Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Matt Damon plays 'dress up' with James Corden



queerguru doesn't usually like to boast (!) but we had one up on fellow Brit James Corden last night when he confessed that hadn't seen Ridley Scott's latest Hollywood blockbuster 'The Martian' as it has not been released yet.  We have though as we caught a press preview .... and surprised ourselves by how much we loved it .... our full review will be published tomorrow.  However James Corden went one better than that of course and he got to play 'dress up' with the movie's star Matt Damon.  The two acted out Matt's entire movie career in under 8 minutes.  It was hilariously funny and totally spot on.  Except for bit about The Martian, but then James was at a disadvantage and could only guess.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Gorgeous Ghraichy

                                                                                                 COURTESY OF KEITH SHERMAN & ASSOCIATES INC.

This very hot 29 year old Parisian who takes his music very seriously is about to achieve what he calls 'every boy's dream.' We're not sure if technically he is right, but we do know at the very least, that there are a lot of gays boys we know who would agree with him and would love to find themselves performing at Carnegie Hall.

Simon Ghraichy an award winning concert pianist is about to make his NY debut there on October 15th with a program entitled 'Liszt and the Americas'. Although a resident of Paris (he calls it the 'city of love') this openly gay young man is actually half Lebanese and half Mexican which not only accounts for his handsome looks, but it also influences his music too.  As well as playing the likes of Liszt and Schumann he loves to play work from little-known Latin American composers, which he will include in his Carnegie recital.

queerguru thinks we are going to hear a lot more from this young talented musician and Carnegie Hall is just the beginning because  Ghraichy will be back in New York next spring to play the Kennedy Center, and he’ll also tour through Mexico.






The Queen of Ireland is on her way



Like half the world we've been in love with Panti Bliss since we first watched THE speech about homophobia on Ist February 2014 in Dublin's Abbey Theater that blew our socks off and immediately went viral. When Stephen Fry later presented her with a People of The Year Award he succinctly said 'I thought it was one of the most moving and eloquent calls against oppression of any kind. It was like any great speech, it was suppressed rage but utterly controlled.'

Panti aka Rory O'Neill, is Ireland's most famous and fabulous Drag Queen and gay activist  and was at the forefront of the successful movement that legalised same-sex marriage in the country earlier this year. Amongst all her other activities she is also hosting the  World's First Ever LGBT Matchmaking and Music Festival in Lisdoonvarna later this month.  Now Irish filmmaker Conor Horgan has just finished his documentary on Panti with the apt title 'Queen of Ireland' which traces how a small gay boy from the tiny town of Ballinrobe in County Mayo became this strapping fearless man in a dress who so perfectly articulates what we as an LGBT community want to hear, and would try and say if we all possessed Panti's passion.  The movie gives us a glimpse too of the man behind the woman : 'When I breath life into Panti, she breaths more life into me.'

Universal Pictures have just released this trailer, and the movie will open in Irish cinemas on October 21st, although no date has been set for its international release.  Watch this space as we will so be tracking this one daily.


Top Ten German Gay Movies



Since it produced one of the world’s first ever explicitly gay films called ‘Different From The Others’ back in 1919, Germany has been at the forefront of making really good LGBT movies. They are usually very sensual with a penchant for really hot looking men but all with highly original and compelling plots like 'Free Fall' featured above.  (Incidentally, that one was so successful that Free Fall 2 is already in the works.  Here then is queerguru's pick for our Top Ten German Gay Movies.    



Monday, September 28, 2015

Gay Cult Classic BIG EDEN is re-released


When the movie Big Eden was released 15 years it instantly became a gay cult classic.  Thomas Bezucha's debut feature film is an decidedly heart-warming old fashioned romance and real feel-good crowd pleaser which picked up nine awards from leading Film Festivals around the country.   The San Francisco Chronicle explained its appeal so succinctly 'Seeing middle-aged, regular fellas get so worked up over each other is a treat'.

Bezuka's story is about Henry a highly successful artist in New York who suddenly has to up and return to his small hometown nestled in the mountains of Montana to look after his sick grandfather who had brought him up.  Back in his roots he starts to re-evaluate his life and although he still has issues with his sexuality (he has still yet to tell his Grandfather) the whole neighborhood have no hesitation in not only accepting him for who he is, but they go out of their way to encourage Henry's potential romance with the hunk native Indian who is silently wooing him.

With such a delightful script in his hand Bezucha managed to cast a bevy of really talented actors starting with Oscar Winner Louise Fletcher, Arye Gross (Adam Green in 'Ellen'), Eric Schweig ('The Last Of The Mohican'), Tim DeKay ('Party of Five'), George Coe ('Kramer vs Kramer') and Nan Martin (Mrs Louder in The Drew Carey Show) which was no mean achievement for a newbie director.  It paid off dividends and made it one of the most successful LGBT movies released that year.

It certainly is one that sits in everyone's memories so the people at Wolfe Video had this bright of bringing out a special 15th Anniversary Edition, complete with a lot of DVD extras.  It will be available October 15th, but meanwhile take a sneak preview of what got us all hot under the collar all those years ago.


We thought this re-release would be the perfect time to catch up and talk to Thomas Bezucha for Provincetown TV to ask him how he came to dream up this fairy tale, or see if in fact he had been Henry himself in real life.


Saturday, September 26, 2015

Miss Marilyn Maye takes me for a ride


One of the joys of my other day job working with Provincetown Community Television is that I get to talk to some amazing people who have chosen to spend part of their summer on this very perfect wee Town right on the tip of Cape Cod.   Many of them claim to be 'stars' (it is a gay resort after all) but very few are real ones like the wonderful Jazz legend Marilyn Maye, who is every inch one of the brightest stars in the firmament.  One should normally never ever discuss a lady's age, but Marilyn is proud of the fact that she is now 87 years old and is performing nightly at the Provincetown Art House for a good 90 minutes without a break and with the stamina of a singer half her age.  Or maybe even younger.

She not only still sings like an angel, but she really is one too as I very quickly discovered sitting in the back of 'Miss Maye' a convertible Rolls Royce driving around town. She has an infectious energy for enjoying life to the very fullest and revels in the fact that she is back in P Town for her 5th year running where she seems to love everybody and everything.  

Miss Maye is very old-school in the respect that she is not only glamorous as hell (with help from her friend Bob Mackie) but she is so disarmingly charming that she has all eating out of her hands. Take a look as we chat about how she started singing on her own Radio Show in the midwest when she was just 9 years old and went on to enjoy a career that includes being a guest on Johnny Carson's TV Show for a record 76 times.



Lily-Rose the next star in the Depp Family

                                             Lily-Rose Depp for Chanel

It has just been announced that Lily-Rose Melody Depp, the 16 year old daughter of actress Vanessa Paradis and a certain actor whose name she carries, is about to break into movies herself. After stunning the Fashion World with her modeling debut at the Chanel Runway Show this summer, and surprising the LGBTQ community with her statement in regards to her sexuality or gender identity, stating she falls 'somewhere on the LGBTQ spectrum', it's obvious we are going to hear a lot more about this stunningly beautiful young woman.

She has just landed herself a part in Stéphanie Di Giusto's upcoming film 'The Dancer' which chronicles the life of American performer Loie Fuller, played by French singer Soko. Lily-Rose will play Isadora Duncan, the 19th century American who revolutionised modern dance but is equally known for her tragic death aged 50 when she got caught up in one of her voluminous chiffon scarves when motoring in the South of France.


Hollywood Must Do Better



In a new report out the LGBT advocacy group GLAAD claims that most major Hollywood studio films either totally avoid our community or they ensure that LGBT figures are simply the butts of jokes or putdowns.  In 2014, for example, only 17 of more than 100 studio releases included lesbian, gay or bisexual characters, and most of those roles amounted to little more than cameos. Movies like 'Get Hard,' 'Ted 2' or 'The Wolf of Wall Street' blatantly use homophobic terms or use gay characters as easy sport for really bad and offensive jokes.

GLAAD have now released an online video campaign called 'Hollywood Must Do Better' to highlight the unfair treatment of LGBT characters in major Hollywood films using a collection of clips from some of the worst offenders. A disclaimer at the beginning of the video reads "People around the world love going to the movies, but for LGBT people, entertainment often comes at their expense."

GLAAD President Sarah Kate Ellis warned that the film industry was in danger of being left behind – by failing to mirror the progress made by ground-breaking TV shows such as 'Transparent' and 'Orange is the New Black'.  She added “As television and streaming services continue to produce a remarkable breadth of diverse LGBT representations, we still struggle to find depictions anywhere near as authentic or meaningful in mainstream Hollywood film.”



Alan Cumming : the new Queen of the Meat Market



Showtime TV have just taken over a passion project that out-gay Scottish/American actor Alan Cumming had been developing with director Rosemary Rodriquez ('The Good Wife') of a 30 minute dark comedy series based on the story of one of N.Y.'s most flamboyant restaurateurs Florent Morellet. 

Morellet opened the restaurant that bore his name in the early 1980's in the Meatpacking District when it was still a scary neighborhood populated by hookers and hustlers and before it was discovered by both the gay community and N.Y's fashion and art glitterati.  It was THE place to go and be seen and be part of the craziness that Morellet encouraged until he became a victim of the success that he was crucial part of that had turned the Meatpacking District into the most desirable, and over-hyped,  area of the city. When his landlord drastically increased the rent, Florent's doors were finally closed for good after his 23 year reign.  

As well as being an outrageous host Florent Morellet was also an ardent gay activist, particularly when it came to AIDS which earned him countless wards and honors, including being the Grand Marshall of NY's Gay Parade in 2006.   He seems like a role that the Cumming, a Tony Winner and an Emmy nominated actor, was born to play.


In 2011 filmmaker David Sigal captured both the heady and the last days of the restaurant in his captivating documentary Florent : Queen of the Meat Market which is now on DVD/VOD on several platforms.


Friday, September 25, 2015

Happy Birthday Pedro



Its the 66th Birthday of one of our very favorite gay filmmakers. From 'What Have I Done To Deserve this?' to 'Women on the Verge of a Nervous Breakdown', 'Bad Education' and 'All About My Mother' etc. we have unreservedly loved ALL his movies.  Here's a clip of your last one that sums up how we feel about you and your work Pedro Almodovar.   Happy Birthday.


Thursday, September 24, 2015

Viva Ireland.... and other Oscar Hopefuls


When it comes to Countries selecting their Official Submissions to the Academy of Motion Pictures in the hope of being Nominated (an winning) a Best Foreign Picture Oscar we should never ever be surprised at what goes down.  Of the 32 entries so far (last year there was a total of 83) four of the movies submitted have gay themes, the most astonishing of these is the one submitted by Irish Film & Television Academy.  Called 'Viva' it's a Spanish language movie set in Cuba and is the tale of Jesus who does the make up for a troupe of drag performers in Havana, but dreams of being a performer. When he finally gets his chance to be on stage, a stranger emerges from the crowd and punches him in the face. The stranger is his father Angel, a former boxer, who has been absent from his life for 15 years. As father and son clash over their opposing expectations of each other, Viva becomes a love story as the men struggle to understand one another and become a family again.

It qualifies for submission as both director Paddy Breathnach and screenwriter Mark O’Halloran are Irish and as IFTA CEO Aine Moriarty said when announcing the decision 'it reflects the diverse creativity and vision of this Irish team in bringing such a tender Cuban story to the screen that is both intriguing and visually captivating.'

'Viva' wowed audiences when it premiered recently at the Telluride Film Festival where it was announced that Benicio Del Toro had come on board as the movie's Executive Producer and it stands a very good chance of ending up with the Oscar next year.

So too do the other LBGT movies already submitted. 


Greece's pick is Xenia a delightful quirky 'road-movie' filmmaker Panos H. Koutras which picked up nominations for The Queer Palm and Un Certain Regard where it premiered at the Cannes Film Festival in May.  Check out our full review from Queertiques.




Thailand's choice is How To Win At Checkers (Every Time) a refreshing coming-of-age drama debut movie from American/Korean filmmaker Josh Kim about two orphaned brothers who have to deal with the reality of social inequality which he does without sinking into melodrama or dragging out any of the usual cliched stereotypes. The compassionate fraternal relationship is particular touching and makes this heartbreaking story such a sheer joy to watch.  Check out the full review from Queertiques. 




The Dominican Republic has opted for 'Sand Dollars' from co-writers/directors Israel Cárdenas and Laura Amelia Guzmán. The movie stars veteran actress Geraldine Chaplin as an older European woman becomes enchanted with a young Dominican woman who must struggle to make ends meet. Love brings a flow of entanglements in a drama which unfolds badly.

Two Hot Harrys



The more we see of Daniel Radcliffe the less we see of Harry Potter.  The young British actor has really grown up as we can see in this first image he has shared from the set of his new movie Imperium that he has just started filming in which he plays an undercover FBI agent who infiltrates a group of neo-Nazis believed to be building a dirty bomb on the real life experiences of ex-FBI agent Michael German.

He is not the only 'hot Harry' making news today as the BBC have just released this picture of Prince Harry, fifth in line to the Throne of the UK, who was a guest star with Prince William on 'DIY SOS' a TV show that’s devoted to fixing the homes of British families in need.  He puts a whole new meaning into the term 'lumbersexual'.



Wednesday, September 23, 2015

It's All About Love



Who could resist any invitation from Panti Bliss, Ireland's most beloved Drag Queen and indefatigable gay activist (if you have never seen her impassioned and brilliant speech on homophobia : then shame on you).  Now she's hosting the World's First Ever LGBT Matchmaking and Music Festival in Lisdoonvarna, a tiny spa town in County Clare, from October 2nd - 4th 2015 and she's inviting anyone looking for the love of their life to come to The Outing. 

They have been matchmaking in the town for over 150 years, so I guess they are good at it,  but now they are turning their attention to the LGBT community.  Who knows if you find your person of the dreams where it could lead too possibly marriage even now that Ireland recognises same-sex ones. There's music, dancing, and always plenty of drink and you are encouraged to bring your best dresses (boys too) as there will be speed dating, blind dates and tea dances. As Panti says, even if you don't exactly meet Mr Right you can be assured of some good old Irish craic!




Stonewall : a queerguru pick



Out gay director Roland Emmerich was on the receiving end of some very nasty vitriolic abuse by people condemning his new movie outright purely on the first sight of a trailer.  A petition was even drawn up urging people to boycott the movie even though no-one had still actually seen it yet to judge it fairly.  The complaint levied against Emmerich was that he was attempting to re-write a crucial watershed in gay history when the birth of the gay liberation movement was really born.   The trouble with the argument is that actual detail of those nights 46 years ago when the Stonewall riots took place are very spotty to say the least  given that most of the participants were unknown, and a good number died in the ‘80s during the AIDS crisis, but still so many people are claiming that their take on events is the only correct one.  Yet for example, according to historian David Carter in his book 'Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked The Gay Revolution', Emmerich got the mix of the crowd spot on.

queerguru has seen the movie already and our sister site queertiques carries our full review.  We know that we are one of a handful of critics who actually liked the movie as although Emmerich's fictional narrative is by no means a documentary on the events leading up to that fateful night in 1969 it is a strongly political based drama that will resonate with younger audiences in particular as it gives a real sense of what went down and help paved the way towards social acceptance and equality.

Emmerich's movie is essentially a coming-out-story which many of us can so easily relate too, he just happened to use the Stonewall riots as the background, which is something we all need to be reminded about.

Tuesday, September 22, 2015

Marlo is now Myrna



Up until about seven years ago actress Marlo Bernier was known as Mark. Marlo is transgender, and having completed her transition from male to female, she has stories to tell about her journey. And that's what she intends to do in a new TV dramedy series called Myrna that she has created and co-written.

Bernier is the creator and co-writer of a new dramedy series in development, Myrna. The story, mirroring Bernier’s real life, follows the journey of an actor, who after a successful career on stage and screen, is willing to sacrifice everything when he finally confronts his true gender identity and transitions from male to female.

The series follows Myrna who has sacrificed everything when she finally confronts her true gender and transitions and then struggles to find work as an actress, wrestles with a manager who still wants to send her out as her formerly-famous self, Michael, and deals with the drama of her friends’ reactions as they make an effort to come to terms with Myrna and her life-altering transition.

The series pilot has its Red Carpet World Premiere at the Hollywood Film Festival on Wednesday 23rd September 2015 at Arclight Cinemas on Sunset Blvd in Los Angeles.  Email PR@M4PR.com to try and blag an invite and mingle with the stars too.


SQIFF : Scotland's new Queer Film Festival


The first edition of the ambitious groundbreaking new Scottish Queer International Film Festival kicks off on September 24th in Glasgow and queerguru welcomes Scotland's first ever inclusive celebration of queer cinema.

For four days in different venues around our favorite Scottish city SQIFF is programming a mix of international feature films with  a dedicated strand of Scottish shorts too. It's mixed with some classic LGBT movies that been given rare big screen outings, and a host of workshops and open discussions from trans acting to the relevance of queer cinema in the 21st Century.

Here then are queerguru top picks of unmissable events at SQIFF.

Scrum: a new documentary film about last year’s huge Bingham Cup (named after Mark Bingham the gay hero of 9/11 tragedy) gay and inclusive rugby tournament involving teams from around the world competing in Sydney is premiering next month.  Director Poppy Stockwell follows the journey of the tournament’s winning team and the personal stories of three gay men whose lives are changed under the tutelage of a determined coach as they vie for the honor of playing for the Sydney Convicts team at the gay rugby World Cup. With the trickle of Rugby players 'coming out' increasing slowly each week, the movie hits a very topical issue and goes towards helping us understanding the inbred homophobia that all sportsmen must deal with.  The director and some of the players will be in attendance which is an added plus.




Peace of Mind: A fascinating documentary of the life of American artist Flo McGarrell, who lived in Haiti before his death in an earthquake which hit the country in 2010. Locals discuss Flo’s reception as a trans man and his impact on the community art and queer movements which were developing through the FOSAJ Art Centre in Jacmel where he worked. It is a very compelling tale of bravery and courage that shouldn't be missed.



SQIFF Shorts : Queer Scotland . With a  spectrum of styles and stories, from melodrama to animated collage, body hair to wrestling, and high camp to sobering allegory, this exciting program of short films represents a breadth of filmmaking and LGBTI and queer contexts in Scotland.  Here's one of our personal favorites : it's called Middle Man.




What Have I Done To Deserve This?  : no queer cinephile should ever pass up on a chance to see a classic Pedro Almodovar movie on the big screen.  This one from 1984 is one of his best and stars, as usual, the fabulous Carmen Maura, this time as a Madrid housewife called Gloria who lives in a tiny apartment with her husband, the taxi driver and forger Antonio; her lunatic mother-in-law, who is addicted in bottled water and cupcakes; and two teenage sons, one of them a drug dealer and the other gay.  When Gloria decides to try and get her life/home in order the results are farcical and gloriously funny as you would expect from Almodovar the King of Camp himself.



Our final choice is the movie SQIFF chose for their Closing Night Gala : Do I Sound Gay?  When American journalist David Thorpe found himself single again in his mid- forties he went into panic mode trying to work out what could possibly be wrong with him.  He thought that the fact that he had always hated his 'gay sounding' voice may be the crux of the matter so he undertook this journey of self discovery which is both hilariously funny and extremely touching too.  queerguru caught up with him recently and talked to him (in our very gay voices) about what he discovered and learned.


SCOTTISH QUEER INTERNATIONAL FILM FESTIVAL
24 - 27 September 2015

For information and tickets http://www.sqiff.org/

Monday, September 21, 2015

Sebastian Silva and his Nasty Baby



When we caught up with Chilean filmmaker Sebastian Silva earlier this summer to talk about his latest movie .... and the first one to be shot entirely in the US .....he gave us a whole new perspective on 'Nasty Baby'.  Filmed in his own apartment in Brooklyn with both he and his cat taking a starring role in front of the camera, he assures us that the story itself is fiction. Well most of it .   When we chatted, the very voluble director had us in stitches of laughter with his very rapid and somewhat dirty wit.  

Here then is the first trailer the film that won the prestigious Teddy Award at the Berlin Film Festival right after some of the more sensitive audience members at Sundance Festival ducked out before the end.  It's a queerguru pick for 'one not to miss' this Fall.


Here too is the full interview we had with Silva at Provincetown Film Festival in June.

Sunday, September 20, 2015

Have You Heard Miss Coco Peru


The indefatigable Clinton Leupp has been performing as Miss Coco Peru for over 24 years now with his razor-sharp wit and those deer-in-the-headlights attention-grabbing eyes, his latest hit show ‘Have You Heard’ reaffirms his position as one of the best drag performers trotting around the globe these days. A storyteller, monologist, actor, singer, comic, entertainer, mentor and passionate gay activist, Miss Coco is sharp, sassy and sophisticated and has this remarkable natural ability to make sure that we all see the funny side of life. Outspoken and outrageous her one-woman-show in 2012 summed her up beautifully: it was called ‘She’s Got Balls’. When we caught up with Clinton after a recent performance the first thing that struck us was his wonderful warmth and his loud infectious laugh. He is unique in the fact that unlike most cutting and somewhat sarcastic drag performers he exudes happiness on and off stage and was a sheer joy to spend time with. Over a martini (or two) he shared his views of life, love and laughter with queerguru.



QG: Let’s start at the very beginning and talk about your ‘Coming Out.’

It may seem ridiculous to people who come to my Show and see me wearing a dress and being as flamboyant as I am now, to think that I ever had to ‘come out’ in the traditional sense, but I did have to go through the same process just like every other gay man. There was a time when I was in a Theater Program in College and closeted and was constantly told to ‘butch up’. And for years I did try to be someone who I wasn’t especially as I wanted to be accepted as an actor and you had to pass for straight as there were not that many gay roles back then.
  
When I was 23 years old I had a boyfriend and we went to the Gay Pride Parade in Manhattan and I was in seventh heaven as I had never ever seen such a large and diverse crowd of gay people in one place. However, on the train on my way back home to the Bronx afterwards my elation quickly subsided as all my old fears and worries came rushing back.  It was at that very moment that I decided that from now on I wanted to only be myself and that I wasn’t prepared to go back even part way into the closet.

I was very lucky as when I came out to my parents they were actually relieved that I was both healthy and happy especially as we had just lost my sister to cancer. I had all the usual fears and dread of coming out just like anyone else but it was only when I addressed them that life got better for me. Being effeminate in a working class area of the Bronx had been torture and I had been picked on and bullied during my entire childhood and adolescence. Now that I was an openly gay man I started to embrace everything I had learned to hate about myself. I was determined not only to accept this side of me but as Miss Coco I was going to dress it up and glorify it, and become the gay man who I chose to be.  

There is something wonderful about owning who you are. I learnt then if people did not respect me, that it was of no consequence, as they didn’t control me anymore

QG: How did Clinton Luepp morph into Miss Coco Peru?

I didn’t know anything at all about Drag and then I went to see the great drag icon Charles Busch in his play ‘A Lady In Question’ and I was completely mesmerized.  I could see that he and the entire case were having THE best time ever. And that included Julie Halston playing Countess Kitty in her broad Bronx accent that college had insisted I lose.  I just thought, I want to do what Charles is doing.

I’m a great reader and all through my life books have a habit of arriving in my library at the exact moment I have needed them. It was at this time that I came across one about a native American called ‘Two Spirits’ which was all about being a third gender. When I read that I thought ‘Oh My God’ this is it. In my whole life up till then I had been searching for something that I could truly identify with, and now I had found it. I’m decided I’m going to do Drag and I’m going to be this third gender. As soon as I said it, everything started falling into place.  It felt like my calling and that I had found my vocation.

QG: You once said ‘I’m not impersonating a woman: it’s just an extension of me'.

Well I never intended Miss Coco to be a real woman per se because the stories I tell are all-autobiographical and so I’m often talking about when I was a little boy.  So for me the goal when I started Coco was to confuse people a little telling his stories whilst wearing a dress.  Then after a while I just wanted audiences to know the stories just by connecting to someone who was simply another human being.



QG: You have a remarkable gift for observation, which comes through in the stories that you tell on stage, are they all true?

Yes, every one of them are based on my life. I have always been very resourceful at finding humor in everyday incidents right from the very beginning. My parents had me late in life so my childhood was spent amongst a group of old people who had grown up through WW2 and who had not had an easy life.  They were all heavy drinkers and heavy smokers and as a little kid I became their bartender. 

QG: Really? (laughing)

Yes I even went around with a tray emptying all the ashtray, but I just adored them and I loved being there listening to this wealth of funny stories and jokes being surrounded by these wonderful larger than life characters.

QG: Do you tell the stories straight as they happened?

Well, I do add a little spice to them naturally to bring out the funny element, and that seems to work.  Sometimes so much that they appear so over the top that people will come up to me and say ‘You didn’t really physically chase that group of little old Indian ladies around Sydney Harbor because they were giving you the evil eye did you? ‘ And I have to say yes, it was all true, which totally shocks them. (laugh)



QG: Tell us the story behind your famous red hair, and the fact that you must be one of the few Drag Performers who never changes her wig.

When I first started performing I had a great big fussy Ann-Margaret wig but that was such hard work maintaining it and to be perfectly honest, it was a real drag.  Then the moment I found my wig and had it styled with flip ups I instantly knew that this was perfect for Miss Coco.

I was always drawn to the silhouette that I adopted for Coco.  I wanted it to be very long and sleek and not over the top as Coco never wears a lot of jewelry or glitzy dresses. It was to be sophisticated but understated and I wanted her to be different than what most people expect of drag.  Coco and I are both very happy with how she looks and the one night I actually dared to wear a shorter version of the same wig people HATED it!  (laugh)

QG: Tell us about your breakthrough role in ‘Trick’ where in one small scene you ‘stole’ the movie and our hearts.

I was not originally meant to be in the movie at all but Jim Fall the Director is a good friend of mine, and asked me to help him out in the audition process.  I ended up reading the Tori Spelling part whilst he tested potential male leads, and suddenly everyone told Jim ‘you’ve got to keep the Drag Queen in the movie’.  So they wrote a part of me and were kind enough to allow me to re-write my infamous bathroom monologue in my own voice.  Some years previously somebody had actually tried to lure me into bed by saying  ‘It’s Big It’s Beautiful …you’re gonna love it.’ and I always knew that I have to use that line in a performance one day.

QG: How deliberately was it that you looked more like Tori Spelling than she did? (laugh)

When Tori Spelling flew to NY to audition, she had blonde hair. However when it came to filming she showed up on the set with red hair, and when Jim Fall tried to question it, her hairdresser said ‘honey, don’t touch her hair it will just fall out as she has dyed it way too often!’   We didn’t do a scene together so the penny never dropped until we saw the completed movie on the screen at Sundance, and I thought ‘Oh My God, we could have been sisters or something more tragic’  (laugh)



QG: Did you ever imagine that this one small movie part would make such a major impact on your career and life?

Well, I remember the first time that I ever saw a gay movie and it impacted me so much I just hoped that one day I would get to be in one and help others feel the same way. And now 15 years later when young people come up and tell me that ‘Trick’ was the first movie that made them first feel good about themselves and helped them come out, it makes me so happy.

I never ever get tired of people shouting out 'It Burns’  to me in the middle of the street. Any time anyone wants to celebrate my work, I embrace and enjoy it, and I never ever take it for granted.  

QG: How much fun was it making the ‘Girls Will Be Girls’ movie with Jack Plotnick & Varla Jean Merman?

Actually, the first couple of days were not that much fun at all as in my own shows I am used to playing it for laughs but now I was having to play a sad sack. The crew were laughing their pants when Varla and Jack were acting, but looked so down and miserable when it was my turn as my role was a bit of a downer.  Confused I phoned Jim Fall who just said ‘play it for real’ and that’s what I did, and I found the craziness in my character, and I was so happy with the result.

QG: As were audiences as you all picked up Best Acting Awards for that.  When is the sequel coming out?

Soon I hope. We have filmed it all and our director Richard Day is now doing the final edit.



QG: You travel an awful lot these so will you tell us about your experiences taking Miss Coco to London?

The thing I loved most about London were the audiences, and one of the best compliments I have ever had was from one of the Soho Theater staff who said ‘we love working your Shows because people come in a good mood and leave feeling even happier.' 

I got another different buzz when I was  eating in Balans Restaurant one night and the Doorman recognized me and thought that he and I could do a version of the bathroom scene in ’Trick’ with me performing on him.  I was very flattered but I am very married too.

I was worried that being happy would take away my edge. Sometimes people say write another new show which is tough as I am happy new and people want me to be miserable and bitter as they perceive that’s where real comedy is.  I am really fortunate that I have such a good husband who supports me and funs joy in my performance.  And I find comedy within our own lives.  Like the time we first met his sister and he just happened to fail to mention that he was naturist and we were all to going to be naked (Laugh).

QG: You never use Raphael your husband as a comic foil as is tradition.

I never thought of that.  I play up the whole thing of him being from Spain where everyone is meant to be romantic like I think British people are all so posh.  But all you need to do is to take one trip to Southern Spain and see the Brits on holiday and honey you soon realize they ain't so posh at all. (laugh) They can be just as trashy as the rest of us. 

QG: You are also a passionate activist, what is on your agenda right now?

I’ve just done  a Benefit to help raise awareness about bullying  as finally people are doing something about this .

The world is changing .  I’m heavy on littering too : I like things to be pretty.

QG: What’s next for Miss Coco?

On the Road doing my new show, and I'm writing a musical with a composer who just approached me which is very exciting. The reality is that I have pretty great life regardless.

QG: Before you go to get ready for your Show tonight, I have to ask, did you really perform in a Nudist Colony?

Yes, but I was fully clothed (laughing).  I have to tell you for a bunch of people who are meant to be free-spirited and relaxed, they really were not a fun audience. They were kind of limp!

QG: But where did you look as you performed?  (laughing).

Well straight into their eyes naturally!  




Saturday, September 19, 2015

Jackie Collins : the creator of Lucky Santangelo has died


Tributes have been pouring in for the novelist Jackie Collins after her death was announced earlier today.  Jackie, aged 77,  wrote 32 novels about Hollywood glamour full of steamy sex and drugs , and all her books have appeared on The New York Times bestsellers list and  sold over 500 million copies in total . She was the younger sister of actress Joan Collins.

The Collins sisters were born in wartime London in a world far removed from the glittering fast paced show biz life that they ended up living, and that came to be portrayed in Jackie's racy novels. The fame and celebrity of the sisters was the subject of an affectionate and hilarious parody by the comic duo French & Saunders  called 'Lucky Bitches' and it serves now as a wonderful reminder of how Jackie Collins made such a forceful impact on the world. 



R.I.P. Jackie Collins OBE : October 4, 1937 – September 19, 2015