Amber Heard came out as bisexual years ago, but has since stated she prefers not to be labeled.

Amber Heard can be seen in the upcoming "Aquaman" DC movie. Evan Agostini / Invision / AP

"I don't identify as anything," Heard told Allure in 2017 when asked if she identifies as bisexual. "I'm a person. I like who I like. I happened to be dating a woman, and people started taking pictures of us walking to our car after dinner. I [was] holding her hand, and I realized that I have two options: I can let go of her hand and, when asked about it, I can say that my private life is my private life. Or I could not let go and own it."

It was when Heard decided to "own it" back in 2010 that the bisexual label first came into play, though she's since decided against using the term.

"It's limiting, that LGBTQ thing," Heard told Allure. "It served a function as an umbrella for marginalized people to whom rights were being denied, but it loses its efficacy because of the nuanced nature of humanity [...] I don't care how many letters you add. At some point, it's going to spell 'WE ARE HUMAN.'"