
Tina Fey
Image by: Universal Pictures
Admission: Tomlin’s here, but you’re probably coming for
Tina Fey
Every smartypants lesbian we know loves Tina Fey, even
though she plays for the other team. And when Admission, her latest film,
opens next spring, that audience will get the added bonus of actual lesbian
Lily Tomlin as a co-star. The story revolves around Fey as a college admissions
director who both falls for Paul Rudd and learns that the baby she gave up for
adoption might well be a maladjusted genius applying for admission to her
school. It’s always good news when Tomlin decides to do a film, but it’s always
just as interesting to see how Fey carries a movie that she didn’t write. The
star didn’t call her book Bossypants for no reason: as former head writer of
SNL, screenwriter of Mean Girls and creator of 30 Rock, she is, more
often than not, seemingly in charge of her own destiny. But she’s had pretty
good luck so far, appearing comfortably at home in the comedies Baby Mama and
Date Night. And if she can do warm-hearted romance-and-family comedy without
turning it all inside out with Liz Lemon-style self-deprecation and absurdity,
she’ll be inching closer to, well, a persona her fans don’t quite recognize.
And you’ll have to wait until March of 2013 to find out.
Chelsea Handler presents Fortune Feimster’s furniture show
Regular viewers of the extremely loose late-night talk show
Chelsea Lately know Fortune Feimster very well. She’s the brash, plus-size,
go-to lesbian comic on staff who can play both Honey Boo Boo and Honey Boo
Boo’s mother and who regularly engages in whatever frank sexual discussions
Handler initiates with the rotating comic panel. And ABC has taken notice of
this dynamic, greenlighting a half-hour sitcom written, produced and starring
Feimster and co-executive produced by Handler. It’s called Discounted and
it’s a rural, blue-collar comedy about two sisters (Feimster will play one of
them) trying to keep their Charlotte, North Carolina furniture store open in
the face of overwhelming competition from an IKEA-like chain of cheap imports.
As with all pilots, it’ll have to jump through every weird hoop the network
decides to put up as obstacles, but if the TV-viewing world is lucky, there’ll
soon be a primetime successor to Roseanne, one that doesn’t have to import
any lesbians for its storylines.
Gay documentary round-up: Divine at the Continental
Jeffrey Schwarz, the documentary filmmaker whose most recent
movie, the highly acclaimed Vito (about the life of The Celluloid Closet’s
groundbreaking film writer and historian, Vito Russo) received a coveted HBO
premiere, is hard at work on his next film. Shining deserved light on another
gay icon, Glenn Milstead, aka Divine, I Am Divine will pay loving tribute to
the equally groundbreaking film star, a man who did for insane drag what his
close friend, director John Waters, did for insane cinema. The film will feature
interviews with Waters, Ricki Lake, Bruce Vilanch, Tab Hunter, Mink Stole and
Holly Woodlawn and is currently in post-production.
Meanwhile, Continental, the latest from documentary
filmmaker Malcolm Ingram (Small Town Gay Bar) will explore the heyday of New
York City’s famed Continental Baths. A gay bathhouse that became a non-gay
entertainment venue as it launched the musical careers of Bette Midler and
Barry Manilow, drawing crowds of celebrities and regular gay guys in towels
looking for anonymous sex, Continental is sure to open younger gay eyes to
the subculture of 1970s hedonism in the same way that Paris is Burning
brought the world of late 1980s drag balls to moviegoers’ attention. Be on the
lookout for both films to turn up at festivals sometime in 2013.
From Dreamgirls to Twilight to... Wikileaks?
Gay filmmaker Bill Condon translated his slowly growing
career success directing movies like God and Monsters and Kinsey into a
spot helming the big-budget Dreamgirls and, finally, both parts of the global
smash franchise The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn. What this means now is that
he can do pretty much whatever he wants, so he’s going to tackle an entirely
different sort of challenge: Wikileaks and the fate of its head whistleblower
in charge, Julian Assange. You may remember that Assange started the website as
a source for leaked diplomatic cables and messages in order to expose
corruption in world governments, a job for which he received few thank-you
notes. Negotiations are currently underway to cast James McAvoy opposite
Benedict Cumbatch (Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy), who’ll play the embattled
Assange, a man still facing prosecution by the United States. And if McAvoy
signs on he’ll star as Daniel Domscheit-Berg, whose book Inside WikiLeaks: My
Time With Julian Assange At The World’s Most Dangerous Website will serve as
one screenplay source for the DreamWorks project. No timeline is set for this
one just yet, but it’s going to have to wait until Condon is finished promoting
those sparkly vampires all over the globe. Think 2014.
Romeo San Vicente could leak all sorts of information, but it would only embarrass some A-list male celebrities whose hearts he broke back in the day.