present revealed a tidbit about his character Captain America’s virginity secret.
Warning: Spoilers forward for the primary episode of “She-Hulk.”
“She-Hulk” — which premiered Thursday — follows the lifetime of Ruffalo’s Hulk/Bruce Banner’s cousin Jennifer Walters (Tatiana Maslany) as a lawyer and because the titular superhero.
A frequent joke within the collection sees Walters gossiping to her buddies that Captain America/Steve Rogers died a virgin, a idea that has lengthy floated within the Marvel fandom.
By the tip credit of the premiere episode, all had been revealed. The scene confirmed Walters drunk-calling Banner, saying Captain America didn't should die a virgin.
However an eye-rolling Banner had sufficient of her rant and informed her the reality. “Steve Rogers shouldn't be a virgin. He misplaced his virginity to a lady in 1943 on the USO tour,” Banner mentioned.


However because it seems, Walters was simply manipulating her cousin to inform her the true gossip about Cap, and he or she wasn’t actually tipsy in any respect.
Ruffalo joked in regards to the scene lately, telling Leisure Weekly: “I laughed my ass off. I’m like, ‘Does somebody want to speak to Captain America about this?’ I haven’t. I used to be afraid he was going to have it reduce. Too late now, buddy. The cat’s out of the bag.”

Evans, 41, even tweeted his response to the reveal on Thursday, merely writing an array of zipped-lip and laughing-crying face emojis.
The query of Cap’s virginity was talked about by 2011’s “Captain America: The First Avenger” author Stephen McFeely final yr when he advised that Rogers truly misplaced his V-card throughout a USO Tour.
Ruffalo additionally mentioned how “She-Hulk” pushes the boundaries for superhero reveals by displaying the day by day minutia of the lives of heroes.
“That’s all of the human stuff that we don’t get to [usually see],” the “Highlight” actor mentioned. “What’s nice about this present is that we get to see them as simply human beings and what their lives are and what these histories are.”
“It’s actually totally different in that approach, and it’s humorous as a result of we’re seeing this single woman in her 30s, and when [head writer] Jessica Gao mentioned, ‘I like how horny-forward the present is,’ I used to be like, ‘I’m going to make use of that.'”
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