Movies
Sacrificing self
New documentary profiles gay Naval Academy alumniĀ
‘Out of Annapolis’
Oct. 22 at 9:30 p.m.
U.S. Naval Memorial Theatre
701 Pennsylvania Ave., N.W.
$15

Director Steve Clark Hall during his service days in 1982 off the coast of Connecticut. (Photo courtesy of the filmmaker)
Baltimore resident Frank McNeil remembers with a chuckle some of the tricks of the trade he and his Marine Corps buddies ā the few who were out to each other ā used to keep handy during their years at North Carolina’s Marine Corps Base Camp Lejeune where he was stationed in the ’80s.
There was a gay bar in nearby Jacksonville, N.C., ironically dubbed Secrets. But partying there was too dangerous because military police would routinely troll the Secrets parking lot for cars with military stickers, trace the owners and confront them.
McNeil wormed his way out of getting busted a few times ā enough to learn Secrets was too close to home to patronize.
“‘So, Corp. McNeil, why was your car parked at a gay bar?'” McNeil remembers the conversation unfolding. “‘Uhhh, I loaned it to a friend.’ You just learned not to go out in Jacksonville, most of us went out in Wilmington, which was like an hour away. So you could go out and have fun but your guard was up, or at least mine was.”
McNeil left the military in 1991, before “Don’t’ Ask, Don’t Tell” was enacted. His story and 10 others are told in the new film “Out of Annapolis,” a documentary that will be screened as half of a double bill at the U.S. Naval Memorial Theatre in Washington Oct. 22. It’s one of three films being screened this month as a mini Reel Affirmations festival as the LGBT film marathon has moved its usual lineup from October to April.
Director Steve Clark Hall, a San Francisco Navy vet whose own story is shared in the film, says he was inspired to make the documentary because he was tired of seeing gays misrepresented.
“I’m just trying to put a real face on who we are,” Hall says. “Everything we see so misrepresents us, so we started with a website three-and-a-half years ago. Who are these people? You know, gays are always assumed to be these other people. Not people we know. Not who we are, but then all of a sudden it’s like, ‘Oh, gays are my good friends or my neighbors.'”
Hall, who spent 20 years in the Navy, says he was “about as out as one could be without having gay tattooed on my forehead. I didn’t raise my hand and say, ‘I’m gay, kick me out.’ I think it wasn’t much of a problem for me because I was always a team player. Always an asset.”
McNeil had an especially rough time keeping his personal and professional life in balance. In those pre-“Don’t Ask” years, he only confided in a “very select” group of friends about his sexual orientation. His late partner, Chris Duncan, was battling AIDS, a factor in McNeil’s eventual resignation.
“It brought a lot of mixed feelings because I really loved what I was doing, but you just couldn’t share completely,” he says. “You couldn’t have your partner’s picture out. You had to change your pronouns. ⦠There was a sense of dismay that you couldn’t quite be honest with the people you were serving.”
“Out of Annapolis” started in the summer of 2008 as an undertaking of the United States Naval Academy OUT ā a group of LGBT U.S. Naval Academy alumni and their supporters. Hall, a novice filmmaker, says the project, which included a study of the experiences of gay alumni, aims to educate the public about the experiences of gay service members before and during “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.” Participants were selected to give a good cross-representation of experiences. About 300 participated in the study, 75 were interviewed and 11 were chosen for the film.
“It was tough to pare it down,” Hall says. “We had some great stories we had to turn away because it would have over-represented a certain group.”
The movie debuted in New York in June and has been making the rounds of LGBT film festivals since. Hall and five others, including McNeil, will be at the D.C. screening, its local premiere.
“It’s very powerful,” says Larry Guillemette, Reel Affirmations festival chair. “I think it will resonate a great deal given the defeat our community just experienced on the ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ legislation. I think it will hopefully galvanize people to get more involved.”
Perhaps ironically, Hall didn’t conceive the project as an anti-“Don’t Ask” manifesto. The policy is hardly mentioned in the film.
“Some of it is just chronology,” he says. “Some of the people we profiled served before the policy began. But the film interestingly doesn’t sit there and try to make an argument, but in some ways just hearing the stories makes it the greatest argument against ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ because people can see what it was really like trying to live under the law. We were forced to be two different people and you just can’t be.”
PHOTO: Frank McNeil at his home in Baltimore (Blade photo by Michael Key)
Movies
āSpaced out on sensationā: a 50-year journey through a queer cult classic
Excellence of āRocky Horrorā reveals itself in new layers with each viewing
Last weekās grab of nine Tony nominations for the new Broadway revival of āThe Rocky Horror Showā ā coming in the midst of the ongoing 50th anniversary of the cult-classic movie version ā seems like a great excuse to look back at a phenomenon thatās kept us ādoing the Time Warpā for decades.
Itās a big history, so instead of attempting a definitive conclusion about why it matters, Iāll just offer my personal memories and thoughts; maybe youāll be inspired to revisit your own.
First, the facts: Richard OāBrienās campy glam-rock musical became a London stage hit in 1973; that success continued with a run at Los Angelesās Roxy Theatre in 1974, and a Broadway opening was slated for early 1975. In the break between, the movie was filmed, timed to ride the presumed success of the New York premiere and become a mega-hit ā but it didnāt happen that way. The Broadway show closed after a mere handful of performances, and the movie disappeared from theaters almost as soon as it was released.
This, however, was in the mid-1970s, when ācult moviesā had become a whole countercultural āscene,ā and the filmās distributor (20th Century Fox) found a way to give āThe Rocky Horror Picture Showā another chance at life. It hit the midnight circuit in 1976, and everybody knows what happened after that.
When all of this was happening, I was still a pre-teen in Phoenix, and a sheltered one at that. It wasnāt until 1978 ā the summer before I started high school ā that it entered my world. Already a movie fanatic (yes, even then), I had discovered a local treasure called the Sombrero Playhouse, a former live theater converted into an āart houseā cinema; my parents would take me there and drop me off alone (hey, it was 1978) for a double feature. I remember that place and time as pure heaven.
It was there that āRocky Horrorā found me. The Sombrero, like so many similar venues across the country, made most of its profits from the midnight shows, and āThe Rocky Horror Picture Showā was the star attraction. I saw the posters, watched the previews, got my first peeks at Tim Curryās Frank, Peter Hintonās Rocky, and all the rest of the movieās alluringly āfreakyā cast; when I came out of the theater after whatever I had watched, I would see the fans lining up outside for the midnight show. I could see their weird costumes, and smell the aroma I already knew was weed, and I knew this was something I should not want to have any part of ā and yet, I absolutely did.
After I started high school and found my ātribeā with the ātheater kids,ā I was invited by a group of them ā all older teenagers ā to go and see it. I had to ask my parentsā permission, which (amazingly) they granted; they even let me ride with the rest of the āgangā in our friendās van ā with carpeted interior, of course ā despite what I could see were their obvious misgivings about the whole situation.
It would be over-dramatic to say that night changed my life, but it would not be wrong, either. I was amazed by the atmosphere: the pre-movie floor show, the freewheeling party vibe, the comments shouted at the screen on cue, the occasional clatter of empty liquor bottles falling under a seat somewhere, and that same familiar smell, which delivered what, in retrospect, I now know was a serious contact high.
As for the movie, I had already been exposed to enough āRā rated fare (the Sombrero never asked for ID) to keep me from being shocked, and the gender-bent aesthetic seemed merely a burlesque to me. I was savvy enough to see the spoof, to laugh at the lampooning of stodgy 1950s values under the guise of a retro-schlock parody of old-school movie tropes; I āgot itā in that sense ā but there was so much about it that I wasnāt ready to fully understand. Because of that, I enjoyed the experience more than I enjoyed the film itself.
Iām not sure how many times I saw āRocky Horrorā over the next few years, but my tally wasnāt high; I drifted to a different friend group, became more active in theater, and had little time for midnight movies in my busy life. I was never in a floor show and rarely yelled back at the screen (though I did throw a roll of toilet paper once), and I didnāt dress in costume. Even so, I went back to it periodically before the Sombrero closed permanently in 1982, and as I gradually learned to embrace my own āweirdness,ā I came to connect with the weirdness that had always been calling me from within the movie. Each time I watched it, I did so through different eyes, and they saw things I had never seen before.
That process has continued throughout my life. Iāve frequently revisited āRockyā via home media (in all its iterations) and special screenings over the years, and the revelations keep coming: the visual artistry of director Jim Sharmanās treatment; the dazzling production design incorporating nods to iconic art and fashion that I could only recognize as my own knowledge of queer culture expanded; the incomparable slyness of Tim Curryās unsubtle yet joyously authentic performance; the fine-tuned perfection of Richard OāBrienās ear-worm of a song score. The excellence of āThe Rocky Horror Picture Showā revealed itself in new layers with every viewing.
There were also more intimate realizations: how Janet was always a slut and Brad was always closeted (I related to both), and how Frankās seduction becomes the path to sexual liberation for them both; how Rocky was the āĆber-Hustler,ā following his uncontrolled libido into exploitation as a sex object while only desiring safety and comfort (I related to him, too), and how the ādomesticsā were driven to betray their master by his own diva complex (I could definitely relate to both sides of that equation). How Frank-N-Furter, like the tragic Greek heroes that still echo in the stories we tell about ourselves, is undone by hubris ā and anybody who canāt relate to that has probably not lived long enough, yet.
The last time I watched (in preparation for writing this), I made another realization: like all great works of art, āThe Rocky Horror Picture Showā is a mirror, and what we see there reflects who we are when we gaze into it. Itās a purely individual interaction, but when Frank finally delivers his ultimate message ā āDonāt dream it, be itā ā it becomes universal. Whoever you are, whoever you want to be, and whatever you must let go of to get there, you deserve to make it happen ā no matter how hard the no-neck criminologists and Nazi-esque Dr. Scotts of the world try to discourage you.
Itās a simple message ā obvious, even ā but itās one for which the timing is never wrong; and for the generations of queer fans that have been empowered by āThe Rocky Horror Picture Show,ā it probably feels more right than ever.
Movies
The queer appeal of āThe Devil Wears Pradaā
Tying the feminist and LGBTQ rights movements together on screen
āWould we have fashion without gay people? Forgive me, would we have anything?ā
Those words, spoken by Miranda Priestley herself (actually by Meryl Streep, the 76-year-old acting icon who played her), may well sum up why āThe Devil Wears Pradaā has been a touchstone for queer audiences for two decades now.
Streep, who returns to big screens this weekend in the sequel to director David Frankelās beloved 2006 classic (succinctly titled āThe Devil Wears Prada 2ā), expressed this nugget of allyship in a recent interview with Out magazine, promoting the new filmās upcoming release. It would be hard, as a member of the queer community, to disagree with her assessment. The world of fashion has always been inextricably linked with queer culture, and the whims of taste that drive it are so frequently shaped by queer men ā and women, too ā who have adopted it as a means of expressing their sense of identity from the very first time they thumbed through a copy of Vogue.
At the same time, the notion that āPradaā has been claimed by the community as ācanonā simply because of the stereotypical idea that āgay people love fashionā feels like a lazy generalization. After all, fashion is about discernment ā about knowing, if you will, whether a sweater is simply blue or if it is cerulean, and, importantly, understanding why it matters ā and just because something ticks off a few basic boxes, that doesnāt mean it qualifies as āhaute couture.ā
So yes, the setting of the āDevil Wears Pradaā universe in what might be called āground zeroā of the fashion industry plays a part in piquing queer interest, but to assume our obsession with it is explained as simply as that is, frankly, insulting. The fashion angle catches our interest, but itās the story ā and, more to the point, the central characters (all of which return in the sequel) ā that reels us in.
First, thereās the ostensible heroine, Anne Hathawayās Andrea (or rather, Andy) Sachs, who falls into the world of fashion almost by accident. She’s a recent college grad who wants to be a journalist, to write for a publication that operates on a less-superficial level than Runway magazine, but fate (for lack of a better word) places her in the job that āa million girlsā would kill to have ā assistant to Streepās Miranda Priestly (based on Vogue editor Anna Wintour), who can determine an entire seasonās fashion trends merely by pursing her lips. Sheās idealistic, and dismissive of fashion in the overall scheme of human existence; sheās also stuck with a truly terrible boyfriend (Nate, played by Adrian Grenier) and trying to live up to the self-imposed expectations and ideals that have been foisted upon her since birth.
Itās clear from the start that none of this āfitsā her particularly well. More significantly, the natural grace with which she blossoms, from āsad girlā fashion-victim to the epitome of effortless style, tells us that she was meant to be exactly where she is, all along.
Then, of course, there is Nigel (Stanley Tucci), the ever-loyal art director and āGay Best Friendā thatās always there to provide just the right saving touch for both Miranda and Andy, helping to boost the former while gifting the latter with his own insight, ātough love,ā and impeccable taste. Never mind that heās a queer character played by a straight actor ā Tucci avoids stereotype and performative flamboyance by simply playing it with pure, universally relatable authenticity ā or that he ends up, at the end of the original film, betrayed by his goddess yet deferring his own dream to double down on his commitment to hers. Anyone who has ever been a gay man in the orbit of a remarkable woman knows exactly how he feels. Of course, they also probably know the precarious life of being a queer person in the workplace ā something that carries its own set of compromises, disappointments, and determinations to go above-and-beyond just to make oneself invaluable to the powers that be.
Which brings us to Emily (Emily Blunt), the cutthroat āfirst assistantā who does her level best to keep Andy in her place, who goes to extremes (āIām just one stomach flu away from my goal weightā) to be the āfavoriteā no matter how much cruelty she has to unleash on those who threaten her status. Some see her as merely an obstacle in the way of Andyās rise to success, an antagonist whose efforts to embody the āno mercyā persona of an ascendent girl boss only expose her own mediocrity. But for many, sheās just another victim doomed to fail and fall while watching others rise to the top. Queer, straight, or in-between, who among us hasnāt been there?
Finally, of course, there is Streepās Miranda Priestley, the presumed ādevilā of the title and the epitome of mercilessly autocratic authority, who has earned her status and her power by embracing the toxic modus operandiof a misogynistic hierarchy in order to conquer it. Yes, sheās more than just a little horrible, a strict gatekeeper who hones in on perceived weaknesses with all the vicious premeditation of a hawk with its eyes on a luckless rabbit, and it would be easy to despise her if she werenāt so damn fabulous. But thanks to the incomparable Oscar-nominated performance from Streep ā along with the glimpses we are afforded into her ārealā life along the way ā she is not just aspirational, but iconic. Stoic, imperturbable, always three steps ahead and never affording an inch of slack for any perceived shortcoming, thereās an undeniable excellence about her that inspires us to see beyond the obvious dysfunction of the āwork ethicā she represents; and sure, thereās enough emotionally detached enthusiasm in her torment/training of Andy to fuel countless volumes of erotic lesbian fan-fiction (Google āMirAndy,ā if you dare), but when we eventually recognize that she might just be the ultimate āfashion victimā of them all, it doesnāt just cut us to the core ā it strikes a chord that should be universally recognizable to anyone who has had to make their own ādeal with the devilā in order to claim agency in their own lives. In this way, āThe Devil Wears Pradaā comes closer than probably any mainstream film to tying the feminist and queer rights movements together in common cause.
In any case, each character, in their way, can easily be tied to a facet of queer identity ā and indeed, to the identity of anyone who must work twice (or more) as hard as a straight white Christian male to succeed. We can see ourselves reflected in all of them ā and whether we aspire to be Miranda (I mean, who wouldnāt?), identify with Andy, recognize our worst traits in Emily, or empathize with Nigel and his deferential suffering, thereās something in āThe Devil Wears Pradaā that resonates with everyone.
Now letās see if the sequel can say the same.
Sir Ian McKellen may now be known as much for being a champion of the international LGBTQ equality movement as he is for being a thespian. Out and proud since 1988 and encouraging others in the public eye to follow his lead, heās a living example of the fact that itās not only possible for an out gay man to be successful as an actor, but to rise to the top of his profession while unapologetically bringing his own queerness into the spotlight with him all the way there. For that example alone, he would deserve his status as a hero of our community; his tireless advocacy ā which he continues even today, at 86 ā elevates him to the level of icon.
Those who know him mostly for that, however, may not have a full appreciation for his skills as an actor; itās true that his performances in the āLord of the Ringsā and āX-Menā movies are familiar, however, this is a man who has spent more than six decades performing in everything from āHamletā to āWaiting for Godotā to āCats,ā and while his franchise-elevating talents certainly shine through in his blockbuster roles, the range and nuance heās acquired through all that accumulated experience might be better showcased in some of the smaller, less bombastic films in which he has appeared ā and the latest effort from prolific director Steven Soderbergh, a darkly comedic crime caper set in the dusty margins of the art world, is just the kind of film we mean.
Now in theaters for a limited release, āThe Christophersā casts McKellen opposite Michaela Coel (āChewing Gum,ā āI May Destroy Youā) for what is essentially a London-set two-character game of intellectual cat-and-mouse. Heās Julian Sklar, an elderly painter who was once an art-world superstar but hasnāt produced a new work in decades; sheās Lori Butler, an art critic and restoration expert who is working in a food truck by the Thames to make ends meet when she is approached by Sklarās children (James Corden, Jessica Gunning) with a proposition. Hoping to cash in on their fatherās fame, they want to set her up as his new assistant, allowing her access to an attic containing unfinished canvases he abandoned decades ago ā so that she can use her skills to finish them herself, creating a forged series of completed paintings that can be āposthumously discoveredā after his death and sold for a fortune.
She takes the job, unable to resist an opportunity to get close to Sklar ā who, despite his renown, now lives as a bitter and unkempt recluse ā for reasons of her own. Though his health is fading, his personality is as full-blown as ever; heās also still sharp, wily, and experienced enough with his avaricious children to be suspicious of their motives for hiring her. Even so, she wins his trust (or something like it) and piques his interest, setting the stage for a relationship thatās part professional protocol, part confessional candor, and part battle-of-wits ā and in which the āscammingā appears to be going in both directions.
Thatās it, in a nutshell. A short synopsis really does describe the entire plot, save for the ending which, of course, we would never spoil. Even if itās technically a ācrime caper,ā the most action it provides is of the psychological variety: there are no guns, no gangsters, no suspicious lawmen hovering around the edges; itās just two minds, sparring against each other ā and themselves ā about things that have nothing to do with the perpetration of artistic forgery and fraud, but perhaps everything to do with their own relationships with art, fame, hope, disillusionment, and broken dreams. Yet it grips our attention from start to finish, thanks to Soderberghās taut directorial focus, Ed Solomonās tersely efficient screenplay, and ā most of all ā the star duo of McKellen and Cole, who deliver a master class in duo acting that serves not just as the movieās centerpiece but also its main attraction.
The former, cast in a larger-than-life role that lends itself perfectly to his own larger-than-life personality, embodies Sklar as the quintessential misanthropic artist, aged beyond ābad boyā notoriety but still a fierce iconoclast ā so much so that even his own image is fair game for being deconstructed, something to be shredded and tossed into fire along with all those unfinished paintings in his attic; heās a tempestuous, ferociously intelligent titan, diminished by time and circumstance but still retaining the intimidating power of his adversarial ego, and asserting it through every avenue that remains open to him. Itās the kind of film character that feels tailor-made for a stage performer of McKellenās stature, allowing him to bring all the elements of his lifelong craft in front of the camera and deliver the complexity, subtlety, and perfectly-tuned emotional control necessary to transcend the clichĆ© of the eccentric artist. His Sklar is comedically crotchety without being doddering or foolish, performatively flamboyant without seeming phony, and authentic enough in his breakthrough moments of vulnerability to avoid coming off as over-sentimental. Perhaps most important of all, he is utterly believable as a formidable and imperious figure, still capable of commanding respect and more than a match for anyone who dares to challenge him.
As for Coelās Lori, itās the daring thatās the key to her performance. Every bit Sklarās equal in terms of wile, she also has power, and yes, ego too; we see it plainly when she is deploys it with tactical precision against his buffoonish offspring, but she holds it close to the chest in her dealings with him, like a secret weapon she wants to keep in reserve. When he inevitably sees through her ploy, she has the intelligence to change the game ā her real motivation has little to do with the forgery plan, anyway ā and get personal. Coel (herself a rising icon from a new generation of UK performers) plays it all with supreme confidence, yet somehow lets us see that sheās as wary of him as if she were facing a hungry tiger in its own cage.
Itās after the āmasksā come off that things get really interesting, allowing these two characters become something like āshadow teachersā for each other, forming a shaky alliance to turn the forgery scheme to their own advantage while confronting their own lingering emotional wounds in the process; thatās when their battle of wits transforms into something closer to a āpas de deuxā between two consummate artists, both equally able to find the human substance of Soderberghās deceptively cagey movie and mine it, as a perfectly-aligned team, from under the pretext of the trope-ish āart swindleā plot ā and itās glorious to watch.
That said, the art swindle is entertaining, too ā which is another reason why āThe Christophersā feels like a nearly perfect movie. Smart and substantial enough to be satisfying on multiple levels, itās also audacious enough in its murky morality to carry a feeling of countercultural rebellion into the mix; and that, in our estimation, is always a plus.
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