Arts & Entertainment
Jack O’Connell cast as Alexander McQueen in biopic
British star will take on troubled fashion designer’s life

(Screenshot via YouTube.)
British actor Jack O’Connell has been cast as Lee Alexander McQueen in a biopic about the fashion designer distributed by French production company Pathé, according to Deadline.
O’Connell, 26, is best known for his film roles in “Unbroken,” directed by Angelina Jolie, and “Money Monster,” starring alongside George Clooney and Julia Roberts. He also starred in the U.K. television series “Skins.”
The film, based on the 2015 biography “Blood Beneath the Skin” by Andrew Wilson, will be directed by “45 Years” director Andrew Haigh. Producer Damian Jones, whose latest work includes “Absolutely Fabulous: The Movie,” is also attached to the project.
“In 2009, Alexander McQueen put on one of his greatest shows – a stunningly beautifully re-working of his greatest designs from the past 15 years,” Pathé said in a statement. “It was a show that he dedicated to his mother and one in which he tried to make sense of his life and art. The film explores McQueen’s creative process in the months leading up to the show providing an intimate portrait of the man behind the global brand – a moving celebration of a visionary genius whose designs transcended fashion to become art.”
McQueen, who was openly gay, came from a working-class London family and worked his way to chief designer at fashion house Givenchy before starting his own fashion label Alexander McQueen. He committed suicide in 2010 at 40 years old.
Filming begins in spring 2017.
Baltimore
This John Waters interview has been edited for readability — but perhaps not human decency
Pope of Trash dishes on Trump, plane etiquette, last meal, and more
By WESLEY CASE | At 80 years old, John Waters is still the ideal dinner guest — incisively sharp, quick-witted and funny as hell.
The chic Baltimore native proved it again and again in a recent Zoom interview, calling from his summer home in Provincetown, Mass.
The occasion was the Blu-ray releases of two of his movies — the 1977 dark comedy “Desperate Living” and his enduring 1988 musical “Hairspray” — on June 23 by the Criterion Collection, which publishes restorations of films it deems culturally important. The Criterion stamp of approval has become the gold standard among cinephiles.
“It’s like getting an award,” said Waters, who wrote and directed both films.
The rest of this article can be read on the Baltimore Banner’s website.
The Washington Blade held the seventh annual Pride on the Pier at The Wharf DC on Saturday, June 13.
(Washington Blade photos by Landon Shackelford)



















The 2026 Lost River Pride Festival was held on the scenic grounds of the Lost River Farmers Market in Lost City, W.Va. on Saturday, June 13. Headliner Tom Goss performed at the festival and gave a second performance at the nearby Guesthouse Lost River.
(Washington Blade photos by Michael Key)




















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