News, Reviews & Commentary on Gay and Bisexual Men in Entertainment and the Media

Stephen Fry

The Week in Gay Geek: Jim Shooter gave us a gay hero, E3 goodness, scandalous YAOI and more!



GETTING CLOSE TO CAPRICA:
I usually end up totally geeking out at this time of the year, as the Television Critics Association is a time when some interesting TV news and discussions starts coming out. Here’s one rumor that has me particularly excited – the Sci-Fi Channel has reportedly ordered two scripts for the Battlestar Galactica prequel, Caprica.

That’s encouraging news since I long had the impression that Caprica’s pilot would air as a mini-series before the network would decide to make it a series or not, as it did with Galactica. This probably means that The Sci-Fi Channel thinks Caprica is good enough to please us Galactica fans. Hopefully there’ll be some official news when the Sci-Fi Channel has its TCA session next week.

EMBRACING TRACING PAPER:
Scandal apparently broke out last week amongst the YAOI community in Japan when Embracing Love creator Youka Nitta admitted to having traced images from various fashion ads. You can check out a collection of side-by-side comparisons at this Japanese web page. As Brigid Alverson notes, I find it interesting how Nitta frequently took images of opposite-sex couples and changed them into male couples:

The page that got Nitta in trouble and the ad that inspired it.

Nitta’s faced a few consequences as her work seems to been dropped from an upcoming issue of Be-Boy Gold magazine and she’s also canceled her planned appearance at YAOI-Con. I wonder if this will further affect the availability of Nitta’s work in the United States. Embracing Love is hard to find due to financial trouble at Be Beautiful, the publisher who licensed the title, a situation that became even more complicated when the Japanese publisher Biblos went into bankruptcy and put Be Beautiful’s licenses in limbo. DMP just published one of her titles earlier this year and has another title coming out in December.

If it's up to American audiences, I doubt this will hurt Nitta’s presence here. While her tracing is a big scandal in Japan, I’ve seen a few American artists whose tendency to copy and alter images became a running gag (like Greg Land and Rob Liefeld) and it didn’t seem to hurt them. Then again, maybe manga audiences will react differently.

I know Nitta has a few fans here (and I probably would be one of them if I ever could find myself a copy of the second volume of Embracing Love); does this change your impression of her work in any way?

After the break: Gays in games and comics ... and what's Stephen Fry doing in this column?

AfterElton Briefs: Sean Penn hits a sour note on the "Milk" shoot, it's curtains for "Curtains", and more!

Cheyenne Jackson (R) and designer/Ugly Betty star Kenneth Cole

In a continued effort to bring you all that is important in the world of gay entertainment and ensure that you are being spoon-fed images of gorgeous, commoditized manflesh, we present the newly-minted AfterElton Briefs. Following the usual assortment of carefully-selected news items, interested readers can find a refreshing pic of a hot man in underwear after the jump. Yes, we're serious.

  • In his attempts to get a crowd of extras riled up on the Milk shoot, Sean Penn referred to Sean Hannity as Rupert Murdoch's "butt boy". Er ... probably not the best choice of words, Sean.
  • Broadway's Cheyenne Jackson will host the Live Out Loud Young Trailblazers Gala, a benefit for the organization, which aims to provide mentorship and support to LGBT youth. Seriously, Cheyenne, you can stop trying so hard to make me fall in love with you. It's getting a little embarrassing.
  • Up north, Canadian Television (CTV) allegedly yanked an "ex-gay" ministry ad after receiving complaints that it was discriminatory. (Warning: links to a religious site, if you're not into that kind of thing.) If so, good for them.
  • The BAFTA television award nominees have been announced, with three gay men (Stephen Fry, Simon Amstell, and Alan Carr) up for the Best Entertainment Performer prize. Additionally, out actor Sir Antony Sher is up for Best Actor for his role in Primo.
  • Curtains, the show for which David Hyde Pierce won a Tony (and thanked his partner when receiving it), will close on June 29th after 537 total performances.

And today's Briefs are brought to you by...

AfterElton Briefs: Cheyenne reads, Stephen kisses frogs, and more!

Cheyenne Jackson in The Agony and the AgonyCheyenne Jackson in The Agony and the Agony

In a continued effort to bring you all that is important in the world of gay entertainment and ensure that you are being spoon-fed images of gorgeous, commoditized manflesh, we present the newly-minted AfterElton Briefs. Following the usual assortment of carefully-selected news items, interested readers can find a refreshing pic of a hot man in underwear after the jump. Yes, we're serious.

  • Anyone want to hear Cheyenne Jackson read aloud from the autobiography of Mr. T, Tommy Lee, or Elizabeth Taylor? He'll be participating in the Celebrity Autobiography series starting January 28th, so you just might have the chance!
  • We know you've already sent a mountain of chocolate to CBS in support of As the World Turns' Luke and Noah, but if you have a second it wouldn't hurt to fill out the net's latest soap poll and give a boost to everyone's favorite Alpha Daytime Gay Teen Couple.
  • It's been rumored that Morrissey's management has said that they are trying to secure playdates for the crooner in Tehran, where homosexuality is punishable by death. Well then it's a darn good thing he's not gay or anything, huh?

  • This is probably the awesomest digital photo craze since StuffonMyCat: Sleevefacing. Someone please break out their Grace Jones vinyl and send us some snaps!! (tip of the bowler to the kids at WorldofWonder for the lead.)
  • Brit wit Stephen Fry isn't sure why straight actors are lauded for their bravery when they have on-screen gay kisses when gay actors are expected to kiss women like there's nothing wrong with it, adding, "I'll kiss a frog if you like."

McKellen and Fry score nominations as Great Britons of 2007

The Daily Telegraph recently announced the shortlist of finalists for the 2007 Morgan Stanley Great Briton Awards. The awards are fairly new, established in 2004 with sponsorship from Morgan Stanley, The Daily Telegraph, and the Royal Society of Arts, as a way of honoring those people who have made significant contributions to British life over the course of the year. Candidates are nominated by the public, with thousands of names submitted each year. The nominations are then narrowed down to three finalists for each of the seven categories (Arts, Business, Campaigning & Public Life, Creative Industries, Environment, Science & Innovation, and Sport) by a panel of judges.

This year, two openly gay men were among the 21 finalists; Ian McKellen, nominated in the "Arts" category, and Stephen Fry, who scored a nomination in the category of "Creative Industries".

The Telegraph elaborates on McKellen’s nomination:

One of the most acclaimed actors of his generation, McKellen has been honoured with more than 40 international awards for his performances on stage and screen. While movie blockbusters such as X-Men and Lord of the Rings have brought him international stardom, he originally found fame playing the title role in Edward II both on stage and television. In 1972, McKellen co-founded the Actors' Company, earning him a reputation as a spokesman for actors and the British theatre in general. He also remains an outspoken advocate for the gay rights campaigning group Stonewall. This year he returned to the stage to great acclaim, appearing in the Royal Shakespeare Company's The Seagull and in the title role of King Lear. The judges described McKellen as "one of the last great actors" who delivers a "quality of acting that you have to be awed by". His performance in King Lear; perhaps Shakespeare's most demanding role was, said one judge, "simply brilliant".

And of Stephen Fry:

Comedian, writer, actor, filmmaker, television personality - Stephen Fry is one of the great British polymaths. As one half of the Fry and Laurie double act, he has appeared in A Bit of Fry and Laurie and Jeeves and Wooster, while also bringing Oscar Wilde to life in the cinema and making a successful career as a novelist. Fry has spoken publicly about his experience with bipolar disorder and has presented a documentary about it, Stephen Fry: The Secret Life of the Manic-Depressive. The two-part series was broadcast in 2006, repeated in March 2007 as part of the BBC's programming in aid of Comic Relief. He was nominated for Best Entertainment Performance (QI) and Best Factual Series (Secret Life of the Manic Depressive) at the 2007 British Academy Television Awards. The judges agreed that Fry is "the epitome of everything British, both modern and old" and - despite his huge intellect - a man who can communicate in a down to earth manner.

Hopefully Fry has some chance of winning his category because, with competition from J.K. Rowling, McKellen unfortunately doesn’t stand much of a chance.

To Make a Long Story Short ... Stephen Fry's Cinderella, Dirty Sexy Money dish, and more!

  • The critics aren't digging Stephen Fry's Cinderella pantomime, which they found to be too gay and too vulgar. Um ... aren't we talking about pantomime here?
  • A brightside spoiler for you Dirty Sexy Money fans: Michael Ausiello sez Carmelita (Candis Cayne) isn't dead following her disappearance in the last episode, but she has been abducted. Now it just remains to be seen who had her 'napped...
  • This new The Moment of Truth gameshow sounds like just about the worst idea ever.

  • The Greenwich Village Society of Historic Preservation (wasn't that a Kinks song?) has surveyed the East Village and may make the legendary Pyramid Club the city's first "drag landmark". The polysexual bar was a staple of the downtown scene in the 80s and has boasted performers ranging from RuPaul to Blondie to Nirvana. (For more great pics like the one above, check out this site.)
  • John Barrowman has a Dalek in his front hall that says things like "Nice *ss." Why am I not surprised?
  • Be sure to read all about Mario Lopez's shirtless, gay-friendly holiday movie in Michael's Best.Gay.Week.Ever. column, and have a great weekend!

What's in a Dame: Has pantomime gone full-on gay?

Pardon my Yankee if I speak in vague terms and mumble a lot in this post, because over here in the States "pantomime" means "those people in Washington Square park who pretend they're in an invisible box and ruin a perfectly good Dean and Deluca picnic lunch".

Over in the UK, "pantomime" refers to an increasingly gay theatrical tradition of exceedingly camp productions that involve a lot of wholesome sexual innuendo, men in drag, and a skewering of classic tales. The productions are apparently quite popular around Christmastime (there are currently several in the works, including Cinderella, Jack and the Beanstalk, and Aladdin) and are something of a national pastime, from what I can tell.

We'd reported earlier on gay matinee idol John Barrowman starring in Aladdin this season, and now it seems that Sir Ian McKellen may be joining the production in drag. Taking this with the fact that gay luminaries like Stephen Fry, Mark Ravenhill (best known for his scathing play, Shopping and F*cking) and Jonathan Harvey have been brought on to write these family-friendly pieces, many have begin to wonder if this tradition of putting men in dresses and camping it up with lots of ribald sexual double-talk has something gay about it.

Um ... yes?

Not for nothin', but that kind of Christmas production makes our chorus-boy-strewn Rockette-fest at Radio City look like a Larry the Cable Guy special. Can any Brit readers shed some light on the Panto phenom? Is this something that American entertainment needs to get on quick and ruin, like Coupling?

First footage of Bryan Singer's Valkyrie ride

A nifty behind-the-scenes teaser trailer was released last week for Valkyrie, openly gay director extraordinaire Bryan Singer's upcoming World War II epic, due out next summer. Valkyrie is based on a true story and revolves around the German plot to assassinate Adolf Hitler. Tom Cruise stars as Col. Claus von Stauffenberg, with Bill Nighy, Terence Stamp, Kenneth Branagh, Tom Wilkinson, Eddie Izzard, and Stephen Fry rounding out the rest of the cast. Early footage looks promising and I've got high hopes for the film, as I've loved just about everything Singer's done, including the vastly underrated Superman Returns.

Singer's filmography is fascinating in that he obviously has a predilection toward films with themes he can relate to; growing up both Jewish and gay has obviously influenced him a great deal. After all, few filmmakers would have opened a big budget superhero film in a Nazi concentration camp or included a "coming out" scene, as he did in X-Men and X2, respectively.

It will be interesting to see how Singer handles a film more explicitly about these themes when he tackles the Harvey Milk biography, The Mayor of Castro Street, which Singer is still (as far as I know) attached to direct, before he moves on to the Superman sequel. That film will be in competition with Gus Van Sant (another openly gay director) and his, as yet untitled, Harvey Milk project, already in pre-production.

UPDATE: A higher quality version of the teaser has been uploaded to the Apple website, in glorious Quicktime.

To Make a Long Story Short ... Brantley loves Die Mommie, Die, Stephen Fry drives across America, and more!

  • The New York Times' Ben Brantley has mostly glowing things to say about Charles Busch's Die Mommie Die! Alas, he doesn't say anything about Van Hansis!
  • Out Aussie singer Darren Hayes causes a minor ruckus trying to update his blog. I can SO relate!
  • Queerty interviews the always hilarious and insightful Dan Savage.
  • Stephen Fry is filming a documentary about driving across America and wants you to snap pictures of his car if you see him. I guess this means he's too cheap to hire his own publicists.
  • Lance Bass will be in New York, New Jersey, Chicago and elsewhere to promote his autobiography which is out tomorrow.
  • If this trashy British magazine just LOVES Mark Indelicato then what's with the tacky pictures?

  • michael's blog
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  • Happy Birthday, Oscar Wilde!

    Alright alright, so technically he isn't alive enough to hear our birthday wishes ... but that's not enough to keep us from taking a moment to honor one of the godfathers of wit, wordsmithery and worldliness, Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde.

    Wilde was born on this day in Dublin in 1854, and in his brief 46-year lifespan produced lasting classics in theatre (The Importance of Being Earnest), literature (The Picture of Dorian Gray) and poetry, although Wilde's very public trial for gross indecency and subsequent imprisonment for his homosexual leanings may be what many know him for more than anything. Wilde's ill-fated affair with Lord Alfred Douglas ("Bosie"), was portrayed in gay actor/writer/filmmaker/Wilde historian Stephen Fry's film Wilde, which was partly responsible for launching Jude Law to international stardom.

    Wilde was also a master of clever quotations, and many commonly used today are attributed to him. His prominent role in the decadent movement has cemented him as something of a pre-rock rockstar, a point which gay director Todd Haynes made in his glam-rock epic Velvet Goldmine by suggesting that Wilde was delivered to earth by a spaceship to become the world's first pop icon.

    Here's a selection of Wilde's best lines, in case you want to celebrate his birthday by dropping a few in the break room...

    "Always forgive your enemies; nothing annoys them so much."

    "Anyone who lives within their means suffers from a lack of imagination."

    "I am not young enough to know everything."

    "Patriotism is the virtue of the vicious."

    "America is the only country that went from barbarism to decadence without civilization in between."

  • brian's blog
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  • Stephen Fry: HIV and Me UK TV documentary concludes

    In the second and final part of this revealing BBC2 documentary, Stephen Fry continues his investigation into HIV and AIDS. In part two of Stephen Fry: HIV and Me, Fry explores the impact of modern treatments and measures the side effects of a revolutionary new single pill for treating HIV. Furthermore, he looks at the prejudice the disease continues to incur, and the ongoing ignorance among the groups most likely to be infected.

    In conclusion, Fry deduces that although things have improved medically since the early Eighties, the situation seems to be worse than ever, both psychologically and socially.

    Stephen Fry: HIV and Me concludes tonight, Tuesday 9 October at 9pm on BBC2.


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