Hollywood creators and film fests highlight LGBTQ stories
TIFF, Inside Out film fests team up to encourage a cultural shift
"My whole life, I've been told you can't centreLGBTQstories. You have to have the nice straight person who is the 'everyday'person to identify with," according to transgender filmmakerSilasHoward.
"That's been this tired, old line that TV and Hollywood has said for a long time," he continued.
"I think that that's starting to change."
Creators like Howard, along with other LGBTQartists and organizations such as the Toronto International Film Festivalandthe Inside Out Festival, are working to shift current conventions by highlighting and bringing more diverse content to the fore.
On June 2, TIFF and Inside Out will kickoff a new partnership with the virtual reality experience Queerskins: a love story, presented by Aurora. The interactive installationexplores fact versus fiction in exploring the story of a Catholic mother and her gay son who dies of AIDS.
Our year-round partnership with Inside Out starts with Queerskins, a VR journey through love and loss that explores the relationship between a devoutly Catholic mother and her gay son who dies of AIDS.
June 230 at TIFFhttps://t.co/u8WpEQeTvY pic.twitter.com/nqKJvQ8RjV
—@TIFF_NET
Ongoing initiatives between the two festivals will includeonstage discussions and special presentations.
"It is incumbent on TIFF to underscore the importance of diverse voices and create a permanent platform for challenging narratives that help people re-imagine contemporary society and everyday life," TIFF's artistic director Cameron Baileysaid in a release announcing the collaboration.
Changing prevailing narratives in the entertainment industry is a work in progress.
For instance, there's been a decrease inLGBTQcharacters in major studio films, according to aGLADD(Gay & Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation) report released last week. The organization found that of the 109 moviereleases in 2017, only 14 (12.8 per cent) included LGBTQ characters, the lowestpercentage sinceGLADDstarted tracking in 2012 (in 2016, the figure was 18.4 per cent).
In terms of television, however,a GLADDreport from November 2017showedthatLGBTQrepresentation had increased last year, with 6.4 per centof characters on prime timeTV identifying as gay, lesbian,bisxual,transgender, and/or queer.
'A human experience'
"I've spent my whole life watching shows that [have] characters that don't reflect me," Howard, who directed the new movieA Kid Like Jake,toldCBCNews in a recent interview.
"But, I've done the math and connected emotionally to centred stories, so the reverse can be true... Somebody can watch my world andif it's centred and if it's an honest and fully rendered character thenthat person can connect because it's about a human experience."
A Kid Like Jake revolves arounda gender-nonconforming four-year-old boy, with prominent TV stars Claire Danes and Jim Parsons portraying the child's parents. It premiered at theSundanceFilm Festival in January and opened Inside Out last week.
Having collaborators from the LGBTQ community involved in the film added complexity, Howard noted.
"I think it's interesting that Jim being gay, the writer [Daniel Pearle] being gay, myself beingtrans a lot of us that were really involved in this adds something different," he said.
"It adds something different to the anatomy of a marriage and looking at societal pressures around parenting."
Howard is also a co-executive producer and director on the upcoming FX series,Pose, which launches on June 3.
Co-created byGlee's Ryan Murphy, the drama series explores the ballroom dance culture inlate-1980sNew York and starsfiveblack transwomen. The project is being heralded as groundbreaking TV for the number of LGBTQ collaborators both in front of and behind the camera.
That Pose is puttingtranspeople in the main spotlight issomething historic, Howard said.
"I'd be on-set watching a scene and realize this character's not going to be disposed of by the next episode, or cast aside... I think it's going to open up a lot of hearts."