Dublin Film Qlub: Torch Song Trilogy Screening

Dublin Film Qlub close their season with Harvey Fierstein's Torch Song Trilogy

dublin-film-qlub-torch-song-trilogy-screening

 

Dublin Film Qlub’s seventh season of films comes to a close this month with a screening of Harvey Fierstein’s Torch Song Trilogy.  

The screening will take place on Saturday July 15 at 2:30pm in The New Theatre, Temple Bar, D2.

The film is an adaptation of three one-act plays on the same character, Arnold Beckoff. The film was scripted by the original author, the multitalented Harvey Fierstein, who starred in both the theatre production and the adaptation (Mathew Broderick played Arnold’s son on stage and Arnold’s husband in the movie). The adaptation opens like the play, with a monologue directly to the audience, and after that the stage is forgotten in all but in the talk-heavy story. The film omits (regrettably) a hilarious sex scene in a darkroom, as well as (mercifully) the endless discussion of Arnold’s lover Ed’s ‘problematic’ bisexuality. The adaptation also invents a (rather sweet) first-meeting scene between Arnold and partner David.

I’m among the last of a dying breed. Well, once the E.R.A. and gay civil rights bills have been passed, me and mine will be swept under the carpets like the blacks done to Amos, Andy, and Aunt Jemima. That’s all right. With a voice and a face like this, I’m not worried. I can always drive a cab. And that, chillun’, is called power. Be it gay, black, or flowered it always comes down to the survival of the majority.”- Harvey Fierstein, in the play The International Stud (1978), later part of Torch Song Trilogy (1982).

A ‘torch song’ is a melodramatic rendition of a love story, romance on an epic scale, and our story is concerned with the five loves in torch-song singer Arnold Beckoff’s life: Ed, Alan, his son, his mother, and himself. This is a positive portrait of a gay person who respects himself and demands respect, from the first second of the film to the last. Shocking to think how rare this is in the stories others have told us and we have told ourselves. Arnold’s whip-tongued queen, maddeningly closeted lover Ed, dangerously-perfect partner Alan, Arnold and Alan’s lovable-rogue foster-son David, and Arnold’s dark tornado of a mother… all sound like excruciating clichés on paper, but in fact they feel so real that you will think you are standing in that dressing room, that alley-way, that cemetery, that cabin in the country, and that sitting-room.

Both the play and the film are about parenting too –about the trick of breaking with the past, knowing you are cursed to drag it along with you. This is the conundrum of film adaptations themselves, and if you wish to be enlightened, look no further than the great Anne Bancroft as the ‘ma’ of professional drag artist Arnold. He may be one of a kind, but is it a coincidence that she comes across as the ultimate drag queen?

Screening kicks off at 2:30pm (doors open at 2pm) on Saturday 15 July in The New Theatre, Temple Bar, Dublin 2. Day Membership: €8. Free tea, coffee, and biscuits. 

For more info on Dublin Film Qlub, check out their website: http://www.filmqlub.com 

© 2017 GCN (Gay Community News). All rights reserved.

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