Rachel Weisz to play Elizabeth Taylor in new biopic about her HIV work

Rachel Weisz to play Elizabeth Taylor in new biopic about her HIV work

Elizabeth Taylor on the Oprah Winfrey Show, 1992 (Photo: YouTube)

British actress Rachel Weisz has been cast to play the role of Elizabeth Taylor in an upcoming biopic of the Hollywood legend.

Variety reports that Weisz, 49, will star in A Special Relationship, penned by Slumdog Millionnaire writer Simon Beaufoy).

The film will focus on Taylor’s AIDS and HIV advocacy, as well as her relationship with personal assistant Roger Wall, a gay man who grew up in poverty in the southern US.

Taylor started to campaign to raise awareness around HIV when friends began to fall ill in the early 1980s. Actor Rock Hudson was the first major celebrity to reveal he had the disease, and Taylor publicly stood by his side as his health deteriorated.

Related: And the actor cast to play Rock Hudson in Ryan Murphy’s ‘Hollywood’ is…

The Oscar-winner went on help found amFAR in the mid-80s. She is credited with persuading Ronald Reagan to acknowledge the disease for the first time in a speech in 1987 and testified before the US Senate and House for the Ryan White Care Act.

She launched her own Elizabeth Taylor AIDS Foundation in 1991. She was honored with her third Oscar, in recognition of her humanitarian work, in 1993.

Taylor died in 2011, aged 79.

Rachel Weisz in 2018 movie, The Favourite
Rachel Weisz in 2018 movie, The Favourite

Weisz is best known for her roles in The Mummy, The Bourne Legacy, and last year’s The Favourite. She won an Oscar for her role in 2005’s The Constant Gardener, among numerous other acting awards.

The movie will be directed by female directing duo Bert&Bertie for See-Saw Films. The production company will pitch the movie to distributors at the American Film Market in Santa Monica in early November.

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Strapping Saxophonists Successfully Destroy Street Preacher’s Homophobic Vibe: WATCH

Strapping Saxophonists Successfully Destroy Street Preacher’s Homophobic Vibe: WATCH

A homophobic street preacher was offering a public sermon about how LGBTQ people are going to burn in hell this week in New York City’s Union Square when the day was saved by Augie Bello and Julian Roel, a couple of young saxophonists at The New School for Jazz, one of whom knows how to toot while riding on a Swagtron electric scooter.

The intervention was captured on film by videographer Nicolas Heller. Augie Bello, the scooter-riding lad, wrote on Instagram: “Today @roel.julian and I were hanging and we stumbled upon some homophobic guy with a mic so we played over him. Shoutout to @newyorknico for capturing this moment. And big shoutout to @swagtronofficial for the Swagcycle it really made this situation a lot better. Swipe up on my story to get one!!”

Well done, men.

The post Strapping Saxophonists Successfully Destroy Street Preacher’s Homophobic Vibe: WATCH appeared first on Towleroad Gay News.


Strapping Saxophonists Successfully Destroy Street Preacher’s Homophobic Vibe: WATCH

October 2019 – Sheffield weekend

October 2019 – Sheffield weekend

Girly Emily posted a photo:

October 2019 - Sheffield weekend

Comments always appreciated, as long as you keep it clean – I love to hear your feedback! xx

Friday night out in Sheffield with the lovely Trisha and of course my bestie Gemma!

At a club called Soyo which we enjoyed very much, and was quite different to a lot of the places we usually go. Very subdued lighting, and different music to what we normally go for, but we had a great time!

October 2019 - Sheffield weekend

“Dress well and raise gardenias” – how gay guys got by in the early ’60s

“Dress well and raise gardenias” – how gay guys got by in the early ’60s

ONE Mag Vol 12 Issue 4

Magazine cover courtesy of ONE Archives Foundation

In honor of LGBTQ History Month, we’re taking a deep dive look-back at the first gay publication in America—ONE magazine. Launched in Los Angeles in 1953, ONE was published by One, Inc., which grew from The Mattachine Society, the seminal gay-rights group founded by Harry Hay. Its editorial founders were Martin Block, Don Slater, and Dale Jennings. Produced on a shoestring and sold for 25 cents, ONE began to change the course of history with an unapologetic exploration of homosexuality and the largely unexamined societal taboo against it. 

This is the seventh in our series of ONE magazine cover stories.

Volume 12, Issue 4: On Life and Art and the Homosexual

In this lyrical and culturally scorching essay, Bob Waltrip muses on the gay man’s existential condition — which in some ways echoes the general human condition:

I have often heard the cry, “But nobody understands.” Unfortunately, this is entirely true. Dear reader, nobody — absolutely nobody — understands you, and nobody ever will. You can live with another person all your life and he still won’t completely understand you. You can talk to a psychiatrist for twenty years and even he will not entirely understand you. Your parents never understood you, your friends have never understood you, and God himself probably never fathomed your mind. In order for another person to understand you, he has to shuck off his own problems and live your life for you inside your body. This is impossible, so it is impossible for anyone else to really understand. The best thing you can do is try to understand yourself.

Waltrip is also realistic about what a gay man could expect from the majority of his neighbors and acquaintances:

After you understand yourself, accept yourself for what you are and love yourself. But never, never make the horrible mistake of trying to make the heterosexual world accept you as well. It is not yet possible to ask Mrs. Bluelip down the street to accept you as a homosexual. She will accept you on a thousand other terms — if you’re that nice Mr. Jones who raises gardenias and dresses so well. This is what you must work with — dress well, raise gardenias, and be friends with her. After you are very good friends she might come to a realization of your sexual proclivities. But I would never recommend that you come right out and tell her.

… The homosexual wages a continual battle, and wears a disguise that is only discarded during those rare moments when he is alone with another man, making love to him. Only then can he be himself. He is not a fictional character. He is not a strong character. He is an extremely frail and complicated thing called a human being. And he is also my brother. And I love him.

We wish we could show Mr. Waltrip an episode of Queer Eye, in which even the most prim neighbors understand and accept, or take him to a Pride parade where hundreds of thousands of allies march in the streets.

We think he’d be glad to see how much love there is to go around these days.

Thanks to ONE Archives Foundation for making this series possible. ONE Archives Foundation provides access to original source material at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California Libraries—the largest such collection in the world.

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