
Ralph Fiennes
Image by: Paramount Vantage
One
of Shakespeare’s lesser-known plays, Coriolanus, based on the life of the
Roman leader, just got the big screen treatment thanks to director Ralph
Fiennes and gay screenwriter John Logan (The Aviator). Starring Fiennes,
Gerard Butler, Brian Cox and Vanessa Redgrave, it’s based on the life of the
Roman leader and, naturally, involves banishment, revenge and political
machinations. And sure, Shakespeare seems a tougher and tougher sell to
American audiences these days, but it’s great that Fiennes went off and
followed his muse anyway. Even better, the movie’s been picked up for
distribution by The Weinstein Company and is coming to an arthouse theater near
big city folks later this year in the hopes of cleaning up in the 2012 awards
season. And if that happens, the rest of you multiplex patrons will have your
chance to check it out, anon.
Good Christian Bitches
coming soon
Yes, there’s a TV show going
to pilot called Good Christian Bitches. Yes, of course, they’re going to
change the name. It’s network television, after all, not Showtime. The
Desperate Housewives-like project, produced by Darren Star (Sex and the
City), written by Steel Magnolias scribe Robert Harling and based on the
book by Kim Gatlin, involves a single mother returning to the wealthy Dallas
suburb where she grew up, only to find herself surrounded by gossip, scandal
and a gaggle of the title’s specific brand of venomous lady. With the
housewives phenomenon – both the desperate and real varieties – simultaneously
expanding and showing signs of creative fatigue, it’ll be a shot of fresh
blood when this twist on the formula finds a place in a network schedule,
provided the makers don’t lose their nerve. No actors are in place yet, either,
but have the casting people considered going straight to the source for local
talent? There’s really nothing quite like the real thing.
Debra Messing gets more gay pals
Call it whatever you want
– the creators call it Smash – but please don’t call it Will &
Grace II. OK, sure, it does star Debra Messing as a New Yorker whose closest
relationship is with a gay man (not yet cast). But that’s where the
similarities end. This gay man isn’t a bourgeois lawyer, he’s a Broadway
composer and Messing is his lyricist/foil. Together the pair is commissioned
with bringing a musical to the stage, with all the diva meltdowns that attend
that sort of thing. More intriguingly, the project is produced by Steven
Spielberg and being called a musical drama at this point in its development.
As is the case with all pilots, the chances are great that it will never be
seen by the general public, but this one seems promising and almost a sure bet
for gay audience adoration. Here’s hoping.
The gay Jersey Shore?
Nothing succeeds like
success, even if – and sometimes because – that success is incredibly
trashy. Witness, then, what Jersey Shore has spawned: not only is the less
compelling Jerseylicious still on the air, but now a gay version is
apparently in the works. An open casting call recently took place in Hammonton,
N.J., for a show tentatively titled Under the Boardwalk that will focus on a
group of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people living in an Atlantic
City beach house for a summer. The creators swear up and down that they don’t
want to promote negative stereotypes or create a gay version of the Jersey
Shore, but dignity is always the first quality thrown out the window in these
sorts of endeavors. It also doesn’t help that the audition promotional spots
asked, "Are you the gay Snooki?" Coming much later: A List: New York vs. Gay
Jersey Shore Road Rules Challenge/Drink-Off.

Romeo San Vicente kind of has a thing for Jersey Shore’s Ronnie. Sorry.