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Oscar = death? The heroes of Boys Don't Cry, Philadelphia, and Kiss of the Spider Woman won Oscars for their actors but were doomed by the final reel. Why is it that when it comes to queer characters ...


Oscar smiles on those who suffer. The Academy's 76 years of doling out nominations and gold statuettes is littered with examples of voters going gaga ga·ga  
adj. Informal
1. Silly; crazy.

2. Completely absorbed, infatuated, or excited: They were gaga over the rock group's new album.

3. Senile; doddering.
 whenever actors harness an arsenal of tics, stammers, and other agonies to play the mentally challenged, physically challenged, addicted, up-against-it types, or combinations thereof. In the 1940s classic The Lost Weekend, Ray Milland copped the Best Actor trophy for battling booze and such alcohol-fueled hallucinations Hallucinations Definition

Hallucinations are false or distorted sensory experiences that appear to be real perceptions. These sensory impressions are generated by the mind rather than by any external stimuli, and may be seen, heard, felt, and even
 as a rubber bat on strings. More recently, My Left Foot was invigorated in·vig·or·ate  
tr.v. in·vig·or·at·ed, in·vig·or·at·ing, in·vig·or·ates
To impart vigor, strength, or vitality to; animate: "A few whiffs of the raw, strong scent of phlox invigorated her" 
 by Daniel Day-Lewis's heart-wrenching triumph over cerebral palsy through writing, painting, and seducing women.

Remember Dustin Hoffman upstaging Tom Cruise's toothy grin and Armani suits by working the autistic savant shtick shtick also schtick or shtik  
n. Slang
1. A characteristic attribute, talent, or trait that is helpful in securing recognition or attention:
 in Rain Man Or how Sean Penn acted us senseless playing the lovably slow-witted hero in I Am Sam let alone the floridly bereaved father in Mystic River? Actors don't cop to it publicly, but they all know that trolling for Academy recognition demands they chew up some serious scenery in movies lop-heavy with that particular brand of strained seriousness that is considered a "credit" to the industry.

But when it comes to awarding the gold to actors playing gay and lesbian characters, Oscar history informs us that it isn't enough for a character to suffer in a bravura bra·vu·ra  
n.
1. Music
a. Brilliant technique or style in performance.

b. A piece or passage that emphasizes a performer's virtuosity.

2. A showy manner or display.

adj.
1.
 scene-grabbing style. He also must die. Watching William Hurt brilliantly swish, fantasize aloud about movies, become politicized, and lock lips with a macho political prisoner in Kiss of the Spider Woman Kiss of the Spider Woman (El beso de la mujer araña) may refer to:
  • Kiss of the Spider Woman (novel), the 1976 novel by the Argentine writer Manuel Puig
  • Kiss of the Spider Woman (film) (Portuguese: O Beijo da Mulher Aranha
, one could hear his Best Actor votes being tallied when his character lay beaten and dying. The message being that to curry Oscar favor, gay characters must pay for stealing scenes through martyrdom. More recently, Charlize Theron's out-of-nowhere brilliance in Monster demonstrates several rules of the Academy game. Oscar voters traditionally get moist whenever a dish lets her looks go, as witness Olivia de Havilland's nomination for The Snake Pit and the wins by Halle Berry in Monster's Ball, Susan Hayward in I Want to Live! and Elizabeth Taylor in Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf? among others. What's more, sexual outlaws must always get their comeuppance come·up·pance  
n.
A punishment or retribution that one deserves; one's just deserts: "It's a chance to strike back at the critical brotherhood and give each his comeuppance for evaluative sins of the past" 
 by the final reel. Take Hilary Swank grabbing the gold for playing Brandon Teena in Boys Don't Cry. Sure, Swank gave a killer performance in which she is shown hacking off her long hair, binding her breasts, shoving a dildo dil·do or dil·doe
n. pl. dil·dos or dil·does
An object that is shaped like and is used as a substitute for an erect penis.
 down her jeans, and strutting around like a studly studly - Impressive; powerful. Said of code and designs which exhibit both complexity and a virtuoso flair. Has connotations similar to hairy but is more positive in tone. Often in the emphatic "most studly" or as noun-form "studliness". "Smail 3.0's configuration parser is most studly."  redneck to wow Cloe Sevigny. But what cinched Swank's award was her transgendered character's paying for his cross-dressing role-playing by being brutalized, raped, and killed.

Similarly, Tom Hanks took home an Oscar as Philadelphia's lawyer, dying of AIDS while fighting employer and societal discrimination. As good as Hanks is, the movie was all Oscar-baiting con job. Giving Hanks the award let Academy members congratulate themselves for expressing political correctness, reward a fine actor for extreme dieting to look AIDS-ravaged, and sniffle over his death without ever once having to be grossed nut by watching him be intimate with his beloved life partner. Now, that's the kind of queer Oscar can snuggle up to.

It almost seems that if any gay character is to get Academy attention, he's got to pay for his sins. By these standards, small wonder that back in the '70s Peter Finch didn't have a prayer of winning an Oscar playing the physician in love with a bisexual lout Lout - Lout is a batch text formatting system and an embedded language by Jeffrey H. Kingston <jeff@cs.su.oz.au>. The language is procedural, with Scribe-like syntax.  in Sunday Bloody Sunday. Why? Because his character not only didn't die but also committed the cardinal sin of being successful, smart, and relatively happy. Although Ian McKellen won a nomination for Gods and Monsters for peerlessly playing dying gay film director James Whale, two things probably cost him a win--one being the movie's absence of a knockout death scene, the other being the actor's unapologetic outness. (Translation: He was just playing himself.)

The award-winning performances of Swank and Hanks stand on the shoulders of such old school Oscar-nominated queer characters as Dame Judith Anderson's housekeeper obsessed ob·sess  
v. ob·sessed, ob·sess·ing, ob·sess·es

v.tr.
To preoccupy the mind of excessively.

v.intr.
 with the lost Rebecca (she suffers death by incineration incineration

the act of burning to ashes.
 in a fire) and Clifton Webb's superbly acidic newspaper columnist in Laura (gunned down by police). In fact, George Sanders, as All About Eve's velvety vel·vet·y  
adj. vel·vet·i·er, vel·vet·i·est
1. Suggestive of the texture of velvet; soft and smooth: velvety skin.

2.
 and venomous theater critic, remains the one actor to win an Oscar playing a gay character (albeit a veiled one) who survives past the final fade-out.

Someday, Hollywood may catch up with real-world reality and start presenting gay characters as fully rounded, complex, and not necessarily issue-oriented. Someday, Oscar may have the smarts to recognize the consummate skill of a performance like Rupert Everett's in My Best Friend's Wedding. And someday too, an actor will grab an Oscar playing an unforgettable character who just happens to be gay and isn't doomed. Until then, though, apparently when it comes to Oscar, the only good gay is a dead one.

Rebello also writes for Spin, Playboy, and Hollywood Life.
COPYRIGHT 2004 Liberation Publications, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Hollywood Issue
Author:Rebello, Stephen
Publication:The Advocate (The national gay & lesbian newsmagazine)
Date:Mar 2, 2004
Words:809
Previous Article:The making of a Monster: for Charlize Theron, the love scenes with Christina Ricci were the easy part. Every other aspect of playing homeless serial...
Next Article:Gay guide to the Oscars: this year's race looks as straight as can be, but there's queerness if you dig for it.(Hollywood Issue)



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