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Post by greenleaf on Jul 10, 2008 11:24:17 GMT -4
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Post by Edith S. Baker on Jul 10, 2008 11:45:26 GMT -4
Can you cut and paste it here? I can't access any blogspot site.
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Post by greenleaf on Jul 10, 2008 12:03:06 GMT -4
Wednesday, July 9, 2008 Reverend's Report from Outfest: Ready? OK! My early fave movie being shown at the 26th Los Angeles Gay & Lesbian Film Festival, a.k.a. Outfest, is the perfectly delightful Ready? OK! This LGBT must-see, written and directed by James Vasquez, premieres at Outfest this Friday.
Its plot centers on young Josh, a fifth-grader who desperately wants to join the all-girl cheer squad at his Catholic school. Carrie Preston (who also co-produced the film) plays Josh’s loving but often flummoxed mother, Andy, and Michael Emerson plays their gay neighbor, Charlie. He is so unconditionally supportive of Josh that, when the students are required to dress as their favorite religious figure for Halloween, Charlie makes the boy’s dream costume: Maria Von Trapp!
It amazes me that Emerson and Preston aren’t yet household names, especially in gay circles. Emerson made his mark off-Broadway in 1997-1998, giving an extraordinary performance as Oscar Wilde in the acclaimed Gross Indecency: The Three Trials of Oscar Wilde (which I was privileged to see). Preston, Emerson’s real-life wife, was (around the same time) stealing the show every night in the play Straight-Jacket, as a naïve secretary tricked into marrying a closeted gay actor in 1950’s Hollywood. Preston and Emerson co-starred in the enjoyable 2004 film adaptation of Straight-Jacket, in which the two give more assured and memorable performances than the lead actors did.
Both have made guest appearances over the years in such popular TV series as Law & Order, Desperate Housewives, Sex and the City, The X-Files and Arrested Development, and Emerson won a 2001 Emmy for his role on The Practice. Preston has had supporting parts in LGBT favorites Transamerica (playing Bree’s/Felicity Huffman’s sister), My Best Friend’s Wedding and the campy remake of The Stepford Wives. They remain the kind of actors whose faces we readily recognize, yet we don’t recall their names.
I believe that’s about to change. Over the last two seasons, Emerson has caused a stir on the hit TV show Lost as Ben Linus, leader of the mysterious Others and chief keeper of the island’s many secrets. And Preston has several high-profile movies awaiting release: Woody Allen’s Vicky Cristina Barcelona; Duplicity, by Michael Clayton writer-director Tony Gilroy; and the film version of the Broadway smash Doubt, acting alongside Meryl Streep and Phillip Seymour Hoffman.
I had the pleasure of speaking with Preston and Emerson about their work on Ready? OK! But first, let me get a couple of things out of the way for my fellow Lost fans: yes, it was cool and a little creepy to hear the voice of Ben coming through my telephone and, no, he doesn’t know where Ben moved the island to at the climax of the recent season finale.
CC: What drew you both to Ready? OK!? Preston: James (Vasquez) and I were at Julliard together. When he first started talking about a germ of an idea he had about a little boy who wants to be a cheerleader, I really wanted to develop a character who showed the mother’s/parent’s coming-out process. Emerson: I’m friends with James and I like his aesthetic, his artistic mission of showing social outsiders but not in a glamorized or sexualized way.
CC: The “gay neighbor” character in movies and on TV has become something of a cliché. Did you have concerns about playing such a role in this film? Emerson: I liked Charlie’s drollery and humanity. The gay neighbor is a type that’s out there, but I thought Charlie’s peacefulness and quiet centeredness set him apart.
CC: There’s a lovely scene in the film between the two of you, where Charlie is fitting a dress on Andy. Does being married to each other add something different to acting together? Preston: Yes. James, Michael and I talked a lot about that scene and how it should be the scene where Andy breaks apart. It was made easier and meant much more to play it looking into the eyes of my partner of thirteen years. Emerson: It did make the scene easier to play and added to my character’s serenity. We know and trust each other. Interestingly, the role of Charlie was bigger and more detailed in earlier drafts of the script, but much of it was deemed excessive and unnecessary as we developed it. It seemed appropriate for the character to become simpler.
CC: The young actor who plays Josh, 10-year old Lurie Poston, is great in Ready? OK! What was it like for each of you to act with him? Preston: We got really lucky with him. We saw 30-40 boys in Los Angeles and Lurie was really the only choice. He’s really natural and was so easy to work with. Emerson: You always approach working with children with a little trepidation. A lot of the time, a great performance by a child can be attributed to a great director. But Lurie was so natural and so easy to work with.
CC: You’ve both done a number of LGBT-oriented projects. Is this an area or audience of particular interest to you? What draws you to such films and plays? Preston: For me, I feel that these are the stories that are still finding their way to the screen and to a general audience. With our production company, Daisy 3, we are trying to make movies you can show to parents and others who aren’t LGBT themselves. Emerson: It just happens to have worked out that way with the roles I find interesting and my artistic circle. And it might be that my “skill set” inclines me toward roles where I kind of float along or play characters who skirt gender norms and expectations. I also love to play comedy, and parts where I have a few comedic zingers as in such films as Straight-Jacket and Ready? OK!
CC: Does either or both of you have a particular message you’d like to send to the LGBT community? Preston: Try not to label anybody, whether in terms of sexual orientation, politics, et cetera. In this film, Josh simply is, and it falls to his mother to accept him for who he is. Emerson: I’d just like everybody to try to break formulas and formulaic thinking. There’s too much of that out there.
CC: What are your plans for Ready? OK! beyond Outfest? Preston: We are in talks with distributors regarding a potential theatrical release, but we don’t have delusions of grandeur because it is a small film. At the very least, it will get a DVD release.
So, dear readers, get ready for Ready? OK! (watch the trailer here), in theaters and/or on DVD soon.
Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of the Orange County and Long Beach Blade. Posted by Kirby - 7/09/2008 09:00:00 PM Labels: Best of the Fests, Lost, Men on Film, Queer Cinema, Reverend's Reviews, Videodrone
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Post by bobdoc on Jul 10, 2008 12:21:41 GMT -4
Emerson: I’d just like everybody to try to break formulas and formulaic thinking. There’s too much of that out there. That's our Michael to a T, isn't it? The article also contained this Michael/Carrie picture from the movie.
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Post by foldslinus on Jul 10, 2008 12:31:38 GMT -4
Great find!
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Post by hellsb81 on Jul 11, 2008 9:54:59 GMT -4
thanks for posting!
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Post by greenleaf on Jul 11, 2008 12:47:09 GMT -4
At the very least, it will get a DVD release.
I wait DVD to have own opinion about movie and acting ME and Carrie
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Post by snivellusfriend on Jul 26, 2008 19:36:47 GMT -4
A very good interview; I didn't know James Vasquez came up with the idea in school. They're having trouble finding a distributor? Have they mentioned this article to them? If that's not proof that the movie needs to be distributed... www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,357205,00.html I live near that town and have witnessed that young and older people believe in the gay stereotypes, that girls with short hair and male figure skaters are gay. I was shocked and insulted that the ice skating rink printed out leaflets for a promotion, at least twice, specifically stating that girls who signed up for lessons would be given free figure skates and boys would be given hockey skates, as though girls wouldn't want to learn hockey and boys wouldn't want to figure skate! The manager was from New York, too! I agree with Carrie, that people shouldn't label other people; I've felt hurt and angry about being labeled, especially by adults, as gay, a guy, and as a teenager, which I'm not, but I now see that all of this is a plus for acting. I'd like people to know that their assumptions about people could be wrong. I hope that Joshua, in the film, turns out not to be gay, like his mother seems to think he is.
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