Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Trailers and clips from films and TV shows references in Sadie Bening's work:

Music video for Blondie's "Rapture"

Music video for Blondie's "Heart of Glass"

Beverly Hills 90210 theme (starring Luke Perry)

Erik Estrada on CHIPS

Trailer for Psycho (1960)

A clip from Way Down East (1920)

Trailers and clips for films and TV shows that are featured in TARNATION:

Here's a fairly complete list of references in the film: 
Pop culture references in Tarnation

"When We Grow Up": A number sung by Roberta Flack and Michael Jackson on the TV special Free To Be You and Me (1974)


"Little Bitty Pissant Country Place": Sung by Dolly Parton in The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas (1982)

Theme from the TV series Zoom (197?)

Trailer for Rosemary's Baby (1968)

Trailer for Andy Warhol's Flesh (1968)

Trailer for Let's Scare Jessica to Death (1971)

Trailer for Andy Warhol's Heat (1972)

Trailer for The Devil's Rain (1975)

Trailer for The Exorcist II: The Heretic (1978)

Trailer for The Wiz (1978)

"Ease on Down the Road" from The Wiz, sung by Diana Ross and Michael Jackson

Trailer for Phantasm (1979)

Trailer for Friday the 13th Part II (1981)

Trailer for Christiane F. (1981)

Trailer for Liquid Sky (1982) 

Fan trailer for Come Back to the Five and Dime, Jimmy Dean, Jimmy Dean (1982)





Trailer for Blue Velvet (1986)


Elizabeth Taylor White Diamonds commercial
Hi everybody,

Taking Kyle's good suggestion, let's use this blog to arrange for rides to THE ROCKY HORROR PICTURE SHOW on Saturday night.  We need to arrive at the theater at 11:40. 

Please post:
 1) If you need a ride, or if you can give a ride.
 2) Where you're leaving from. 
 3) How many people you have room for, if you can give a ride. 

You can also post your e-mail addresses, if you feel comfortable doing that.  If you'd like to contact each other, you can also always use the UCLA directory.  I'll make sure that everybody is accounted for on Thursday.

Ben

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Two great videos about ACT UP

Hi everyone,

I hope you'll watch these videos which were posted to commemorate the 25th anniversary of the founding of ACT UP (one an independent documentary, one a clip from The Rachel Maddow Show).  ACT UP is an AIDS activist organization that has had major socio-political impact.  Vito Russo was a founder and proud member at the end of his life.  These videos will give you some extra background in preparation for Monday's screening of ZERO PATIENCE, a film that was highly influenced by ACT UP's political strategies.  They each include inspirational footage of ACT UP demonstrations.

http://www.bilerico.com/2012/04/rachel_maddow_commemorates_25th_anniversary_of_act.php

The songs from Andy Warhol's CAMP

It occurred to me that it might be useful for anybody who was interested in CAMP to have full versions of the songs that the film references (including the repetitious "piano music" with lyrics). 

Here are links:

In Crowd (the piano song), performed by The Mamas and the Papas

Let Me Entertain You, from the 2008 Broadway production of Gypsy


Let Me Entertain You, striptease version, performed in the (second) film version of Gypsy (1993)

You'll Never Get Away From Me, from the Original London Cast recording of Gypsy (1973)

Also, here is a montage of Confidential Magazine covers.  Confidential is the magazine that Jack Smith is ostentatiously reading at the end of the film.  It was one of the first nasty celebrity gossip magazines, and its covers and stories were notoriously lurid.  Kenneth Anger was influenced by Confidential in the writing of Hollywood Babylon, and no doubt stole stories from it.


Confidential Magazine montage

Examples of some things that Richard Describes as "camp":


Busby Berkeley musicals:
The Lady with the Tutti Frutti Hat, a number from the film The Gang's All Here (1943), starring Carmen Miranda.  Legendary camp!

Nelson Eddy and Jeanette MacDonald:
Sweetheart, a number from the film Maytime (1937)

Marlene Dietrich:
Hot Voodoo, a number from the film Blonde Venus (1932)
Scenes from The Devil is a Woman (1935)

Little Richard:
Whole Lotta Shakin' Going On performed on the TV show Shindig! (1964)
Good Golly Miss Molly music video

Sylvester:
Music video for You Make Me Feel Mighty Real (late 1970s)

John Wayne:
A campy appropriation of John Wayne from an installation exhibit

Some more examples of things that have been described as "camp":

What Ever Happened to Baby Jane? (1962) trailer

Valley of the Dolls (1967) trailer: An outrageously campy trailer for an outrageously campy movie.

The protagonists in the 1970 film The Boys in the Band "camp about".

Mommie Dearest (1981) trailer

Divine sings You Think You're A Man in the late 1970s/early 1980s

The Village People sing Milkshake in their crazily campy film Can't Stop the Music (1980)

Trailer for Showgirls (1995), Paul Verhoeven's notoriously unsuccessful adaptation of All About Eve was re-claimed as a camp classic by some

Feel free to add your own favorite examples of "camp" in the comments section!

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Some links to supplement today's class...



If you want to learn more about Kenneth Anger's harassment of Gloria Swanson, you must read this article.

I also recommend this excellent documentary on Jack Smith, which has remarkable audio and visual archival materials on Jack Smith, his films, and his performances.  It also does a great job covering the reception of Flaming Creatures.

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

A transgender YENTL?


I just read this article in the most recent issue of The Advocate, titled "Not Your Bubbe's Yentl: A story made famous by Barbra Streisand gets a queer 21st-century retelling."  Jill Sobule, the queer singer-songwriter of the 1995 hit "I Kissed a Girl," has written an updated stage musical of Yentl.  The article states: "Sobule's Yentl story is about a transgender boy's coming-of-age rather than a straight girl's secret." 

Interestingly, at the end of "Yentl the Yeshiva Boy," the Isaac Bashevis Singer short story on which Yentl is based, Yentl moves to America at the end to continue living as a man.  Food for thought...


Full article

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Monday, April 9, 2012

If you liked CRUISING, you'll love...


This is really something. The trailer for Boy Toys (2007), a scene for scene remake of Cruising starring Ken dolls (in the tradition of Todd Haynes' Superstar: The Karen Carpenter Story). The whole thing is available on YouTube. We'll be watching clips from it during our "New Media" unit.
Boy Toys trailer

THE KILLING OF SISTER GEORGE and THE BOYS IN THE BAND AVAILABLE ON YOUTUBE!

The Killing of Sister George (1968, Robert Aldrich) and The Boys in the Band (1970, William Friedkin) are now available, in their entirety, on YouTube! Vito Russo discusses these films in the excerpt from The Celluloid Closet that you're reading this week. Don't miss the opportunity to see these films. Love them or hate them, they are essential LGBTQ cinema.

The Boys in the Band, one of the first (if not the first) LGBTQ films to be protested by activists, was directed by William Friedkin, who also directed Cruising (1980). Click on the links to watch the films. I'd be showing them in our course, if only there was more time!

The Killing of Sister George (1968, Robert Aldrich)

The Boys in the Band (1970, William Friedkin)

Thursday, April 5, 2012

Gawker.com discusses "the gay classics."

Wow, LGBTQ film history (or, at least, gay male film history...), is everywhere today! And there's a lot of concern about whether past LGBTQ pop culture is still relevant. Here's this article from Gawker about The Boys in the Band, a fascinating film from 1970 that we, unfortunately, won't get to watch in its entirety. But you can write about it in your final paper!

http://gawker.com/5899549/lets-discuss-the-gay-classics

So what do you think? Are Judy Garland, old LGBTQ movies, and a lot of the stuff that we've been talking about in class still relevant? Why or why not?

Do gay men still need Judy Garland?


An interesting New York Times article about whether or not Judy Garland, Vito's favorite diva, remains culturally important for gay men:

The Road Gets Rougher for Judyism's Faithful

(Of course, not surprisingly, the article fails to mention that Judy has also historically been highly relevant to some lesbian audiences. See the chapter: "'My Beautiful Wickedness': The Wizard of Oz as Lesbian Fantasy" in Flaming Classics: Queering the Film Canon by Alexander Doty).

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Propaganda films for women from the 1940s and 1950s

During World War II, many women went to work to fill the roles left empty by men who went to war (as Elizabeth Lapovsky Kennedy and Madeline D. Davis point out in their great book Boots of Leather, Slippers of Gold: The History of a Lesbian Community, the increase in working women contributed to thriving lesbian communities during this time period, as women found themselves and each other). Vito Russo points out that one of the reasons that Hollywood movies in the 1950s made independent women characters in films "scary, evil lesbians" was to encourage women to return to to their "correct sphere" in the home (think about Donna Reed and Betty Draper). Click on Rosie the Riveter for a propaganda video encouraging women to go to work in the 1940s:

Click on the Pepsi ad for a Pepsi commercial from 1957 illustrating a "modern woman's" proper place in the mainstream imagination:

Anti-homosexual propaganda films from the 1950s

BOYS BEWARE (1953)

HOMOSEXUALS: THE TERRIBLE TRUTH (date unknown)

GLEN OR GLENDA (1953, Ed Wood)


Watch GLEN OR GLENDA in its entirety online! Click on the poster.

Tuesday, April 3, 2012

Coming soon to LGBTS-187: QUEENS AT HEART and Mark Quigley


This Thursday, Mark Quigley, Manager of The UCLA Film & Television Archive's Research and Study Center, will be coming to class to speak with us about the many LGBT media-related resources available to scholars at UCLA.

In particular, he'll talk about the archive's enormous Outfest Collection, which includes every film that Outfest (L.A.'s long-running LGBTQ film festival) has shown, among other materials. He'll also be showing QUEENS AT HEART, an extremely rare short documentary about drag culture in New York from 1965 (it will serve as an interesting representation of the period in which Vito moved to New York, and is also a useful precursor to Cruising and Paris is Burning, which both deal with LGBTQ subcultures in New York). It was recently restored by The UCLA Film & Television Archive's Outfest Legacy Project, a fantastic project dedicated to preserving LGBTQ films.

Mark sent over this poster of SHE MAN, which played on a double bill with QUEENS OF HEART. Unfortunately, we don't have SHE MAN in the archive. But if you want it, believe it or not, you can buy it here.


Trailer for QUEENS AT HEART

"A Position of Faith" (1972)

Vito Russo saw this documentary, A Position of Faith (1972), and fell in love with its star: the first openly gay person in history to be ordained to the Christian ministry. He added clips from the film to his Celluloid Closet lecture, and the two became lovers for a time.

"A Position of Faith," Part I
"A Position of Faith," Part II

Rhoda dates Phyllis' gay brother on THE MARY TYLER MOORE SHOW


Vito interviewed Valerie Harper for The Advocate partly because he was so delighted with her performance in this episode of The Mary Tyler Moore Show, "My Brother's Keeper." Michael Schiavi writes that "This was exactly the kind of nonchalant visibility he was fighting to obtain for gays and lesbians." (P. 147)

To see "the longest laugh in the history of The Mary Tyler Moore Show," fast forward to Part II, 9:30 (the whole episode is classic!)

The Mary Tyler Moore Show: "My Brother's Keeper," Part I
The Mary Tyler Moore Show: "My Brother's Keeper," Part II
The Mary Tyler Moore Show theme song

Performances by some of Vito's favorite New York cabaret singers of the early 1970s (click on the pics):

Laura Kenyon

Alaina Reed
Baby Jane Dexter
Here is a link to a pretty comprehensive list of films that appeared in The Celluloid Closet, along with links to their pages on IMDB (in case you forgot to write any down...)

Films that appear in The Celluloid Closet

Trailers for films that Vito showed as part of his early lecture series:

Vito screened clips of these films in his early "Celluloid Closet" presentation to illustrate "The Gay Guilt Syndrome" and "Blackmail" subtopics of his lecture (Michael Schiavi, Celluloid Activist, p. 134). Click on the posters below to watch the trailers:


Vito tried to "offer some hope at the close of his presentation" with "Breakthrough" clips of these films:

"The Homosexuals": A CBS documentary from 1967



Vito Russo discussed this documentary, which originally appeared on CBS in 1967, in his first "Celluloid Closet" lectures:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFSCPTZLxGs



Summary taken from YouTube user TheLoverofMovies:
"The Homosexuals" is a 1967 episode of the documentary television series CBS Reports. The hour-long broadcast featured a discussion of a number of topics related to homosexuality and homosexuals. Mike Wallace anchored the episode, which aired on March 7, 1967. Although this was the first network documentary dealing with the topic of homosexuality, it was not the first televised in the United States. That was The Rejected, produced and aired in 1961 on KQED, a public television station out of San Francisco.[1]

Three years in the making, "The Homosexuals" went through two producers and multiple revisions. The episode included interviews with several gay men, psychiatrists, legal experts and cultural critics, interspersed with footage of a gay bar and a police sex sting. "The Homosexuals" garnered mixed critical response. The network received praise from some quarters and criticism from others for even airing the program.

Read about it here: http://www.filmthreat.com/features/1122/

Monday, March 26, 2012




A review of Vito (2011, Jeffrey Schwarz), an upcoming documentary about Vito Russo.

http://www.shadowsonthewall.co.uk/12/3d.htm#vito

Link to Vito's facebook page!

http://www.facebook.com/VitoRussoMovie

Trailers for two of Vito Russo's favorite schlock masterpieces:

Vito Russo championed these "schlock masterpieces" as a writer for After Hours magazine. He wrote of Wicked Wicked that it is "what we used to call a camp and a half...[it contains] lines like 'How does it feel to have your throat cut, Miss Jones?' 'It hurts.' You'll love it." (Schiavi, Michael. Celluloid Activist: The Life and Times of Vito Russo. Wisconsin: The University of Wisconsion Press, 2011). Click on the images below to see the trailers.


A great recent article on queer cinema from The New York Times. It mentions the UCLA Film & Television Archive and features an interview with Shannon Kelley, who will be a guest speaker in our class.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/03/18/movies/queer-art-film-series-at-ifc-center.html

Bette Midler at The Continental Baths


Videos of Bette Midler performing at The Continental Baths, filmed by Vito Russo in 1971.

Complete concert


Individual numbers:
Fat Stuff
For Free
Easier Said Than Done
Marahuana
I Shall Be Released

Trailers for/clips from programs that Vito Russo screened as part of his "Firehouse Flicks" series with the Gay Activists Alliance

Click on one of the images below to see a clip or trailer from the film or program:











Zap! Video footage: Gay Activists Alliance Marriage Takeover, 1971



Vito Russo participated in this "Zap!" with The Gay Activists Alliance. Links to original video footage from 1971 are below.

The Gay Activist Alliance decided to occupy NYC's Marriage License Bureau, June 4,1971, after the City Clerk threatened to arrest the minister of a local gay church for performing "Services of Holy Union" which the City Clerk said were the equivalent of gay marriage. Gay marriage was not yet one of the LGBT movement's goal in 1971 but the activists felt they couldn't stand by while a city official threatened the Church of the Beloved Disciple with legal action. They decided to take over the NYC Marriage License Bureau and throw an engagement party for two gay couples.

Part 1

Part 2

Part 3