THE CELLULOID CLOSET


'''The Celluloid Closet''' (1995) is a documentary film directed and written by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman. The film is based on the 1981 (revised 1987) book of the same name written by Vito Russo, and on previous lecture and film clip presentations given by Russo 1972-82. Russo researched the history of how motion pictures, especially Hollywood films, had portrayed gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender characters. It was given a limited release in select theatres, including the Castro Theatre in San Francisco in early 1996, and then shown on cable channel HBO.
The documentary interviews various men and women connected to the Hollywood industry to comment on various film clips and their own personal experiences with the treatment of LGBT characters in film. From the sissy characters, to the censorship of the Hollywood Production Code, the coded gay characters and cruel stereotypes to the progress made in the early 1990s.
Vito Russo wanted his book to be transformed into a documentary film and helped out on the project until he died in 1990. Some critics of the documentary noted that it was less political than the book and ended on a more positive note. However, Russo had wanted the documentary to be entertaining and to reflect the positive changes that had occurred up to 1990.

Contents
DVD
Impact
Credits
See also
References

DVD


In 2001, the DVD edition of the documentary includes a crew audio commentary, a second audio commentary with the late Russo, an interview Russo gave in 1990, a link to the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation website, and some deleted interviews put together into a second documentary titled ''Rescued From the Closet''.

Impact


Russo was one of the first people to persuade gay and straight people to examine the role that popular culture plays in shaping our attitudes about sexual orientation and gender identity. It started a genre of research that examines how movies, television shows, comic books, and video and computer games depict LGBT people.
Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD) gives an award called the Vito Russo Award to openly gay or lesbian people within the Hollywood film industry who advance the cause of fighting homophobia.

Credits


The following people are interviewed for the documentary.

Lily Tomlin (narrator)

Tony Curtis

Susie Bright

Arthur Laurents

Armistead Maupin

Whoopi Goldberg

Jan Oxenberg

Harvey Fierstein

Quentin Crisp

Richard Dyer

Jay Presson Allen

Mrs. Gustav Ketterer

Gore Vidal

Will H. Hays

Farley Granger

Paul Rudnick

Shirley MacLaine

Barry Sandler

Mart Crowley

Antonio Fargas

Tom Hanks

Ron Nyswaner

Daniel Melnick

Harry Hamlin

John Schlesinger

Susan Sarandon

See also



List of lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender-related films

Production Code

Doom Book

lavender marriage

References





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