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When Art Becomes Life, and Vice-Versa

The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye

It’s a common cliché that, the longer a couple stays together in a relationship, the more each partner starts to resemble the other. But to what lengths would two people go to take things to the next step, to surgically alter their facial features, to physically and literally look like one another? In The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye, ground-breaking performance artist and music pioneer Genesis Breyer P-Orridge and his partner-collaborator, Lady Jaye, do exactly that — in a series of daring sexual transformations they called their “Pandrogyne” project.

Genesis Breyer P-Orridge has been a key figure of the underground music scene for over 30 years. A cult artist in prepunk and post-punk groups Throbbing Gristle and Psychic TV, he is considered to be the father of industrial music and a pioneer of acid house and techno. Not content with breaking new ground in music, Genesis has also used his position at the limits of society to challenge the very fundamentals of biology, as he does here with Lady Jaye (now deceased) as his muse and collaborator, documented over a period of seven years by director Marie Losier.

A native of France, The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye isn’t Losier’s first film portrait of avant-garde artists. Her previous subjects include filmmakers Guy Maddin and The Kuchar brothers, and theater director Richard Foreman, in works described by as whimsical, poetic, dreamlike and unconventional. She lives and works in New York, and has been the film curator at the French Institute Alliance Française since 2000. Genesis and Lady Jaye plays Sunday, July 24 at 10:30PM, at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea. You’ll also enjoy a special screening of Jonathan Couette’s (Tarnation) short film All Flowers in Time, starring Chloe Sevigny, immediately before the feature. Click here for tickets and more information.

Other must-see films headlining our 2011 festival season:

Paul Goodman Changed My Life. A documentary portrait of the writer and public intellectual chiefly remembered as the author of 1960′s landmark Growing Up Absurd, a book which helped to galvanize and define that era’s student movement. A philosopher of the New Left, brilliant poet, out queer and family man, radical pacifist and visionary, Paul Goodman’s ideas and stubborn integrity helped many in our community find a moral compass in the sixties. Directed by Jonathan Lee. Playing Tuesday, July 26 at 6:30PM, at Manhattan’s Jewish Community Center. (After viewing Paul Goodman, be sure to stick around for Tomer Heymann’s The Queen Has No Crown at 9PM, the other feature film on our Tuesday night bill at JCC. Click here and here for tickets and more details.)

Photos of Angie. A heart-wrenching reminder that, as much progress has been made by the LGBT community, there is still so much more work needed for greater acceptance and protection of transgendered individuals. In July 2008, Angie Zapata, a transgender teenager from Greeley, Colorado was murdered. In Photos of Angie, director Alan Dominguez documents the horrific story of her death through interviews with family, reporters, politicians, and activists, against the backdrop of a trans-phobic criminal justice system. Follow this link for tickets to the Tuesday, July 26, 8PM screening at Cinema Village.

Tomboy. Directed by Celine Sciamma (Water Lillies). A lighthearted, bittersweet glimpse into a period of time when, for many LGBT youths, budding hormones collide with parental and societal expectations, with unpredictable results. Here you’ll meet Laure, a 10-year-old girl who’s decided to start life in a new neighborhood as Michael, her male alter-ego, yielding unexpected levels of attention and popularity. But as Michael/Laure learns all too quickly, acceptance from the world on her terms probably won’t last forever. Tickets are available for TWO screenings, both at Cinema Village: Friday, July 22 at 3PM, and Sunday, July 24 at 7PM.

An Ordinary Couple. A romantic and uplifting documentary following two extraordinary men on an unexpected journey from their funeral to their wedding, in that order. Unable to legally marry in 2006, Orin Kennedy and Bernardo Puccio celebrate their life together by inviting their closest friends to their “living funeral” where a 12-foot Kennedy-Puccio monument is unveiled. Directors Jay Gianukos and Susan Barnes intertwining themes of love, politics, humor and political commentary in this deeply personal look at an extraordinary couple’s dedication to one another. Playing Saturday, July 23 at 11AM, at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea.


Spotlighting Our Centerpiece Films

 

At NewFest, every day is a celebration of LGBT moviemaking, but our Centerpiece films are the icing on the cake. This year, our programmers have selected TWO films: one narrative, Andrew Haigh’s Weekend, and one documentary, Bobbie Birleffi and Beverly Kopf’s Wish Me Away, as the focal point of our festival. Purchasing tickets to these events is as easier than ever before; just follow this link for details.

Weekend. It’s Friday evening at a house party with straight buddies from the old days, but Russell (Tom Cullen) is ditching the boozy bash for some late-night cruising at a gay club. Just before closing time he picks up Glen (Chris New), but what was supposed to be a one-night stand is turning into something else, something special. That weekend, in bars and in bedrooms, getting drunk and high, telling stories and having sex, the two men get to know each other in ways they never expected, in a brief encounter that will change their lives. Haigh, who not only directed but penned the script for Weekend, says it’s ”both an honest and unapologetic love story between two guys and a film about the universal struggle for an authentic life in all its forms. It is about the search for identity and the importance of making a passionate commitment to your life.” Playing Sunday, July 24 at 8PM, at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea. (As a special treat, you’ll enjoy a screening of Omar Zúñiga Hidalgo’s Away immediately before the feature.) Click here for tickets, which include admission to reception immediately following the presentation.

Wish Me Away. Country music superstar Chely Wright presents NewFest audiences with an all-access backstage pass to her life offstage as an out-and-proud lesbian in this poignant, provocative new documentary. More than just one woman’s coming out story, Wish Me Away showcases Wright’s battle against the overt homophobia of the country music world, and her dazzling resiliency as she mounts a comeback. Award-winning filmmakers Birleffi and Kopf spent more than three years with Wright, tracing her rise to fame… from small-town sensation in Wellsville, Kansas, to the top of the Billboard country music charts, to her recent honors as one of Out magazine’s 100 People of the Year. Our Centerpiece documentary, featuring a special LIVE appearance by Chely Wright. Friday, July 22 at 7:30PM, SVA Theatre in Chelsea. Your ticket to the movie admits you to the reception right after the movie. Click here to purchase.

Of course, our Centerpiece films aren’t the only reason to come to NewFest. Be sure and check out these and other movies coming to our festival July 21 through 28 (follow the links for tickets and more info):

Turtle Hill, Brooklyn. Now with a SECOND screening added by popular demand! Playing Sunday, July 24 at 5PM, and Tuesday, July 26 at 10PM, Cinema Village. A comical and sincere slice-of-life glimpse into the story of a couple trying to figure it out. Mateo (Ricardo Valdez) and Will (Brian Seibert) invite their friends over for Will’s 30th birthday. After a few surprise visitors, they get through the day, but realize that doubting one’s partner isn’t nearly as scary as doubting oneself. Directed by Ryan Gielen.

Kill the Habit. Playing Saturday, July 23 at 10PM, SVA Theatre; Monday, July 25 at 7PM, Cinema Village. Galia (Lili Mirojnick, Cloverfield) struggles with substance abuse and a laundry list of personal problems. Today, she’s discovered a surefire way to get the monkey off her back — by killing her unscrupulous drug dealer. But what to do with the body? At her wit’s end, Galia enlists her long-suffering best friend Soti (Katerina Moutsatsos, The Hangover)… setting off a chain reaction of events that’s part The Usual Suspects, part Thelma & Louise. Directed by Laura Neri.

Heart Breaks Open. Playing Friday, July 22 at 6PM, and Monday, July 25 at 3PM, Cinema Village. A model queer activist and advocate, Jesus’s world implodes after discovering that he is HIV positive, forcing him to confront his innermost fears, his relationship with his ex-boyfriend, and a future living with HIV. Directed by Billie Rain.

Shut Up, Little Man! An Audio Misadventure. Playing Sunday, July 24 at 3:30PM, SVA Theatre. When two friends decide to tape-record the fights of their violently noisy, obnoxious neighbors for fun, they find they’ve accidentally created one of the world’s first ‘viral’ pop-culture sensations. Come experience for yourself what Spin magazine says is “as disturbing as it is hilarious.” Directed by Matthew Bate.


LADY GAGA’s Monster Ball Tour Touches Down at NewFest

Lady GaGa’s bigger-than-life concert performance of the year – Lady Gaga Presents the Monster Ball Tour: At Madison Square Garden — touches down at NewFest this Friday, July 22! The FREE event is already SOLD OUT, but don’t worry, it’s easy to get your fix of Lady GaGa on HBO GO! Tune in anytime to www.hbogo.com and watch for yourself the concert movie that earned Lady GaGa a remarkable five Emmy nominations!

Already have your tickets, Little Monsters? Then Friday is the time to show how much you LOVE you-know-who by dressing to impress in your finest Lady GaGa fashions! Own a vinyl catsuit… a bubble top… a hair bow… a freaky frock you’re dying to show off? A meat dress you’ve yet to nibble on? Then throw it on, ghurl, and work the runway at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea at what’s destined to be the funkiest and most fabulous floor show of the season.

In a music landscape littered with manufactured pop starlets, American Idol castoffs and other second-tier talents, Lady Gaga is a true New York City original. In her Monster Ball Tour, you’ll witness for yourself the amazing vocalizations, mind-blowing stagecraft, wild fashions and sinister sexuality that have made the 25-year-old singer the hottest phenom on the pop music scene in a decade. Join us as Lady Gaga salutes her New York City roots when the Monster Ball tour takes over the sold-out Madison Square Garden all over again… this time, on the big screen at Chelsea’s SVA Theatre.


MARGARET CHO, Dirty Girls and More

Your ticket to the best LGBT film festival of the season is just a click away. NewFest 2011 kicks off next week, so be sure to check out these hot-ticket features and reserve your seats today!

Margaret Cho’s hugely successful concert tour Cho Dependent is coming to the big screen at NewFest! Filmmaker Lorene Machado, herself a longtime collaborator of Cho’s, captures the LGBT-friendly performer as only a friend and confidante could. At turns deliciously raunchy (think sex & drugs) and dishy (Margaret takes on Bristol Palin and her own Korean-born mother), Cho Dependent is part stand-up, part musical theater, and all unbelievably funny. Playing Friday, July 22 at 5:30PM, SVA Theater in Chelsea. Click here for tickets and showtimes.

Be sure not to miss the New York premiere of Abe Sylvia’s Dirty Girl.  Winner of the Audience Award at the recent Provincetown International Film Festival, Dirty Girl is produced by this year’s NewFest Visionary Award winner, Christine Vachon.  The film features rising star Juno Temple as Danielle, who sets off from Oklahoma to find her long-lost father with a gay friend. Co-starring Milla Jovovich (pictured at right, with Temple) and Dwight Yoakum.  Get tickets here for the Saturday 10PM screening at the SVA Theater.

The Brooklyn Academy of Music in Brooklyn’s gorgeous Fort Greene neighborhood is opening its doors to NewFest for one night only, Wednesday July 27.  Be sure not to miss Hit So Hard, the story of Hole drummer Patty Schemel.  In addition to tackling issues of Schemel’s drug addiction (which she has overcome), the documentary also shows amazing footage from her days on tour with Hole, with plenty of never-before-seen footage of Courtney Love, Kurt Cobain, and their daughter Frances Bean. Also at BAM, see the follow-up to the hit off-color comedy The Maid. In Old Cats (Gatos Viejos) (click here for tickets), filmmakers Pedro Peirano & Sebastian Silva return to form, with a black comedy that follows the troubles of a family dealing with an aging matriarch.

NewFest, indieWIRE, and the 92Y Tribeca are celebrating iW’s 15th Anniversary with a special retrospective screening of Jonathan Caouette’s Tarnation, which challenged the boundaries of personal film, indie film, and queer film when it made its festival debut in 2004.  Caouette will screen scenes from his new film Walk Away, Renee and have a Q&A moderated by NewFest Director of Programming Bryce Renninger.  Get your tickets for the Tarnation event Wednesday July 20 (the day before NewFest kicks off) at the 92Y Tribeca here. And don’t miss Caouette’s new short film, All Flowers in Time (starring Big Love’s favorite sister-wife Chloe Sevigny) playing this month at NewFest.

NewFest is proud to support the Outfest Legacy Project for LGBT Film Preservation, a collaboration with the UCLA Film & Television Archive. It’s the only program in the world devoted to saving and preserving lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender moving images… among them, three rarities playing this month here in New York City: Queens at Heart, documenting three New York male-to-female transsexuals; Mona’s Candle Light, the story of a 1950s-era lesbian bar in San Francisco; and Choosing Children, a groundbreaking story of some of the first out-and-proud lesbian mothers. Playing Monday, July 18, 8:45PM, at the Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center. Click here to purchase tickets or for more information.


Cinema Village: One of SEVEN Great Venues to Catch NewFest!

NewFest, the LGBT film festival you’ve come to know and love, is bigger, bolder and more fabulous than ever before! Our program expands to an unprecedented seven venues all across New York City, one probably near you. This year we’re screening at the Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center; Chelsea’s SVA Theatre; Cinema Village;  Harlem Stage; JCC Manhattan; BAM Rose Cinemas in Brooklyn; and The Museum of the Moving Image in Queens. Check our film guide to find out where to catch the best movies of the season.

While you’re here, take some time to get better acquainted with these fine directors whose films we’re delighted to feature at NewFest 2011. Click any photo to purchase tickets, or for more information:

David Weissman, We Were Here. Weissman’s first feature-length film, 2002′s The Cockettes, documented the gender-bending performance group as they became a pop culture phenomenon in the early 1970s. In We Were Here, Weissman presents another portrait in time: the first years of the then-unimaginable AIDS crisis in San Francisco. Our Opening Night film, We Were Here makes its NewFest debut at Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater on Thursday, July 21.

Alexandra Roxo, Mary Marie. A 2006 graduate of NYU’s Tisch school of the Arts, Roxo officially majored in drama and theatre, but saw the creative possibilities in filmmaking after a stint at NYU’s Film Production Center. Marie Marie is Roxo’s first feature-length film.

Rashaad Ernesto Green, Gun Hill Road. Beginning his career as an actor, this Bronx native spent years touring in theaters nationwide, and working in front of the camera with such nationally known directors as Spike Lee. His Gun Hill Road, set near the same South Bronx neighborhood where Green grew up, is this year’s Closing Night film. It plays at the Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center on Thursday, July 28.

Amor Hacker, A Few Days of Respite. From Indiewire: “Hakkar directs and stars as the aging man torn between a security he has never known and his passionate connection to his younger lover… A Few Days of Respite questions the nature of love and happiness and the sacrifices we may make to achieve either.”

Andrew Haigh, Weekend. Haigh’s previous film Greek Pete, a documentary capturing a year in the life of a hunky London hustler, was an instant favorite with New York audiences at our 2009 festival. The UK native makes the successful transition to drama as he returns to NewFest with Weekend, one of our two centerpiece films. Look for it Sunday, July 24 at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea.

Eldar Rapaport, August. Born in Tel Aviv, Israel, Eldar moved to the US twenty years to attend Emerson College in Boston. His short film Steam – about two guys trapped in a gymnasium steam room with no exits – has played over 40 festivals worldwide, picking up numerous awards along the way.

Elisabeth Sperling and Trish Dalton (not pictured), One Night Stand. Sperling’s credits include Scapegoat On Trial, and the Discovery Channel’s Perfect Disasters. Dalton’s credits include 34x25x36, (recently aired on PBS after screening at SXSW), Tiffany’s Story, and more than 60 educational documentaries and commercials.

Bobbi Birleffi and Beverly Kopf, Wish Me Away. This award-winning filmmaking team followed country music superstar Chely Wright for three years, as the performer struggled how would eventually reveal to the world she is a lesbian.Wish Me Away shows both the devastation of her own internalized homophobia and the transformational power of living an authentic life. It’s one of NewFest 2011′s two centerpiece films, and plays Friday, July 22 at the SVA Theatre in Chelsea. Includes special live appearance by Chely Wright.

Tickets are available for all movies and showtimes. Consult our Film Guide for details, or to reserve your seats today.

 


Meet the Directors, Take One

It goes without saying that it takes a great director to make a great movie. Meet a few of the directors whose films you’ll see this month at NewFest 2010… men and women from all over the world, bringing you the best in LGBT documentary and feature filmmaking. Click any photo for an instant link to information about tickets, venues, and showtimes.

Allan Neuwirth, What’s the Name of the Dame? A native New Yorker, Neuwirth was originally a cartoon animator, before shifting to moviemaking. In 1998, Neuwirth co-created (with Glen Hanson) the syndicated comic strip “Chelsea Boys,” set in NYC’s world-famous gayborhood.

Dori Berinstein, Carol Channing: Larger Than Life. A three-time Tony-Winning Broadway producer (Legally Blonde, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, The Crucible), Berinstein’s ShowBusiness: The Road to Broadway was named one of the top four Documentary Films of 2006.

Lorene Machado, Cho Dependent. A frequent collaborator with comedian Margaret Cho, Machado has worked on the Discovery Channel’s Moments of Impact, Court TV’s Most Daring series, and the WE Network’s Bridezillas.


Bernard Shumanski, Blackmail Boys. A native of South Africa, Shumanski co-directed and produced Blackmail Boys with his brother Harry. The Shumanskis previously directed 2009′s Wrecked, the sexually-explicit drama about a gay teen’s tumultuous decent into drugs and anonymous sex.

Tom Tykwer, 3 (Three). A recipient of numerous awards and prizes during his amazingly successful career, the German-born Tykwer (pronounced Tick-ver) previously directed such films as Run Lola Run (1998), The Princess and the Warrior (2000) and Perfume: The Story of a Murderer (2006).

Adele Tulli, 365 Without 377. A former actress, the Italian-born Tulli traveled to the streets of Mumbai, India to chart the lives of three LGBT people there for her first feature-length film. 365 Without 377 is also Tulli’s NewFest debut.

Stephen Cone, The Wise Kids. Originally from South Carolina, Stephen moved to Chicago in 2004, where he founded Cone Arts in 2005 to faciliate the making of his own films. But Cone’s roots in theater run deep, too; as a playwright, his works have been produced in Chicago, Austin and New York City.

Dany Papineau, 2 Frogs in the West. Born in a small community near Montreal, Papineau first experienced Canada’s rural west while on summer vacation as a civil engineering student. Amazed by the beauty of the Rockies, he bought his first video camera to share his experience with his family back home… eventually leading to a career in film.

Marie Losier, The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye. Born in France, Losier is a filmmaker and curator in New York City. She’s known for a number of film portraits on avant-garde directors, musicians and composers such as Mike and George Kuchar, Guy Maddin, Richard Foreman, Tony Conrad, and now, Genesis P-Orridge.

Gretchen Morning, Gone. Gretchen began her TV career as a writer/producer on TLC’s Gunfighters of the West. Since then, she has become a successful writer, editor and producer of short- and long-form reality and non-fiction television shows. Morning co-directed Gone with her husband, John Morning (not pictured.)

Angela Tucker, (A)sexual. A Brooklyn based writer, director and producer, Tucker produced the Emmy-nominated documentary Deadline, and worked in various production capacities on such PBS documentaries as Election Day and Beyond the Steps: Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.

Michael Schiralli, Varla Jean & The MushroomHeads. Schiralli is an accomplished film and theatre director with dozens of accolades for his work, including a GLAAD Award for Coco Peru Is Undaunted . Previously, Schiralli directed HBO’s Toyota Comedy Fest and segments of Anything But Standup.

Stay here with NewFest.org in the days ahead to learn more about the directors, films and special events coming to NewFest 2011. Tickets are still available to all shows, but they won’t be around for long. Be sure to reserve your seats today!


Fun Movies, Brilliant Storytelling. That’s NewFest.

If you like a great story as much as we do, NewFest is the place to be this July. Here are just a few you won’t want to miss; click any photo to purchase tickets, or to get more information.

Mangus. Join us on a trip to River City, Texas, where Mangus Spedgwick’s lifelong dream to star in Jesus Christ Spectacular ends in a freak accident. Mangus takes it all in stride… that is, until an archnemesis and queeny classmate steps into the role that is rightfully his. As Mangus struggles with the possibility of never playing the Big JC, it’s his family, strangely, that finds redemption. Think Waiting for Guffman meets Andrew Lloyd Weber, with a splash of Greater Tuna for good measure.  Starring Ryan Boggus as Mangus, Jennifer Coolidge (American Pie 2, Best in Show), John Waters, and Heather Matarazzo in a hilarious star turn as Jessica Simpson. Directed by Ash Christian (Fat Girls, Petunia.) Playing Saturday, July 23 at 7:30PM, SVA Theatre; Sunday, July 24 at 10PM, Cinema Village.

2 Frogs in the West. Sometimes, a person learns life’s biggest lessons outside of the classroom. Meet 20-year-old French-Canadian Marie Deschamps as she blows off college to travel and learn English in the nether reaches of the West. But is it all worth it? Nearly at her wit’s end, the fetching Francophone finds herself in Whistler, British Columbia, where new friends help her realize it’s okay to feel just a little bit out of place in this world — changing her life forever. Directed by Dany Papineau. Playing Sunday, July 23 at 2:30PM, Cinema Village.

Going Down in La-La Land. Welcome to sunny Los Angeles, California, land of swimming pools, movie stars and dreams of making it on the big screen. Just off the last LAX flight from small town America is the hunky young Adam. He’s ready to conquer Hollywood with his plans to become a star — that is, if he can navigate a world bursting at the seams with outsized egos, psycho bosses, washed-up starlets, coke whores and closet cases. Beverly Hills 90210 this ain’t, folks. Directed by Caspar Andreas, Going Down in La-La Land is based on the smash novel of the same title by Andy Zeffer. Playing Friday, July 22 at 10PM, SVA Theatre.

Leave It on the Floor. An original musical with the spirit, fabulousness and élan of 1990′s Paris is Burning. When Brad’s mother kicks him out, he steals her car and heads to Los Angeles. There he falls for the ultra-fierce ball scene, and it’s sashay-shante fashion sensibility. Directed by Sheldon Larry (Noah’s Arc) and written by Glenn Gaylord (Eating Out: All You Can Eat). Kick-ass, high-energy dance numbers choreographed by Frank Gatson Jr., the man who taught Beyonce how to leave it on the floor. Playing Monday, July 25 at 7:30PM, Harlem Stage; Wednesday, July 27 at 9:30PM, Cinema Village.

Tickets to these movies and more are available right here on our website.


Groundbreaking Films, Great Entertainment

NewFest.org is the place to watch for all the upcoming highlights of the 2011 programming season. Keep an eye right here as we spotlight the feature films, documentary films, and shorts screening at NewFest beginning July 21. Purchasing tickets to the headliners listed below, as well as to our other films, is easy as clicking the link at the top of this page.

These are just a few of the films we’ll be telling you more about in the days to come here at NewFest.org…

We Were Here. David Weissman (Cockettes) presents his moving portrait of San Francisco at the dawn of the AIDS crisis. We Were Here follows five members of that community as they confront their lives’ biggest challenge. Our Opening Night presentation. Thursday, July 21 at 7PM, Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center.

Wish Me Away. As Chely Wright prepares to go on national television to tell the world she is a lesbian, the country music superstar proves her coming out is anything but a cheap publicity stunt. Award-winning filmmakers Bobbie Birleffi and Beverly Kopf document Wright’s battle against the overt homophobia of the country music world, and her dazzling resiliency as she mounts a comeback. Our Centerpiece documentary, featuring a special LIVE appearance by Chely Wright. Friday, July 22 at 7:30PM, SVA Theatre in Chelsea.

Weekend. Director Andrew Haigh (Greek Pete) returns to NewFest with his beautiful and uninhibited story of a one-night stand with long-lasting ramifications. As the end of the weekend draws near though, the men are forced to confront a difficult decision. Our Centerpiece film. Sunday, July 24 at 8PM, SVA Theater in Chelsea.

Gun Hill Road. Enrique Rodriguez (Esai Morales, NYPD Blue) returns to his Bronx family after two years in the state pen, only to discover how much things have changed. The most startling of those changes: his transgendered teenage son Michael (newcomer Harmony Santana) is making a new life for himself as Vanessa. Already a hit at Sundance hit, Rashaad Ernesto Green’s groundbreaking look at family, gender, and machismo in Latino culture is our Closing Night feature presentation. Thursday, July 28 at 8PM, Walter Reade Theater at Lincoln Center.

And don’t forget: In addition to our opening and closing night festivities at Lincoln Center and our screenings at the School of Visual Arts Theatre in Chelsea, this year NewFest expands to a handful of other venues across the city. These include Cinema Village in Greenwich Village, The Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Jewish Community Center, and Harlem Center Stage.


Tickets Are NOW On Sale to the General Public!

NewFest’s 2011 film festival season is underway… tickets are NOW on sale to the general public! 

This season, we’re thrilled to be able to bring you the best of LGBT moviemaking at the following locations across the city:

· The Walter Reade Theater at the Film Society of Lincoln Center. This year, NewFest begins the festival at the world’s foremost performing arts center, starting on Opening Night,Thursday, July 21, when we’ll screen We Were Here by director David Weissman. We’ll return to the Walter Reade to wrap our festival Thursday, July 28 for our Closing Night ceremony and Rashaad Ernesto Green’s latest feature Gun Hill Road.

As part of our Opening Night ceremony at Lincoln Center, NewFest is thrilled to present legendary film producer Christine Vachon with our first annual NewFest Visionary Award. Vachon was instrumental in the development of the New Queer Cinema movement, producing such classics as Todd Haynes’Poison, Tom Kalin’s Swoon and the lesbian favorite Go Fish (from NewFest board member Rose Troche.) Vachon’s credits also include Dirty Girl by Abe Sylvia, which will screen at this year’s festival. She will also participate in a special free event, a DISCUSSION WITH CHRISTINE VACHON at the Film Society’s new Elinor Bunin Munroe Film Center on Friday, July 22nd. That event is free and open to the public (watch our website for more details.)

· Chelsea’s School of Visual Arts Theatre is our home from Friday, July 22 through Sunday, July 24. The site of some of this year’s most exciting programming, our SVA location is also the place to catch our Centerpiece screenings of Wish Me Away (Friday, July 22) and Weekend (Sunday, July 24.) But the SVA isn’t our only downtown location. We’re also pleased to add Cinema Village in Manhattan’s Greenwich Village to our list of venues. Look for showtimes at Cinema Village EVERY DAY from Friday, July 22 through Thursday, July 28.

· Harlem Stage. Catch our screening of Leave It On the Floor and the short film That’s Entertainment here on Monday, July 25.

· JCC Manhattan. Two documentaries, twice the fun. Tuesday, July 26.

· Museum of the Moving Image in Queens. Also on Tuesday, July 26.

· BAM Rose Cinema at the Brooklyn Academy of Music. Wednesday, July 27.

Don’t miss out on the event of the season, and the movies of a lifetime. Log on and check out our full roster of films here on our website.

Ticket Prices:

$14 for Non-Members

$12 for Members

$8 for Students and Seniors (Only available at Box Office; Valid ID is required)

$50 for Opening Night film at The Film Society of Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater (Price includes After Party)

$25 for Centerpiece films (Price includes admission to reception after the films


 


Previewing Our 23rd Festival Season

NewFest, New York’s premiere Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender film festival, is back for another season and better than ever. We’re prouder than ever, too, to kick off our 23rd exciting season with our newest partner, the Film Society of Lincoln Center, and a program of more than 50 feature-length and four dozen short films. It all begins next month, July 21 through July 28.

In addition to our opening and closing night festivities at Lincoln Center, NewFest 2011 expands to a handful of other venues across the city this year, with festival programming at the School of Visual Arts theater in the heart of Chelsea, and at Cinema Village in Greenwich Village. And be sure to stay with us in the weeks ahead. We’ll announce additional screenings at The Museum of the Moving Image in Queens, the Brooklyn Academy of Music, the Jewish Community Center, and Harlem Center Stage.

 

The lineup begins Thursday, July 21 at 8PM, with our Opening Night presentation at Lincoln Center’s Walter Reade Theater - David Weissman’s documentary We Were Here. A hit with both critics and audiences at Sundance, We Were Here follows the story of five men and women struggling to make sense of the emerging AIDS crisis in 1980s San Francisco, and the unimaginable disaster it wrought upon our community. You may remember Weissman for co-directing the 2001 documentary, The Cockettes, chronicling San Francisco’s legendary theater troupe of hippies and drag queens, 1969 – 1972.  We Were Here revisits the city by the bay a decade later, as its flourishing gay community is hit with its biggest crisis ever.

Friday, July 22 at 8PM NewFest moves to the SVA Theater with our Documentary Centerpiece screening of Bobbi Birleffi and Beverly Kopf’s Wish Me Away. Here you’ll meet country music superstar Chely Wright (whose song “Single White Female” hit #1 on the Billboard Country charts) as she tells the world she’s an out-and-proud lesbian… and navigates the celebrity tabloids’ seamy attention brought on by her confession.

Later that weekend at the SVA, Director Andrew Haigh (Greek Pete) returns to NewFest to bring us our Feature Centerpiece Screening of The Weekend. A favorite at this year’s SXSW festival in Texas, The Weekend is the boy-meets-boy story of a one-night stand with the potential to evolve into so much more. That’s Sunday, July 24 at 8PM.

We wrap up our festival a week later with a return to Lincoln Center, and our Closing Night screening and awards ceremony on Saturday, July 28 at 8PM. That night we’re thrilled to present Gun Hill Road, directed by Rashaad Ernesto Green (pictured below.) The Sundance hit is a groundbreaking look at family, gender and machismo in Latino culture, and costars Esai Morales (NYPD Blue), Judy Reyes (Scrubs) and newcomer Harmony Santana.

But that’s just a taste of some of the great things to come. Stay tuned; we’ll share our full program of great LGBT films later this month right here on our site.


We’re Opening At Lincoln Center!!

Lincoln Center

NewFest has some big news: the Film Society of Lincoln Center and NewFest will co-present the opening and closing nights of NewFest at Lincoln Center. The opening night gala, screening and after party will take place on Thursday, July 21, 2011. The formal announcement was made at a Film Society dinner at Sundance, while our programmers were there screening films for this year.

If you were wondering why we announced the opening date change earlier this month, now it can be revealed: the Film Society of Lincoln Center is opening their new, state-of-the-art film center this coming summer, and by moving our opening to July 21st, our members have the opportunity to be among the first to enjoy this film-going experience that will be second to none.

There’s more exciting news to come. But we don’t want you to miss the opening and closing night screenings and gala parties — they are sure to be events! And the best way to guarantee you’ll be there (we expect these events to sell out fast) is to become a member at the Supporter or Contributor level today. Just go to our membership page and sign up now!

We’re pleased to say that this marks the beginning of a new relationship between our two pioneering film organizations.

After opening night, festival programming will continue at the School of Visual Arts theater in Chelsea with special screenings at a variety of other respected New York cultural institutions, including the Brooklyn Academy of Music, Harlem Stage and The Jewish Community Center to provide a full program of screenings from July 22-27, 2011.

The festival’s closing night gala screening and after party will return to Lincoln Center on Thursday, July 28, 2011.  And remember, the best way to guarantee seats is to become a member now.

CLICK HERE TO READ INDIEWIRE’S COVERAGE OF THE LINCOLN CENTER PARTNERSHIP:


Why Are Marketers Missing Out on Opportunities With LGBT Audiences?

This piece originally appeared in the July 14, 2010 issue of Advertising Age.

Last week in the heart of Chelsea, in New York City, Joan Rivers got a standing ovation from her adoring gay and lesbian fans after the screening of a documentary about her life, “Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work.” The sold-out event at NewFest, New York’s premiere LGBT film festival, attracted a well-educated, professional (and good-looking) crowd of New Yorkers, most of whom were gay, and all of whom are prime targets for many of today’s brands from Heineken to American Express, and yet mainstream sponsors like these two (who, by the way, underwrote the Tribeca Film Festival in April) were nowhere to be found.

NewFest was made possible this year thanks to the generosity, primarily, of the fashion designer Marc Jacobs, with additional sponsorships from Showtime’s “The Real L Word,” Mitchell Gold & Bob Williams, TekServe, Grand Marnier, IFP, The Gem Hotel, Viña Casablanca, Chilean wines Santa Carolina and NYC’s Gay & Lesbian Center, among others. Some of these sponsors are certainly big, mainstream brands, but what is interesting to me is that the top three are either owned by gay men or, in the case of Showtime, do programming specifically oriented to the gay and lesbian community. So I scratch my head, wondering if major brands simply don’t care about advertising to the LGBT community anymore.

The screening for ‘Joan Rivers: A Piece of Work’ received many sponsors, but none of the big guns.

“When brands actually create campaigns specifically targeting the LGBT community, they get comparatively stronger ROI,” says Bob Witeck, CEO, Witeck Combs Communications, a marketing communications and strategic consulting firm working in the LGBT market for over 17 years. According to Witeck, the key to tapping into this market is authenticity, consistency and durability. For brands like Orbitz, American Airlines and Kimpton Hotels, to name a few, marketing to the LGBT community has consistently paid off.

Hmm, that sounds a lot like what happens when marketers commit to marketing to Hispanics. In fact, there are a lot of similarities between these two markets. Both are racially and socio-economically diverse; both are trend-setting, technologically savvy, early adopters and heavy influencers; both are highly concentrated in the top ten DMAs of the country; both get the short end of advertising budgets, and yet both are fiercely loyal to brands that make an effort to reach them in relevant ways. Of course, it’s the LGBT market that gets the brunt of the hate mongering from conservative right-wingers, although lately I’d say Hispanics are certainly feeling the hate too, need I mention … Arizona?

But I digress. This month is gay pride month, and all across the nation, cities large and small will be hosting events to celebrate their lesbian and gay communities. According to Richard Florida, a professor of business and creativity at the Rotman School of Management at the University of Toronto, gay men and lesbians are a critical part of the so-called “creative class” that help cities become economically more competitive by making them more attractive to the intellectual classes that, in turn, help develop cultural and technological innovation, which foments the growth of our nation’s economy.

Research also shows that, even in tough economic times, LGBT communities tend to have more disposable income. So again, I scratch my head and wonder what the heck is going on.

“Gay-inclusive storytelling is what is suffering,” says Witeck. “Budgets are shifting to mainstream agencies who claim to have the LGBT competency in-house, but in reality assign the job to someone on staff who just happens to be gay.” And then, there’s also the issue around push-back from objectors like Bill O’Reilly and interest groups who are anti-gay. “Brands have a hard time navigating what they consider a cultural dialogue or debate, even though public opinion has changed, and acceptance is stronger,” says Witeck.

Specialized shops like Witeck-Combs, Prime Access and Target10 continue to do an excellent job for their clients, but the sad reality is that over the past two years, half a dozen gay advertising shops have closed, including the legendary Double Platinum, run by Stephanie Blackwood and Arthur Korant.

It seems like we are at a tipping point where it is tempting to want to bring minority groups into the fold and advertise with a one-size-fits-all message. But we all know that, in this post-advertising era where consumers are in control, it’s all about the long tail. NewFest closed last night with a sneak preview of CNN’s documentary “Gary & Tony Have Baby,” which airs nationwide on June 24th at 8 p.m. After ten fun-filled days of movies and parties, NewFest officials estimate that over 20,000 New Yorkers (who can sometimes be a tough crowd to please) watched, laughed and cried at 100 different stories of our community. What a missed opportunity for those brands who want real consumer engagement!

About the author: Chiqui Cartagena is the senior VP of multicultural marketing at Story Worldwide. She is also the author of Latino Boom!: Everything You Need to Know to Grow Your Business in the U.S. Hispanic Market.


NewFest Workshops: The Complete Podcasts

There’s an easier way than ever to attend a NewFest Filmmaker Workshop… in the comfort of your own home. Our innovative seminars (led by some of the best pros in the business) are now available as podcasts for download. Check us out on Podbean… or subscribe to our iTunes podcast feed. http://newfest2010.podbean.com/


FRIDAY Movies and More at NewFest

Reserve your tickets online for easy pick-up at The Cell, just across from the SVA Theater, 23rd Street at Eighth Avenue, in the heart of Chelsea.

Both our Daily Film Grid and our 2010 Program are available as pdf downloads by clicking the thumbnails at left and below.


THURSDAY: Comedy, Music & Queer Culture

Important documentary film making. Hilarious comedy. Original musicals. We’re bringing it ALL to you today at NewFest 2010.

Think of New Zealand and you may think of wool sweaters, Lord of the Rings, and mutton. Not after tonight. At THE TOPP TWINS: UNTOUCHABLE GIRLS you’ll meet one of funniest and most original acts in show business today… as these lesbian identical twins from that other land waaaayyy down under yodel, schtick and fight for LGBT rights in a touching new documentary. As a special treat, they’ll also perform LIVE after the screening and take questions from the audience. Oh yes, there will be LOTS of questions. Showtime is 7:30pm.

THE HERETICS continues filmmaker (and Hampshire College film professor, at right) Joan Braderman’s important work, documenting the impact Heresies magazine made and continues to make in the feminist community. That’s at 5pm.

 Bear community impresario, documentary filmmaker and Kevin Smith-protege Malcolm Ingram is on hand LIVE to answer your questions at the screening of BEAR NATION at 10pm. And keep reading this website… we’re previewing the show with an original interview with the director himself.

Musical theater more your style? FRUIT FLY is the coming-of-age story of the world’s most adorable Filipina performance artist in the world’s second gayest city, San Francisco. You won’t call this Fruit Fly a ‘fag hag’ after watching H.P. Mendoza’s (left) musical comedy with its original new score. The soundtrack is already available on iTunes… download it now and sing along with the show at 10:30 tonight.

Didn’t make it to these crowd-pleasers when we showed them the first time? You asked, we listened: Our Thursday slate includes repeat screenings at of ROCK HUDSON: DARK AND HANDSOME STRANGER and CHILDREN OF GOD, both back by popular demand. Check this website for listings and showtimes.

Tickets are available online, or at the SVA Theater box office, 23rd Street at Eighth Avenue in the heart of Chelsea.


Malcolm Ingram’s BEAR NATION

Watch the trailer.

Consider the common bear, with his large, heavy build, awkward gait and huge appetite. Hunted since prehistoric times for his meat and fur… precisely as he is today by many in the LGBT community.

Malcolm Ingram is fascinated by this.

The Toronto born-and-bred indie film director knows intuitively what it means to be a bear, that emerging subset of meatier, furrier gay men. Not only is he one; his latest film, BEAR NATION, examines the phenomenon in up-close and personal detail for a wider audience. We talked to Malcolm to learn more about these strong, cuddly creatures ahead of his movie’s Thursday debut at NewFest.

Fans of your earlier film Small Town Gay Bar will immediately see that this documentary is much lighter in tone…

It’s lighter, but it’s also a whole lot different. I went in like I was afraid it would turn out to be a lot more negative. Talking to folks within the community, well, people were so thankful that I was even there that, I don’t know, that Bear Nation turned out to be a love letter, a celebration, of what it means to be a bear.

That’s exactly one of the issues your movie examines. Would you be willing to pin yourself down and define ‘bear’ for us right now?

No! One of the biggest problems within the gay community in general is that everybody is so f–king quick to subcategorize us. The whole L-G-B-T-A-B-C thing is just so wrong. I like the word ‘queer.’ Hey, I’m totally queer, and I love that word. I don’t feel the need to narrow things down and say ‘I’m a bear with top tendencies, blah blah blah.’ In the end, I’m queer, and I like sucking d–k. I’m a dude who sucks c–k. I’m in that category… ultimately, there is a political element to our sexuality, but whatever.

Malcolm Ingram, left, with Bear Nation executive producer Kevin Smith.

So you consider yourself a bear.

Oh f–k yeah. If you saw me… I’m like 6’3″, 300 pounds (laughs) so I definitely am one. The bear community helped me come out of the closet; I didn’t come out until I was in my thirties. My introduction to gay culture was something I didn’t understand or fit into. Like, I would walk into a normal gay bar, and I didn’t fit into that whole world at all. I mean, it was like people were looking at a bus pass that nobody was waiting for. So the place I found my sexual identity, was at a bear bar (The Faultline in Los Angeles) where I suddenly realized, yeah, I have a sexual currency. It was kind of like when in The Wizard of Oz when everything went from black and white to color.

While making your movie, what other bear scenes did you find to be as welcoming?

The thing is, what’s so great about the bear community is that it’s welcoming everywhere you go. Period. The thing about it is, it’s global. Though there are bear clubs as far away as Japan, there’s a certain uniformity to the whole experience wherever you go. If you wanna go somewhere in the gay community where you know you’re going to be accepted just go the bear bar. Because at a bear bar, you’re going to find all kinds of different people where, essentially, if you don’t fit in, hey, that’s a great place to begin.

A guy you interviewed in Bear Nation says “being a bear is a state of mind.”

Yes. There are a lot of people who want to subcategorize everything, who feel the need to label everything. And I’m totally cool with it, but for me the bear community is the place for misfits, the people who don’t fit into any other rigid categories. It’s just a good place to hang your hat: It’s nonjudgmental, and the net is cast pretty wide. Ultimately, if you hang out in the bear community, you’re gonna eventually find someone who you want to f–k or someone who wants to f–k you!

GRRR! So what’s the best place for a bear lover to get his paws full of honey?

We shot at the XXL (Club) in London, and it’s one of the most amazing places I’ve ever seen. The club has at least five different staging areas, and they fill it every Wednesday and Saturday. They run a major bear event twice a week, and they fill the place up… and get this, they’ve been doing it there for ten years. And if you go there, you’ll see the hottest, most interesting, eclectic group of guys. That’s because London gay nightlife is strongly influenced by, if not completely centered around, bear events.

You sure don’t talk like a guy who didn’t come out of the closet until his 30s.

It’s not so much that I didn’t come out, it’s that I didn’t have any group to come out to. It would have been like coming out in a vacuum; I just didn’t feel any connection. You know, I was having gay sex kind of under the radar, sure, but I didn’t really even figure out I was gay until the bear community gave me my identity. I mean, I looked at the gay community, and I felt like I was some kind of impostor until I found my niche — bears.

I say this because that’s the story I heard told over and over again while making Bear Nation. When doing my interviews for it and for Small Town Gay Bar, they were of people who were all sort of finding out where they belonged.

People trying to find a place to connect.

Absolutely. Plus, the bear scene is very much a celebration of masculinity. The difference between the leather scene, which also emphasizes a pointed display of manhood, is that it feels like those guys are wearing their masculinity kind of like drag, do you know what I mean? It just doesn’t feel as natural as the bear scene. It’s manufactured… their hyper-awareness of masculinity. Bears celebrate maleness in a much more organic way. You know, we in society put so much pressure and so much attention on physical appearance. Ultimately, the only thing that f–king matters is what’s in your head. Period. Being a human being is not just about what you look like. It’s everything else, man, that makes you who you are.

Evans Forlidas

Malcolm Ingram, the director of “Small Town Gay Bar,” delivers an insightful yet comical exploration of bear identity, body image, and community, featuring bears of all ages and types. From Kevin Smith appearing on the cover of “A Bear’s Life” to behind the scenes of a Chicago circuit party called Bear Run, this documentary is for not only for members but also the aspiring and the bear-curious.

Click the pic to download your very own desktop grizzly bear!


Finalists Announced in NewDraft Competition

NewFest’s Screenplay Competition & Reading Series is pleased to introduce the five finalists in our 2010 NewDraft competition, selected by a panel of film industry professionals. This year’s winner will be announced Saturday, June 12, at our 8PM awards ceremony. The finalists are:

Saturday’s Child by Shari Carpenter. A blaxploitation character defines the life of the actress who played her and the young girl who grows up admiring her.

The Mystic Chord by Rob Williams. After losing his memories following a nervous breakdown, Michael Van Allen must figure out who he is and what happened to him in the past.

Product Placement by Jennifer Hagel. A woman who specializes in product placement product-places herself into her love interest’s life.

Union by Whitney Hamilton. Grace Kieler takes on her dead brother’s identity to fight and survive the Civil War. Along the way, she finds true love with a caring widow.

Vampire Strippers Must Die! by Keith Hartman. A group of male strippers (half gay, half straight) on tour in Eastern Europe battle the undead.

The contest is dedicated to discovering and fostering LGBT feature screenwriters and/or LGBT feature screenplays.


TONIGHT at Harlem Stage: ‘Billy & Aaron’

You may already know filmmaker and screenwriter Rodney Evans as a favorite of NewFest, having won our 2008 NewDraft script competition for his full-length feature Day Dream, now in development. It’s a sure bet you’ll remember Rodney, too, if you were present for the staged reading of a scene from Day Dream that year… and for the standing ovation it received from the thrilled NewFest crowd.

Rodney Evans

Two years later, an even wider audience will have a chance to experience Evans’ work with his short film Billy and Aaron, developed in conjunction with Day Dream. It’s a fly-on-the-wall portrayal of jazz legend Billy Strayhorn (played by real life singer-musician Brandon Delagraentiss) and his lover Aaron Bridgers (Ignaro Petronillia) imagined during the time of a crossroads in their romance. Shot in an art deco theater and cafe – one that bears an uncanny resemblance to famous Harlem jazz venue Lenox Lounge – Evans created the piece while attending the prestigious director’s coaching program at Amsterdam’s Binger Filmlab. New York-based musician and composer Aaron Beall worked behind the scenes for Evans to recreate the instrumental version of ‘Lush Life,’ a 1938 Strayhorn standard used in the short.

I spoke briefly with Rodney to learn more about the openly gay Strayhorn, and about the musician’s collaboration with bandleader and composer Duke Ellington.

What brought you to Billy and Aaron’s story in the first place?

I came to know Billy Strayhorn through his music. I had heard ‘Lush Life’ around ten or 15 years ago, and it was one of those songs that really moved me, and that I thought was beautiful. I also read David Hajdu’s biography about him (Lush Life: A Biography of Billy Strayhorn, 1996) and I found I could relate to a lot of his experiences. I thought it was a shame that so few people knew anything about him, and so that led me into further research into him, getting deeper into his music, studying his life, eventually deciding to write an original screenplay about him.

His connection to the Harlem Renaissance of the Jazz Age and to the gay demimonde of the time is a critical element to his story.

Here’s the way it was. Billy was a younger musician who was in awe of, and went out of his way to meet, the great and legendary Duke Ellington. It’s The Duke who gave him his first big break, hiring him as an arranger and an accompanist with the band, and that allowed Billy a lot of freedom as a gay man he wouldn’t have had otherwise. Because his finances were, well, taken care of, he was allowed to live this openly gay lifestyle, and not have to worry about the financial repercussions of coming out. I think in exchange, he wasn’t given credit at the time for a lot of songs he wrote for Duke. It was probably part of a tacit agreement he made with the big man himself: that, in order to live this open lifestyle on one hand, he would more or less live in the shadows while the Duke took all the bows.

Your film re-imagines a conversation Billy had with Aaron, when he decides he will not accompany his then-lover on a move to Paris. Are you saying this decision was largely driven by career and financial concerns?

I don’t think we’ll ever really know, as both men have both passed on. (My movie is a) fictional portrayal of their relationship, but it is based in facts. I did the hard research into his life to try and figure out what went into that and into other tough decisions he made, or was forced to make, in his career. You know, whether to step up and fight for the kind of credit he deserved as an artist, or, to live an openly gay lifestyle, write music he didn’t really get credit for, and more or less live in the shadows of the great Duke Ellington. He chose the latter, and had difficult life because of it.

It had so many repercussions: He was an alcoholic for decades, which shows how he was in many ways haunted by his life’s decisions. It’s difficult that in that kind of climate – of being a black musician in the 40s or 50s – there weren’t a lot of financial resources for artists; he knew he was fortunate just to have the steady paying gig that he did.

In a way, your film is a comment on what we now call the ‘down low,’ and the consequences of publicly coming out.

Yes, but this work is about my trying to delve into Billy’s experience, and trying to imagine it as fully as possible, and to do justice to it, first and foremost. That being said, I think the reason Billy’s story resonated with me, simply, are the ways that I can relate to his experience, and some of the similarities to things I’ve seen in my life, as a contemporary black gay artist. I think the connection between today’s black gay lifestyle and Billy Strayhorn’s experiences are very real. That made me want to delve deeper into what was going on in his life, and to depict it in Billy and Aaron.

Evans Forlidas

From our film guide: Openly gay composer Bily Strayhorn deals with his life. Plays in Boys Will Be Boys shorts program. USA, 2009, 10 min. Q&A with filmmaker; reception to follow. Plays with Children of God, tonight at Harlem Stage, 7:30pm.


Sunday Night is WOMEN’S NIGHT With Cheryl Dunye’s “The Owls”

by Sekiya Dorsett

Cheryl Dunye’s The Owls is a fusion of documentary and narrative but more importantly a celebration of freedom in filmmaking. Since Dunye’s Watermelon Woman arrived on the scene in 1996, there has been praise for Dunye’s brave methods. She is a filmmaker who breaks the rules and defies all the odds to create unique experiences for the audience. This freshness visits us again in this new work.

The Owls celebrates experimental filmmaking. Dunye fuses strong character and story into nuggets of suspenseful moments. The Owls takes us into the lives of four aging lesbians with a secret that binds them. MJ (V.S. Brodie) and Iris (Guinevere Turner) are a washed-up producer and musician couple trapped in an alcoholic stupor which pulls them together and a soberness that forces them to face their truth. They disdain each other. Carol (Cheryl Dunye) and Lily(Lisa Gornick) are a bi-racial couple fighting for a dying relationship while trying to have a baby.

Above: Lily and Carol battle to save their relationship.

Linking the couples is the former fame, fortune and success of Lily and Iris who are former band mates and lovers. Today, the one thing that binds them all is a murder. A few years ago, during a wild party, MJ accidently kills Cricket a young lesbian who attacks her. In fear, the women hide Cricket’s body under MJ’s pool but the guilt continues to float to the surface and into their lives.

Above: MJ and Lily struggle.

As the four search for themselves, truth and peace of mind, Skye, a drifter, comes to shake up their world driving a wedge between Carol and Lily. She knows their secret and has come back for revenge. The weaving stories mixed with intensity of a mature drama makes The Owls a must see.

Guinevere Turner (Iris) is a blast from the past. You may remember her from her role in Rose Troche’s iconic lesbian film, Go Fish. This time, she plays a tormented narcissistic soul with ease. Skyler Cooper (Skye) brings intensity as the revengeful lover. Skyler is most noted for her appearance as herself in Debra A Wilson’s documentary Butch Mystique and in last year’s NewFest hit, Amber Sharp’s “Don’t Go”, the television pilot. Her muscles make a few appearances. V.S. Brodie (M.J.) plays the worn confused woman with sully awkwardness. As she pleasures herself while watching internet porn, we feel sorry for her. She is lonely. Cheryl Dunye( Carol ) is a nerdy aloof woman who is more concerned about her garden than the obvious interest of her awkward partner, “the awkward Brit”, Lisa Gornick (Lily).

Weaved throughout the narrative arc is two mini internal documentaries. During these moments, documentary/narrative clash.  Like a reality show, the actors appear after key moments within the movie to share their feelings and provide a little commentary. Skye at one point jokes, “This is what I have been fighting for [in Iraq]. A chance for these women to live in the desert.” The five women provide insightful commentary as they discuss their experiences as community of aging lesbians, their feelings of “butch” and “femme” and more.

While the actors talk in the voice of their character, there are moments where they talk about themselves playing the characters and the way that the women joined together to create The Parliament Collective. With so much to absorb, this film is a true discussion piece about a sector of the lesbian community that is forgotten as we celebrate the glossed lesbians of the commercial “lesbian” media. This is definitely going to be one of the most talked about film of this year’s festival.  It is the truth that has been missing and will be another Dunye classic.


‘Open’: An Exploration into Trans Identity

Our NewFest 2010 behind-the-scenes, meet-the-filmmaker series continues with Jake Yuzna, director of Open... interweaving love stories featuring real individuals using modern medicine to explore new frontiers of love, sex and the human form. Yuzna will be on hand to answer questions from the audience when the film makes its NewFest debut Sunday afternoon at 5:30pm.

The 28-year-old Minneapolis native spoke to us from Brooklyn, where he currently makes his home.

Many people already feel like they know you through the work of your uncle, (well-known and respected horror film director) Brian Yuzna. I suppose he was a strong influence on your work.

It’s a situation where I grew up being around film all of the time. I never lived in the same city as Brian, but he was very close with my grandmother and would always send these clippings and articles back home to her, along with stories about who he met, what or where he was shooting. He was living and working all over the world, and the stuff he was doing was this kind of gory, horror stuff… perfect for me;  I grew up being kind of a morbid kid, hearing these scary stories from him. So I don’t really know if it’s the exposure, or if it was in the blood, and that I’m just the next generation in the family to get the gene to be obsessed with films.

A lot of my influence as a filmmaker came more from the movies I saw growing up, not just from Brian. But wherever I go, someone will recognize my last name and ask if I’m related. About six months ago I was at Metropolitan Bar in Brooklyn and the person who was taking IDs was like, ‘Hey, are you related to Brian?!’ ‘Yes, I am… I haven’t heard that one in a while.’ (Laughs)

Horror fans are totally passionate about film. They have this encyclopedic knowledge about the business; it’s amazing. It’s almost like a religion.

It’s great that there are so many people who are ferociously, passionately into that kind of filmmaking. I’m the same way. I grew up reading Fangoria and other magazines like that, and was totally ecstatic when the Sci Fi channel first started up. It wasn’t until I got older that I realized how, well, scrappy, too, were the people making these movies. They would make one film, and then use the money they made from that to support the other, they were that dedicated. It’s a little bit different now, because there’s this huge audience for independent filmmaking, an even bigger diehard audience that supports it and allows it to exist.

Open was influenced largely by the story of Genesis Breyer P-Orridge. Those of us who were into the industrial music scene years ago know Genesis’ work with Throbbing Gristle, Psychic TV, and Chris + Cosey. Bring me up to speed on Genesis’ body modification experiments since then that have served as a launching point for your film.

I’m always having to explain her. A lot of people know Genesis, and she’s getting even more recognition now, because her body of work (so to speak) has covered so many decades. She’s really broken a lot of ground. She’s kind of like Velvet Underground – not many people bought their records, but everyone who did wanted to start a band, you know what I mean?

Okay. In the late 80s or early 90s, Genesis P-Orridge met Lady Jaye Breyer and they became a couple, and they fell in love. Genesis had done a couple of projects about body modification, but together, they developed this venture called Pandrogyny. (In it, each underwent surgery designed to create two versions of the same pandrogenous being, called ‘Genesis Breyer P-Orridge.-Eds)  They used that to express what they saw as the next step in human evolution, taking it into our own hands. Cracking the DNA, plastic surgery –  all that science is allowing us to become a new kind of human, and we should embrace that. But they actually did it. They were saying that, looking at each other as male or female, or as you and me, or being a member of this or that religion, whatever, causes a lot of the strife and hatred… and that we need to start looking at our species as a whole.

So it was a literal way of saying we’re all the same, let’s rise above these petty societal differences.

Yes. What they realized is they were so in love that they no longer saw each other as Genesis and Lady Jaye, but as two parts of one entity. They felt that the next step was to actually have their bodies reflect their identity. They were really influenced by Thoreau’s cut up technique for writing – and they liked the idea of ‘cutting up’ their identities to make a third complete, distinct identity. Unfortunately, Lady Jaye passed away a year or so ago, so Genesis has been devastated, dealing with the aftermath.

Not to give away too much of your film, but your story begins when one member of a similar couple is forced to deal with the separation from a partner for the first time.

Actually, we had shot the film already when that happened; similarities to the script are just a coincidence. Originally, the idea was to have a biological character of their born gender, someone transitioning from M to F,  one from F to M, and an intersex person in the same story. As I was exploring all of this, I began thinking about Genesis’ project, which I was familiar with, and I thought it might be more interesting to have that represented as one of these characters.

It may seem extreme or strange that these characters undergo plastic surgery to look like one another, but when you think about it, the idea behind it isn’t. We’re all looking for a reflection of ourselves in our partners.

There were concerns about this when I was making it, and even from the actors. There are so few honest representations of trans people; we’re reflecting the communities we’ve been a part of here, and we want to make sure they’re not sensationalized.

That implies that you encouraged your performers to bring their own ideas into the filmmaking process.

It’s a dialogue. Yes, some of the folks you’ll see in the movie worked with me to develop the script together. Morty Diamond was great, because he was able to look at the script and say, “You know, this doesn’t make sense because of all the trans men I know do this or that, and that’s how a relationship works. Neither person is weirded out by the mechanics of the situation – it’s just kind of like a ‘thing.’” So yeah, there were instances in making the film where we tweaked the script, but on the other hand, there were just as many situations where I took a stand and said, ‘No, let’s keep this or that, because it works really well.’

The character of Cynthia, played by Gaea Gaddy, for instance, was originally conceived to be a trans woman’s role. But once we started shooting and I spent more time with her, she told me, ‘No, I’m not a trans woman, I’m a hermaphrodite’ – which opens a whole other bag of stuff. So I was like, sure, let’s talk about this. We shifted the character to reflect her story more.

Is there anything in particular you want audiences to think about when they sit down and watch your movie?

What I would say is to be open to new possibilities. The characters and story are not the average everyday thing you experience, the kind of thing that’s usually represented in films. Just go in with an open mind. It’s a little different, but hopefully a good experience. It’s kind of like the first time somebody kisses you and uses tongue. It’s a little weird, but it’s very enjoyable all at the same time (laughs)

Evans Forlidas

From our film guide: Jake Yuzna’s Open, the only American film to ever receive the Teddy Jury Prize, is a mesmerizing love story that pushes the boundaries of gender, identity, and human connections. Gen and Jay are a happy couple living in Minneapolis with a sweet, albeit peculiar mission: through gender-reassignment therapy for Gen (Jay is a biological woman, but Gen was born a man) and intense plastic surgery, the lovers will look identical to each other and form a single pandrogynous being. Things get complicated when Jay leaves town and Gen befriends Cynthia, an intersexed vagabond. When Cynthia expresses her feelings for Gen, the strength of Gen’s relationship is tested. Meanwhile, gay college student Nick has a one-night stand with transman Syd that goes awry and puts Nick in a situation he never thought he’d have to face. Features an original soundtrack by electroclash band ADULT. Sunday, June 6, 5:30pm.


AIDS Educator-Activist Headlines Saturday at NewFest

NewFest is proud to present Sex in an Epidemic, a pioneering documentary by Jean Carlomusto “exploring the personal, political and structural challenges… of HIV educators.”

A longtime feminist and community activist, Carlomusto was at the front lines of efforts to curb the spread of AIDS at the onset of the terrifying new disease; as a career videographer and documentarian, she was in the unique position to interview many of the early important figures in the fight against HIV. It is her own footage, along with archival interviews from the New York LGBT Center, the Lesbian Herstory Archives and other organizations, that lay the foundation for her story.

NewFest spoke to the filmmaker-historian a day ahead of her film’s Saturday screening.

I can honestly say this is a movie that should be seen by as wide an audience as possible.

I agree. The reason I made it is because I wanted to start a larger dialogue once again, because it seems like AIDS and HIV prevention have completely slipped off the map. You know, that wouldn’t be a bad thing if the numbers weren’t rising. In this country we’re getting more than 60,000 new cases a year, and that’s simply unsustainable. I should think by now that the numbers would be less than half of that, but they’re not.

Well, to begin with you call the movie Sex in an Epidemic. A lot of people don’t even view this as an epidemic any more.

That’s completely true. They think the epidemic is in Africa.

Do you think that this complacency stems from the comfort level created by the development of life-prolonging drugs, protease inhibitors and others, over the last 15 years?

It’s partially that. It’s partially that the politics have really moved on. Right now I see how much of the energy is focused on issues of same sex marriage and transgender issues. While I think they’re both very important issues, I don’t think we can afford to be cavalier about HIV. It’s amazing to me. I really don’t think we would even be talking about same sex marriage and transgender issues at all if it weren’t for the real political mobilization that came after HIV. We just wouldn’t be here; the system wouldn’t be in place.

I have always been particularly moved, watching movies like yours, to see how lesbians have been at the forefront in the fight against HIV from day one. It’s ironic, because lesbians are the group least likely, because of the way HIV is transmitted, to acquire the disease. So here’s a tough question. Do you think if the shoe were on the other foot, and it was the women who were getting sick, that the gay men would have come out fighting for you the way you did for us?

It’s a real loaded question, one that I don’t have the answer to. I think they would have…  because the disease occurred first in the gay male population, we saw the fight against AIDS, initially, as part of a larger fight against homophobia in general. We felt like, this is homophobia, and because we’re homosexuals too, we have to do something about it. As I got more involved I saw how things permeated, that is, how a lot of other social ills were exposed (by the AIDS crisis) but I have to say it was homophobia that provided the initial spark to get so many lesbians involved.

Of course, I don’t know if I can speak for all lesbians on that. I think a lot of women got into the movement out of concerns about the health care system. At least that was my take on it at the time. But certainly in New York, people were so scared, so afraid of anything gay. Gay people had become pariahs, so homophobia was a huge concern.

Did you happen to know many people, before you became an activist, who were diagnosed with AIDS?

As I got more involved with HIV, I started to meet more and more people living with it. In the early days, yes, I knew a few people, but I was also aware that the numbers were rising. I started volunteering at Gay Men’s Health Crisis around ’86, and of course I started to meet a lot more guys who were sick; that’s when people were dying a lot quicker. I had about two or three different supervisors at GMHC… Joey Leonte, for example, who’s interviewed in the film, is the guy who hired me. He’s no longer with us. The way things went there quickly because repetitive: people would start to get sick, then a short while later they’d be cleaning out their desks, then a short while after that you’d be sitting at their memorial service. It was horrible.

More about those early days. You provide some fascinating interview footage with AIDS activist Larry Kramer and other gay men whose approach to battling the disease was to get the word out to as many people as possible, and to scare everybody about AIDS. Others, including a doctor you interviewed, said it was better to err on the side of caution, and avoid panic. As an activist on the front line of the fight from the beginning, where did you fall on that discussion at the time?

Simple. Early on, GMHC was following the CDC’s recommendations, which was to limit the number of your sexual partners, to not do poppers, not to go to the bathhouses. That was the early information we were giving out. It was a very, very hard situation to be in at the time. In fact, it’s one of the reasons I wanted to make the film. I feel for Larry Mass — the doctor everybody was coming to (for questions about AIDS) at a time when nobody really knew what the truth was. As a physician, he didn’t have a theory that told him, hey, this is a one shot deal — a disease you could get from just one sexual encounter – and that you just shouldn’t have sex at all without a rubber. (Noted AIDS researcher and physician) Joe Sonnabend came up with a lot of that early information, but he had a model that was ultimately false. It was based on bactorialism, but still, were ideas that allowed him to come up with some very useful safer sex guidelines, many of which were still usable even after the HIV virus was discovered.

We all look back with pride, now, at a lot of the anti-AIDS activism, and the protest actions conducted by ACT UP, Queer Nation, and other groups back in the day. But there was a real controversy surrounding that kind of aggressive approach to demanding funding for HIV at the time, that I don’t think younger people really understand. There were big differences within the gay community as well as to how the fight against AIDS should be approached.

In New York, most of the controversy centered around the St. Patrick’s church action (On December 10, 1989, approximately 5,000 members of ACT UP and WHAM protested outside of the cathedral, while 43 people disrupted mass, in a demonstration against Cardinal John Joseph O’Connor’s public stand against AIDS education and condom distribution in public high schools, and abortion.-Eds.) The media clamped on to it in a way that never really went away. Initially they had been kind of supportive, or at least were getting there, but things started to turn when they started to document the outrage that a Catholic mass had been interrupted.

Television stations all over the country ran that story, and the reaction to it, for days after the incident.

Yes, and it certainly raised questions about what kind of approach we should be taking within the group as well, even within ACT UP and other political groups. People were wondering if we went too far. I’ll never forget Ray Novarro, an activist at the time, who said something important: that we shouldn’t let the media redefine this event. That action happened at a time when the church was taking a very political stand that was destructive and was killing people; the gentleman who knocked the host out of the cardinal’s hands was a Catholic who had grown up in the system, and that is where he took it (his activism.)

Taken in context, it makes a lot more sense as an act of protest, whether you agree with what the guy did or not.

That got a lot of play. But one thing that I liked about that action, which didn’t get a lot of play at the time, was the fact that it was co-sponsored by WHAM, the Women’s Health Action Mobilization. They were really great about talking about women’s issues. On a larger scale, I thought their presence there was a great example of some of the types of bridge-building going on.

You make an interesting point in Sex in an Epidemic: that, for many men affected during the early days of AIDS, sleeping around meant much more than just having a good time. It was almost a political act, for those who grew up during the repressive 1950s.

That’s a big part of what the film’s about. As a documentarian who interviewed all of these guys… after HIV was discovered, and people could all agree what the basic outline for promoting safer sex should be, groups like GMHC spent an awful lot of time bringing in some very creative folks figuring out how to drive the safer sex message across. So, you had somebody like Raymond Jacobs – he was this fabulous theater queen who had been in the original cast of Hair, and used to talk about dancing naked on stage – who pioneered how to talk about prevention. So he produced this film called Chance of a Lifetime (1985). The tactic was not to scare people so much, but to simply talk about sex, in a non-judgemental way. Because once you start talking about sex, you realize there are a lot of different ways to have it. That’s the part of the discussion that I really got into, as a lesbian. What I appreciated so much was the fact that this stigmatized population was going back to what created their identity – their sexuality. They were saying, hey, let’s talk about it, let’s figure out fun ways to make it safer.

I’m not romanticizing it. We would even sit around in groups and a facilitator would say, ‘Okay, let’s name every sex act we can think of that doesn’t involve sucking or fucking.’ All of these fascinating things would come up, like shrimping; I would think to myself, oh my god, what is shrinmping? (Laughs) Yes, it’s sucking on toes and it’s safe. (Laughs) But I consider such discussions to be very enlightening. There are all these different sexual modalities that were shared during these discussions, which became a very important part of safe sex education. And you know, these things were just as important for women, which I realized right off the bat, having come from a feminist background. But these early sessions were just as important for gay men, because, at the time, the nightlife and bath house culture didn’t allow for discussions of these different shades of sexuality.

Is there anything in particular you want audiences to think about while viewing Sex in an Epidemic?

I’m really interested in promoting a historical bridge from the past, in a way that shows our history is on a continuum, and that the kind of work you see in my film is still being done today. (That kind of work) needs to be amplified, and we need to go back, constantly, and think about the tragic about of loss we suffered, and out of that loss, what was gained. We gained a lot of momentum for gay rights from that period of time, and that alone should make us at least knowledgeable about the state of HIV prevention.

Evans Forlidas

From our film guide: An engaging and illuminating documentary about the history and evolution of safe sex in the face of a deadly epidemic. Mostly New York based subjects including Act Up activists tell the extraordinary story about how out of a time of panic and chaos came the invention of safe sex, and the subsequent difficulty in publicizing it as a concept because of political opposition. Q&A with Filmmaker. Saturday June 5, 3PM.


SATURDAY: Film School at NewFest

We call them our Filmmaker Workshops… innovative seminars led by working professionals with the real skills to pay the bills.

This year, with the help of our friends and co-sponsors at IFP, our expanded program features seminars on June 5th and Saturday, June 12th. Our seasoned panelists are here to share their knowledge about everything the aspiring performer or filmmaker wants to know about financing, stretching budgets, distribution, outreach, music rights and casting. The pros from Tek Serve, New York’s Apple Specialists, will be also be here with a special demo of the latest HD technologies making the scene. It’s like a mini film school… but without the huge tuition: There’s only a $10 suggested donation to attend each class.

Here’s a quick preview of our seminars offered tomorrow:

Working Actor’s Survival Kit: Building Your Career as an LGBT Performer (1PM, 90 min.)

Sure you’ve got the talent, you’ve got the experience, you’ve got the drive… but do you really have the know-how to make it on the ultra-competitive New York acting scene? Saturday at NewFest, discover the critical tools LGBT actors need to promote and sustain a career in film, stage, or TV. We’ve assembled a crack panel of professionals to provide the working actor practical tips on resumes, head shots, reels, and how to find the right agent. You’ll hear how to make a killer demo reel; time-saving suggestions for uploading pictures and videos to the web; and insider tips on finding useful social networking platforms you may never have even known existed. Professionals who’ve stood in your shoes (AND walked a mile or two in them) will also address: ways to stay true to oneself as an LGBT performer; how to remain versatile while being proactive;  and ways to find and create a specific niche for oneself in the vast entertainment business. Meet our panel:

TRACI GODFREY is the Chair of the Screen Actors Guild LGBT Committee in New York, as well as a National Director of the Screen Actors Guild Board of Directors.  She is an actress and voice over artist who has performed extensively on the New York and London stage.  Television credits include guest appearances on Sopranos, Law And Order, All My Children, and One Life To Live and recurring roles as Dr. Elaine Schiller on As The World Turns and Detective Farley on Law And Order Criminal Intent.  Traci lives with her partner and children in East Hampton and Montclair, NJ.

KIM MOAREFI
has a varied career in casting and production for films, television and theater. Select feature and TV casting credits include: HBO movies Grey Gardens, starring Jessica Lange and Drew Barrymore; Doris and Bernard, starring Susan Sarandon and Ralph Fiennes; and Polio Water, starring Misha Barton and Cherry Jones.  Select theater casting credits include: Macbeth and Julius Caesar for Shakespeare on the Sound and The Exonerated, starring Richard Dreyfuss, Mia Farrow, Jeff Goldblum, and Aidan Quinn, which played Off Broadway. She was also a casting director for the NBC daytime series Passions. She is a member of the Casting Society of America.

GARY RIOTTO (left) splits his time between Los Angeles and New York City. His acting work includes roles in features such as The Heartbreak Kid with Ben Stiller, recurring work on ER, hosting segments on America’s Next Top Model and Off Broadway Theatre.  Most recently, he shot an ABC pilot, How To Be A Better American, an episode of Parenthood and is currently in a workshop production of The Minotaur for the Fire Dept. theatre company in NYC.

Since 2005, panel moderator ADAM MOORE (right) has served as Associate National Director of Affirmative Action & Diversity for Screen Actors Guild and leads the department’s New York office to develop and implement a national diversity plan of action to achieve accurate representation of those groups historically excluded from the entertainment media.  He is currently liaison to the New York City Task Force on Diversity in Film, Television and Commercial Production, curriculum advisor to the New York City Department of Education and is proud to have served on President Obama’s Disability Policy Committee during the 2008 Presidential Election.  Adam has spent the past nine years in New York City and currently lives with his wife and dog in Brooklyn.

CARYN WEST (left), actress/acting coach/director, is the only teacher selected on both coasts as one of “The Best Audition Coaches” by Back Stage West and East 2009 polls.  She actually auditions just like her clients and works hard to keep up in a fast changing industry. Her credits include: three Broadway shows, leads in top regional theaters and roles in film and television.  She will be teaching her film and television “Audition Intensive” at Michael Howard Studios in July, 2010.

PLUS: Two other important seminars not to miss:

A Guide to LGBT Film Distribution & Festival Strategy (11AM, 60 min.)

How should LGBT filmmakers consider getting their films out to audiences?  Do LGBT filmmakers need to make different choices than their straight counterparts?  What role do festivals play? Our experts reveal the best strategies to address these and other issues. Learn from the best in the business, including film distributor Kathy Wolfe (at right) and Steven Raphael of Required Viewing. You’ll also meet NewFest favorite Kimberly Reed (below left,) director and producer of the award-winning documentary Prodigal Sons.

Personal Finance for Filmmakers (3PM, 60 min.)

Making a living as a filmmaker takes financial planning along with everything else you need to learn about your craft.  Certified Financial Planner and CPA, Marc Rosen of Bell and Company will review topics such as: When to set up a “Loan Out” company, the pros and cons of different entity structures (eg LLC vs. corporation,) how to “envision yourself as the President/Owner/Member of an entity, deductible expenses, tricks of the trade, and much more.

Tickets are still available. Just click on the Film Guide link above for details.
Walk-ins are welcome.

FRIDAY Movies to Entertain, Enlighten, Inspire

NewFest 2010 roars into full swing Friday with three foreign-language narratives.

We begin our program at 7PM with I Killed My Mother (J’ai Tue Ma Mere.) Former Canadian child actor Xavier Dolan writes, directs and stars in his story of a young man’s turbulent, compelling, and enraging relationship with his single mother, based in large part on true incidents from his own upbringing. I Killed My Mother is the openly gay heartthrob’s second feature length film, with a level of accomplishment and virtuosity in filmmaking already being compared to that of a young Pedro Almodovar… all the more impressive given Dolan’s young age: He just turned 21 this Spring. In French with English subtitles.

Next on tap is Leo’s Room (El Cuarte de Leo,) co-sponsored by the Global Film Initiative and the NY International Latino Film Festival. A runaway hit with audiences in several Spanish-speaking countries, it’s the story of wide-eyed gamin Leo as he comes to terms with his sexuality, true love, and the treachery of those who try to stand in his way. Our film guide calls director Enrique’s Buchichio’s work a “dreamy, nuanced character study with emotional layers.” In Spanish with English subtitles, Leo’s Room is preceded by a special screening of the 16-minute short film The Strongest, by Brazilian filmmaker Ricky Mastro. The event begins at 10PM.

Friday also marks the NewFest debut of From Beginning to End (Do Começo ao Fim,) easily our most controversial film of the season. Director Alusio Abranches challenges and titillates the viewer with his story of two model-gorgeous brothers whose close relationship evolves into a sexual one. Presented in a nonjudgmental fashion, From Beginning to End ultimately encourages the viewers to judge for themselves the ethical and moral implications of the two men’s (some say ilicit) love affair. From Brazil; in Portugese with English subtitles. The screening begins at 9PM.

Tickets are still available for all shows. Click the Buy Tickets link at the top of this page to purchase yours.


TODAY at NewFest: The Documentaries

NewFest 2010 begins today (Friday) with the award-winning documentary programming you’ve come to expect from New York’s cutting edge LGBT film festival with Switch: A Community in Transition. Activist, filmmaker and trans man Brooks Nelson not only helms this exploration of gender transition, but steps in front of the camera to document the impact of his own gender transition on those around him. With equal doses of subtlety, humanity and humor, Nelson’s first-person account helps us understand not only what it means – but also what it feels – to experience the transition of a loved one.

Switch is presented on a double-bill with Nobody Passes Perfectly, a mid-length documentary from director Saskia Bisp. In Danish with English subtitles, it’s another open-minded and emotionally profound film about gender. You’ll meet Tomka, in his early thirties and living with his girlfriend while transitioning, and the middle-aged Erik, who is finally experiencing life on his own terms. The double-feature begins at 3:30PM.

It’s a cruel reality that members of the generation who made so many important strides for LGBT rights are increasingly being forced back into the closet in their twilight years, shunned by the very relatives and health care workers they rely upon for support. Stu Maddux takes us behind the scenes in retirement homes and health care centers across the country in Gen Silent – his up-close and personal study of a group of diverse seniors who are anything but silent. Co-Sponsored by SAGE, the national social service and advocacy organization dedicated to LGBT senior citizens, the documentary focuses the spotlight on the brave elders who dare to take a stand and fight back against the current system. (6PM)

Following at 8PM is Beautiful Darling, the freshman documentary from “off-off Broadway” theater director James Rasin. The poignant, well-researched new bio-pic tells the story of transsexual performer Candy Darling, her all-consuming quest for fame and celebrity, and her ultimate estrangement from Andy Warhol, the man who introduced her to the world. You’ll come for the story, but you’ll stay for the original interviews with such luminaries as John Waters, Holly Woodlawn, Jayne County, Penny Arcade, Gerard Malanga, Taylor Mead… and for the live question and answer session with the director immediately following the screening. Co-Sponsored by IFP.

NewFest rounds out the complement of Friday documentary programming with a presentation of Markku Heikinnen’s All Boys. In stark contrast to the slick, sun-drenched Eastern European-produced gay pornography associated with the famous Bel Ami Studios is the edgier work of controversial Dan Komar, in the Czech Republic. All Boys is a raw, no-holds-barred journey into Komar’s world, the young models with whom he lives, and the impact of his ‘bareback’ sex films on the Prague-based gay porn industry. The sexy, provocative, and disturbing film was produced in Finland, but is presented in English. Midnight.

Tickets are still available for all shows, and can be purchased by clicking the Buy Tickets link at the top of this page.