How Hollywood portrays AIDS
From ‘An Early Frost’ to ‘Yesterday’: Filmmakers, pioneers and cowards
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Ferrell, Reilly share premiere laughs Will Ferrell and John C. Reilly laugh it up at the star-studded premiere of their new R-rated comedy “Step Brothers.” |
Although The New York Times first reported on AIDS in the summer of 1981, it took Hollywood years to dramatize the crisis. Television and independent movies got there first — television because the pandemic fit into the disease-of-the-week movie format, independents because the subject clearly meant so much to them.
Several of the non-Hollywood filmmakers who addressed the subject died of AIDS shortly after making their films. Vito Russo did not live to see his book, “The Celluloid Closet,” become a movie. Also among the early AIDS casualties were three gay members of the cast of the landmark play and movie, “The Boys in the Band”: Kenneth Nelson, Leonard Frey and Frederick Combs.
When one of Hollywood’s own, Rock Hudson, died of AIDS in 1985, the major studios did not rush to deal with it. They were slow to see the possibilities until “Philadelphia” became a 1993 box-office hit and won Oscars for Tom Hanks and Bruce Springsteen. The movie played multiplexes nearly a decade after Hudson’s death, yet the filmmakers were still afraid to show Hanks and Antonio Banderas doing much more than discreetly dancing together.
The first feature-length AIDS films made their debuts in the year of Hudson’s death. “An Early Frost,” a superbly cast TV movie, starred Aidan Quinn as a depressed attorney who comes out to his parents (Gena Rowlands, Ben Gazzara) and grandmother (Sylvia Sidney) at the same time he tells them he’s HIV-positive. Arthur Bressan Jr.’s “Buddies,” about a gay man who befriends a stranger who is in the last stages of the disease, couldn’t hide its shoestring budget, but it was effective and surprisingly graphic.
Bressan died of AIDS shortly after the limited theatrical release of “Buddies,” which quickly disappeared. Much more popular was “Early Frost,” which demonstrated with its strong ratings that a large audience would respond to AIDS stories. Ron Cowen and Daniel Lipman, the Emmy-winning writers on “Frost,” later worked on “Queer as Folk.” Only Quinn’s third film, it was a major boost to his career.
The indie classic that launched Steve Buscemi
In 1986, Bill Sherwood wrote and directed “Parting Glances,” a low-budget production that is still widely regarded as the most entertaining and possibly the best AIDS film to date. Spirited and witty, it was essentially a New York relationship comedy about a stressed-out gay couple. One is tied to a sickly ex-lover, the other plans a trip to Africa, and much of the script dealt with their attempts to escape or confront the situation.
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The visibility of homosexuals increased as AIDS forced some celebrities to come out. TV movies about Liberace, Greg Louganis and Rock Hudson came and went, making little impression. Somewhat more successful was a 1989 TV production, “The Ryan White Story,” starring Lukas Haas as the 13-year-old hemophiliac who contracted AIDS from a transfusion.
Waris Hussein’s ambitious three-hour British film, “Intimate Contact” (1987), also dealt with a hemophiliac boy who is ostracized when he is sickened by “the gay disease.” But the most dynamic scenes involved Daniel Massey as a stricken businessman and Claire Bloom as his wife.
Also in 1987, William Nicholson (author of “Shadowlands”) wrote “Sweet As You Are,” another British TV production, starring Miranda Richardson and Liam Neeson as a couple who are similarly devastated by the news that he’s been infected.
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