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  • ‘We’re here, we’re queer, and we’re going to be heard’: Activists rally as Idaho lawmakers seek to challenge same-sex marriage ruling


    LGBTQ+ rights advocates protested at the Idaho State Capitol after lawmakers approved a memorial calling for the reversal of federal same-sex marriage protections.

    BOISE, Idaho — Dozens of LGBTQ+ rights advocates rallied at the Idaho State Capitol Sunday to protest a legislative petition that calls on the U.S. Supreme Court to overturn its landmark same-sex marriage ruling.

    The demonstration came four days after the House State Affairs Committee approved a memorial asking the high court to reverse its 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges decision, which legalized same-sex marriage nationwide.

    “One day, I want to marry someone that I love just as much as my counterparts,” said one of the rally organizers, Cole Lancaster. 

    Lancaster said his dreams of marriage feel increasingly threatened in his home state.

    State lawmakers backing the memorial argue that marriage regulations should be determined at the state level rather than by federal mandate.

    “I don’t think marriage is a fundamental right,” said Heather Scott, the petition’s sponsor. “It’s not the federal government’s job to figure out what’s going on in Idaho.”

    Scott said the goal isn’t to take away rights but rather to transfer conversations like same-sex marriage to the state level so Idaho lawmakers can decide for themselves. 

    “What we’re encouraging is that these discussions happen within the state, with our local people, instead of through the federal government,” Scott said. 

    But protesters expressed deep skepticism about putting their marriage rights in the hands of state legislators. Many wrote letters to lawmakers explaining what their marriages and equal rights meant to them personally.

    “Our marriages don’t affect anyone else,” Lancaster said. “We’re here, we’re queer, and we’re going to be heard, and we’re not going anywhere.”

    Protesters vowed to continue fighting against the memorial and any other attempts to roll back marriage equality.

    “We’re telling people in the Capitol building that we don’t want this initiative to continue any further,” Lancaster said. 



    In a recent move that has sparked outrage among the LGBTQ+ community, lawmakers in Idaho have introduced a bill that aims to challenge the legality of same-sex marriage in the state. In response, activists have come together to rally under the banner of “We’re here, we’re queer, and we’re going to be heard.”

    The proposed bill, known as HB 396, seeks to nullify the 2014 federal court ruling that legalized same-sex marriage in Idaho. This move has been met with fierce opposition from advocates of LGBTQ+ rights, who see it as a blatant attack on the progress that has been made in achieving marriage equality.

    “We will not stand idly by while our hard-fought rights are threatened,” said one activist at the rally. “We have come too far to allow discriminatory legislation to turn back the clock on marriage equality.”

    The rally, which drew a large crowd of supporters, featured speeches from community leaders, allies, and individuals directly impacted by the potential repeal of same-sex marriage rights. Chants of “Love is love” and “Equality for all” echoed through the streets as demonstrators made their voices heard.

    As the fight for LGBTQ+ rights continues, activists are determined to stand firm in their commitment to equality and justice. “We will not be silenced,” declared one speaker. “We will continue to fight for our rights, our love, and our families. We’re here, we’re queer, and we’re going to be heard.”

    Tags:

    • LGBTQ rights
    • Same-sex marriage
    • Idaho activists
    • Marriage equality
    • LGBTQ community
    • LGBTQ activism
    • Idaho lawmakers
    • Marriage equality ruling
    • LGBTQ rights rally
    • LGBTQ rights activism

    #queer #heard #Activists #rally #Idaho #lawmakers #seek #challenge #samesex #marriage #ruling

  • Sundance 2025 features uncharted queer territory and reimagined LGBTQ classics


    The 41st annual Sundance Film Festival kicks off Thursday in Park City, Utah, with a heady slate of 90 feature-length films from around the globe. Each film will also screen in nearby Salt Lake City at least once during the festival, which runs through Feb. 2.

    Long at the forefront of breaking the best and most daring in LGBTQ cinema, Sundance will bring the goods again, with 15 dramatic and documentary features on the exciting and largely upbeat roster. 

    “The list is really celebratory,” Sundance programmer Ash Hoyle said. “Sometimes the queer community, we’re so good at looking at and documenting our own histories and our own struggles — and that’s certainly at play with a lot of these, as well — but the tone this year is overwhelmingly really optimistic and really celebratory.”

    Jennifer Lopez stars alongside Diego Luna in an extravagant musical remake of the 1985 queer classic “Kiss of the Spider Woman,” while Bowen Yang co-stars with Lily Gladstone in a reimagining of the 1993 gay favorite “The Wedding Banquet.”

    A host of returning Sundance directors and LGBTQ audience favorites will also premiere their latest works, including Ira Sachs (“Peter Hujar’s Day”), Zackary Drucker (“Enigma”) and Elegance Bratton (“Move Ya Body: The Birth of House”).

    Last year’s Sundance Film Festival premiered several of the year’s most acclaimed LGBTQ titles, including Jane Schoenbrun’s “I Saw the TV Glow,” which recently picked up nine Dorian Award nominations from GALECA, the Society of LGBTQ+ Entertainment Critics. 

    “I think this shows how audiences are craving something different and films that are in breaking the mold and filmmakers like Jane who are willing to take risks in their work,” said Sundance’s director of programming, Kim Yutani. 

    Fortunately for those who can’t attend the festival, more than half of this year’s LGBTQ titles will also be available for ticketed online screening starting Jan. 30. 

    Here are the LGBTQ features that will premiere this year:

    Olivia Coleman and John Lithgow
    Olivia Coleman and John Lithgow in “Jimpa” by Sophie Hyde.Mark De Blok / Sundance Institute

    “We’re starting off the festival on Day One with Sophie Hyde’s latest film,” Yutani said. “She’s had many films at the festival — most recently ‘Good Luck to You, Leo Grande’ — but this feels like her most personal film as she looks at intergenerational relationships, with a character who is a filmmaker played by Olivia Colman. Sophie’s own child, Aud Mason-Hyde, is one of the main actors, which adds another layer of things as a close personal story. It’s a really fun film — it’s set in Amsterdam; it’s John Lithgow as you’ve never seen him before.”

    Chase Strangio
    Chase Strangio in “Heightened Scrutiny” by Sam Feder.Courtesy Sundance Institute

    “Particularly exciting is Sam Feder’s new film that follows Chase Strangio, the ACLU lawyer who went to the Supreme Court for litigation this year,” Hoyle said. “It’s just one of many really prescient, urgent films that are in the festival this year. Really grateful for Sam’s voice in the program and being able to really meet the moment that we’re in in the U.S. this year.”

    Dylan O'Brien and James Sweeney
    Dylan O’Brien and James Sweeney in “Twinless” by James Sweeney.Greg Cotten / Sundance Institute

    “This one is definitely one that’s already sort of buzzing around and people are going to be really excited by,” Hoyle said of the film about two young men who meet in a twin bereavement group and form an unlikely bromance. “Talk about daring — this is a film about messy dark queerness, with a really interesting angle. It’s funny, it’s sexy, and it’s actually one of a great number of films in U.S. Dramatic Competition this year that are written, directed and starred in by a singular voice, James Sweeney.” (available online)

    the wedding banquet Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone, Han Gi-Chan, Bowen Yang
    Kelly Marie Tran, Lily Gladstone, Han Gi-Chan and Bowen Yang in “The Wedding Banquet” by Andrew Ahn.Luka Cyprian / Sundance Institute

    “This one has all the right elements, like the fun, starry cast [including Yang and Gladstone] and direction by Andrew Ahn — who made the beloved ‘Spa Night’ and ‘Fire Island,’ of course — and he co-wrote the script with James Schamus, who was the writer of the original ‘Wedding Banquet,’” said Yutani. “It’s not a direct remake, but rather it uses the Ang Lee film as more of a launchpad to tell its own story.”

    Tonatiuh and Diego Luna
    Tonatiuh and Diego Luna in “Kiss of the Spider Woman” by Bill Condon.Courtesy Sundance Institute

    Already a 1985 queer film classic and a 1993 Tony-sweeping musical, “Kiss of the Spider Woman” is reimagined here as a movie musical by director Bill Condon (“Dreamgirls,” “Gods and Monsters”) with stars Lopez and Luna. “This film has such amazing performances and old-school Hollywood grandeur. We couldn’t be happier that this, too, will be one of the buzziest titles at the festival.”

    Vince Lawrence and Jesse Saunders
    Vince Lawrence and Jesse Saunders in “Move Ya Body: The Birth of House” by Elegance Bratton.Vince Lawrence / Sundance Institute

    “This doc by Elegance Bratton looks at the history of house music and its birthplace in Chicago and of course the queer Black community from which the scene erupted,” Hoyle said. “This film has an amazing cast of characters, folks who really touched and started the scene. And it’s really insightful around how some of the history of race in the city and gender politics played into the evolution of house music and which communities have taken it forward and of course gotten credit and financial success from it.”

    Amanda Lear
    Amanda Lear in “Enigma” by Zackary Drucker.Lys Arango / Sundance Institute

    This documentary feature from Zackary Drucker, who co-directed 2023’s “The Stroll,” explores the lives of two legendary transgender women: English model April Ashley and French singer Amanda Lear. “This is a really fun title that looks at two divergent lives and how they explore and foil one another in terms of how a person navigates queer community,” said Hoyle, who added that the film is a “fascinating story and a rich look at trans history.”

    Nina Rask and Magnus Juhl Andersen
    Nina Rask and Magnus Juhl Andersen in “Sauna” by Mathias Broe.Christian Geisnæs / Sundance Institute

    Hoyle said this narrative feature “feels so nuanced to a degree that it’s really not anything I’ve seen before. It explores gay male affinity spaces and how trans men do and don’t fit into those. It’s also a romantic love story, but it doesn’t shy away from the parts of love and infatuation that are really approximate to jealousy and to competition. As we hear more and more conversation around belonging and inclusivity, this is a film that is really complicating ‘What exactly does that mean? What does that look like? Where is that easy, and where is it really hard?’”

    Ben Whishaw
    Ben Whishaw in “Peter Hujar’s Day” by Ira Sachs.Courtesy Sundance Institute

    “Ira Sachs [‘Keep the Lights On,’ ‘Passages’] is one of the filmmakers who has played Sundance the most, if not the most,” Yutani said. “This one we were attracted to because it is so different from his other work. I think one of the exciting things about Ira is just how he continues to challenge himself and to work in almost different forms. This is an adaptation of an interview with the artist Peter Hujar, and it’s basically a monologue that Ben Whishaw delivers so exquisitely. This is just a special film that transports you to a different time, a different place, a specific place, and it’s just made with such a delicate touch.”

    Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley
    Andrea Gibson and Megan Falley in “Come See Me in the Good Light” by Ryan White.Brandon Somerhalder / Sundance Institute

    “This film is a gut punch,” Hoyle said. “It’s a beautiful portrait of the poet laureate of Colorado, Andrea Gibson, who’s a real talent and who’s navigating a really difficult cancer diagnosis with their girlfriend. It’s a beautiful portrait of their relationship and their sort of loving intellectual approach to the process of dying. And then, of course, it’s interwoven with their poetry, which is just relentlessly moving. This is not one to miss, but not one to attend without a full packet of Kleenex.”

    Sally Ride
    Sally Ride, the subject of “Sally” by Cristina Costantini.NASA via Sundance Institute

    This documentary about the life of astronaut Sally Ride “really has everything,” Hoyle said. “It’s got a queer love story, it has an analysis of the implications, and it’s a great way to track the way that being out has changed in the public eye over the years since Sally Ride’s career. It’s also a really incisive look at the culture at NASA, both around queer staff and female staff, in a way that’s just really, really eye-opening. We have here such a triumphant look at our own space program but especially at this time, when we’re seeing gender politics play out in that space so loudly.” 

    Bhushaan Manoj and Suraaj Suman
    Bhushaan Manoj and Suraaj Suman in “Sabar Bonda” (“Cactus Pears”) by Rohan Parashuram Kanawade.Vikas Urs / Sundance Institute

    “This is a semi-autobiographical film about a young man who goes back to his hometown in India and is struggling to be true to his own identity with his family,” Yutani said. “The kind of pastoral gay story that it’s telling is a really special one. It’s probably one of the more explicit gay films I’ve seen out of India, too.”

    A still from "GEN_" by Gianluca Matarrese.
    A still from “GEN_” by Gianluca Matarrese.Bellota Films/Stemal Entertainment/Elefants Films/Sundance Institute

    This documentary feature “focuses on a doctor in Milan, Dr. Bini, and we have a very intimate look at how he communicates with his patients, quite a few of whom are dealing with their gender identity,” Yutani said. “If this film offers anything, it’s offering optimism and what medical treatment for all people could be. And it is truly extraordinary to see this doctor at work.”

    Tom Blyth and Russell Tovey
    Tom Blyth and Russell Tovey in “Plainclothes” by Carmen Emmi.Ethan Palmer / Sundance Institute

    “This is a period piece about the ’90s, a fun look back into very recent history about a plainclothes police officer who’s entrapping gay men in mall bathrooms and then ends up having an exploration of his own sexuality through the role play that he’s engaging in,” Hoyle said. “One of the things we responded to about this film is just how exquisitely it’s made. We were so excited to see a first-time filmmaker executing technically at the level that Carmen [Emmi] is in a first feature. It’s just beautifully made, really precise and really interesting narrative terrain.”

    Santiago Pineda and Sofía Buenaventura
    Santiago Pineda and Sofía Buenaventura in “Rains Over Babel” by Gala del Sol.Sten Tadashi Olson / Sundance Institute

    This feature film from Colombia is centered on a group of misfits who hang out a dive bar that doubles as purgatory, according to the film’s description on Sundance’s website. Yutani described it as a “very attractive film with kind of this weird goth punk feel to it” and said it “completely builds its own landscape that is just totally unique.”



    The Sundance Film Festival has always been a platform for groundbreaking and innovative cinema, and in 2025, it is pushing boundaries even further with a lineup that explores uncharted queer territory and reimagines LGBTQ classics.

    From bold new voices in the queer filmmaking community to fresh takes on beloved LGBTQ stories, Sundance 2025 promises to be a celebration of diversity, representation, and creativity.

    Highlights of the festival include a reimagining of the classic film “Brokeback Mountain” from a trans perspective, a documentary exploring the intersection of queerness and disability, and a coming-of-age story about a young non-binary person navigating love and identity.

    Sundance 2025 is a festival that is not afraid to challenge norms, break stereotypes, and showcase the full spectrum of queer experiences. Get ready to be inspired, moved, and transformed by the powerful storytelling on display at this year’s festival.

    Tags:

    1. Sundance 2025
    2. LGBTQ classics
    3. Queer cinema
    4. Sundance Film Festival
    5. LGBTQ representation
    6. Queer storytelling
    7. LGBTQ films
    8. Sundance 2025 lineup
    9. LGBTQ diversity
    10. Queer cinema trends

    #Sundance #features #uncharted #queer #territory #reimagined #LGBTQ #classics

  • 100 Queer Poems, Like New Used, Free shipping in the US



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  • Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo on Wicked Oscar Buzz, Queer Glinda and Part 2

    Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo on Wicked Oscar Buzz, Queer Glinda and Part 2


    Seeing Cynthia Erivo and Ariana Grande in action is a remarkable study in contrasts. Even after months of their omnipresence on social media and TV screens — as fans have consumed every morsel of the ongoing press tour for their film “Wicked,” in which tears have been shed (and shed, and shed!) — it’s hard not to be mesmerized as the London-born theater actor and the Boca Raton-born pop singer, newly minted co-stars, pose for photographs in a New York City studio in early December. Erivo is stoic, silent, channeling the power of her character Elphaba, though once she’s off-camera she lets loose watching her director Jon M. Chu take solo shots: “Give me Calvin Klein, Jon!” she shouts. “C’mon, profile! Work!” And on cue, Chu grows half an inch taller, straightening his spine and adjusting the tilt of his chin.  

    Grande, on the other hand, seems never to stop singing, harmonizing to a playlist that ranges from Whitney Houston’s “Higher Love” to Mariah Carey’s “Always Be My Baby” in a voice that sounds subtly different from the one that made “Thank U, Next” and “God Is a Woman” into pop sensations. Like her character Galinda, she sings in an operatic tone, with consonants more sharply drawn than they’d be on a Grande album.

    The Tyler Twins for Variety

    Speaking later with a puffer jacket on to fight the chill of our room and a big iced coffee in hand, Grande reflects on her new voice — a sign that though production may have wrapped, she’s still in Oz.  

    “Maybe people underestimate how long we spent finding and disappearing into these women,” Grande says. “So when certain inflections or mannerisms take time to melt away, sometimes people poke fun. But we had a job to do, and we had things to get lost in — because that’s what the piece required.”  

    It’s hard not to be struck, in Grande’s speaking voice as well, by a new quality that feels very old-school: the swaggering crispness of a 1940s movie idol. “I think that might stay,” she says of her newfound enunciation. “Galinda required a lot of vocal work for me. Certain things maybe won’t melt away. Some will, but I’m really grateful for the pieces that will stay with us forever. What a beautiful thing to be left with, and to feel the ghost of every day.” She takes a long pause. “And, you know, I’m still looking for my eyebrows.” (Grande has cycled through looks as she’s reinvented herself throughout her career, and these days, her daintily shaped, honey-blond eyebrows are still in their Galinda era.) “I’ll let you know if I find them — I hope I don’t.” 

    And if the “Wicked” takeover of popular culture has made anything clear, it’s likely she’ll keep searching. For Grande, Erivo and Chu haven’t yet left Oz — and neither have any of us. With $600 million and counting at the global box office, four Golden Globe nominations, a path to potential Oscar glory and a sequel, “Wicked: For Good,” looming on the horizon, “Wicked” has done for its witchy shade of green what “Barbie” did for Mattel stiletto pink. It’s leveraged a familiar property, put it in front of underserved female audiences and watched as the world discovered its story in a whole new light.  

    It’s a remarkable, and somewhat surprising, cherry on top of the decades’ worth of success of the Broadway production. Adapted from Gregory Maguire’s novel about the untold backstory of “The Wizard of Oz”’s villainous Wicked Witch of the West (recast here as Elphaba, a pure-hearted social outcast who makes an easy scapegoat for the fascistic Wizard), “Wicked,” a collaboration between producer Marc Platt, composer Stephen Schwartz and writer Winnie Holzman, was first performed on Broadway in 2003. But after the show became bigger than “Cats” for a new generation of fans, Platt felt trepidation about bringing it to the screen (even though he’d held the film rights to the novel before Schwartz had written a note).  

    The moment had never quite been right: Once the stage show took off, Platt says, “I knew the bar would be extremely high. I wanted to have the confidence that it would be as terrific as it could be, and I found that slightly daunting.” 

    The hiring of Chu — best known for directing “Crazy Rich Asians” and the film musical “In the Heights,” which had the misfortune of seeing its 2021 theatrical release wiped out by moviegoers’ changed habits in the wake of peak COVID — opened the world up. “He has an intuition that is very musical — how he moves the camera and how his films flow, and that’s something you can’t teach,” Platt says. 

    The Tyler Twins for Variety

    But at the heart of “Wicked”’s success, too, is one extraordinary partnership, one that was cemented before filming together even began.  

    And now that legions of fans have gotten to see the film, Grande and Erivo are feeling liberated, ready to answer the remaining burning questions about the production. “Now that it’s the world’s, it feels like there’s so much more to talk about,” Grande says.  

    Take the tabloid rumor that Grande got paid more than Erivo — much more. Not so. 

    “We went through our contracts together,” Grande says, “and called each other up. ‘Did you see that? What do you think about that? Let’s get it together!’” 

    Universal Pictures, which distributed “Wicked,” made the unusual decision of issuing a statement in November to clarify that the actors received equal pay for the films. “This is a modern production,” Chu elaborates, sitting next to Grande and Erivo in a stylish black suit. “This is what Hollywood should reflect. These are co-CEOs of ‘Wicked,’ Inc.” 

    “We both went through it — ‘What number are we doing? How do you feel about that?’ We were really fucking honest,” Erivo says. “And that’s really rare. People don’t do that.”  

    “We’re very different, but when we’re doing something like this together, her needs become my needs,” Grande says.  

    Erivo, not breaking Grande’s gaze, replies, “And her needs become mine.” 


    They’ve leaned on each other a great deal: Since the lengthy production of both halves of the “Wicked” story in 2023, Erivo and Grande have crisscrossed the globe to discuss their characters’ journeys. The sobbing in some of the interviews has left spectators a bit astounded. Are the pair taking care of themselves? 

    “We are,” Grande says. “I feel so grateful and proud of how present we’ve been able to be. A lot of people have come up to us and been like, ‘How you holding up?’ with a long face. And we’ve just peeked at each other and been like, we’re grateful and floating.” 

    “We had a good time,” Erivo adds. 

    And yet, the tears return today. As Grande is talking about how she and Erivo have been supporting each other, her eyes start to water.  

    The Tyler Twins for Variety

    Suddenly, her voice becomes that Galinda singsong as she trills out, “But I won’t get emotional!” She taps the bridge of her nose, murmuring in frustration, “Oh my God, stop it!” before allowing her voice to crack. “The most special stuff is unseen,” she concludes. “We can giggle at it all we want, because we’re quite funny. I’ve watched and had a giggle. But it is really a privilege to work and feel this way, not just as an actress in a movie but as a human being with other human beings who care — yes, about the work, but about each other.” Her eyes glint with tears, and — in Grande’s presence, as opposed to watching a junket interview sent around as a meme — there’s a startling quality to just how emotionally open she’s become.  

    Her tone has grown rushed — and it’s proof positive she’s stuck with the Galinda voice, because she’s speaking in it even as she’s beginning to lose control. Chu swoops in to finish her thought. “I think we needed this movie as much as the world needs this movie,” he says. 

    No kidding. For Chu, the project represents the break of a lifetime, the opportunity for the film-buff son of immigrant parents to make his own elaborate saga and, eventually, to meet a hero or two. “It’s a very lonely job, being a director,” he says. “But I’ve been getting so many beautiful calls from other directors — I’ve never gotten that kind of outreach.” Particularly head-spinning for a filmmaker who grew up addicted to “Star Wars” was a recent FaceTime with George Lucas. “He was like, ‘I know how hard it is to do all those elements. We should spend some time together.’ I’m like, ‘Yes, what’s your address?!’”  

    “I’m outside, actually!” Grande teases. For her, too, “Wicked” is a meet-your-idols moment; she first saw the stage show as a child with the original cast of Idina Menzel as Elphaba and Kristin Chenoweth as Galinda (both make cameos in the film). And for Erivo, Elphaba represented a sort of overcoming. Erivo found the Ozdust Ballroom sequence, in which Elphaba walks into a party only to realize that she is being mocked and treated as a pariah, especially cathartic. “I was talking to a friend earlier this week,” she says, “and he was like, ‘I just want to confirm for you that you were bullied.’ This moment gave me the opportunity to revisit, process, feel it again and share it.”  

    Later in our conversation, Grande brings the sequence up again, when describing the film-opening flash-forward sequence in which Galinda, now reigning as Glinda the Good Witch, sets fire to an effigy of Elphaba. “Much like how hard the Ozdust felt for you, that’s how it felt to light you on fire a million times in a row!” The sequence was shot after “For Good,” the fan-favorite song that closes the sequel and gives it its name. In it, Elphaba and Galinda profess their undying friendship; suffice it to say that Grande found the notion of treating her co-star with violent hostility an acting challenge. She now says the only thing that got her through lighting Elphaba up, time and again, was Chu’s whispered encouragement to “be strong.” 

    “We were really in it,” Grande says, “and really lost in the sauce.”  


    “Wicked” lands, accidentally, at a moment in which its themes of female collaboration against tyranny take on a certain resonance. This is perhaps nothing new for the story: Maguire’s 1995 novel was inspired by the author’s perception of media propaganda during the first Gulf War, and the 2003 stage musical was read by some as a broadside against George W. Bush during that war’s sequel. The Wizard (played here by Jeff Goldblum), unable to convince Elphaba to aid him in his scheme to enslave Oz’s animals, instead paints her as a villain to the credulous townspeople.  

    “When Winnie and I started writing the show,” Schwartz says, “some of the Wizard was based on Bill Clinton. And by the time the show opened, we had the Iraq War, sold to the public through false information. I guess if musical theater had an impact on the world, we’d live in a better world. The political themes are unfortunately more relevant.” 

    After all, we’re living in the wake of Donald Trump’s second election as president, and the film that’s captured the zeitgeist is all about … “dictatorship,” Grande says with a mordant chuckle.  

    Real-world political turmoil and “Wicked” seem to go together as well as, well, green and pink. “When ‘Wicked’ first came out on Broadway, I remember the people in my life having that exact discussion,” Grande continues, reflecting on Elphaba and Galinda’s unlikely, and politically instructive, friendship. “It’s time for people to say, ‘Oh, how can I be a better ally?’ Because that’s how we’ve always survived. We’ve always been able to survive with those friendships and those allies.”  

    The Tyler Twins for Variety

    All of which makes clear why the blockbuster story of a green-skinned witch has earned the unlikely label of most politically charged film in the Oscar race. “The thing that keeps coming back to me is how much people need it,” Erivo says. “It gives people the permission to think of themselves as people that can help. It might not be easy, but it isn’t impossible. That’s the sort of thing that permeates.”  

    And while the film may not literally be a re­sponse to the 2024 election, it’s informed by the theme of living in unsettled times. “When we were filming, it was happening — the uneasy feeling of change,” Chu says about conceiving the movie during the early days of COVID. “Once you know the truth, who do you become after that? Are you willing to sacrifice your privilege to protect someone else?” “Wicked”’s answer — at least so far — isn’t hopeful on a societal level: The people of Oz are easily swayed by propaganda and untruths. But it suggests that individuals have the power to create change too.  

    And Erivo’s casting represents its own kind of change. On the stage, only one Black woman has played Elphaba — Alexia Khadime, in the London production from 2008 to 2010 and again in a run that continues to this day. “I knew there was a long line of history behind me, and you take the responsibility on and you have to let it go,” Erivo says. “My responsibility is to hold that, see it, understand it, respect it and then create my own. If I’m trying to do something that came before, then I’m not in the room.” 


    Given that “Wicked” has been playing on Broadway for more than two decades, its every note is by now well known to devotees who’ve spent that time re-listening to the original cast recording. Which meant that a careful balance was needed between honoring what had come before and reinvention. Recording “Defying Gravity” for a track to use during rehearsals, Erivo first mimicked original Broadway cast member Idina Menzel’s version of “the battle cry.” (Transcribed, it looks like “ah-AHHH-ahhh!”)

    She recalls that Schwartz and musical director Stephen Oremus said to her, “Well done. Now, what’s yours?” 

    “I kept trying something, and eventually, something felt like me,” she says. “What’s the guttural cry that I would make? That was the thing that came out.” Erivo’s version is shot through with a deeper pain than the original, and it hits a few more notes on its way to completion. It’s cinematic — fittingly so.  

    “You say you kept trying,” Grande jumps in. “But I was there, and I think it was maybe the second or third time.” She laughs, but then shifts on a dime to Broadway-ballad earnestness. “It was right under the surface, waiting to come out. You just needed that green light. You didn’t keep trying. No, that was yours.” 

    Though Grande and Erivo play bitter rivals — at least at first, as Grande’s hyperbolic mean girl and Erivo’s lonely outcast butt heads as college roommates before teaming up — they were united in the goal of making “Wicked” their own. Erivo put her stamp on “Defying Gravity”; for Grande’s big solo number, “Popular,” the pop singer resisted calls to make it too commercial.

    “In the original rehearsal track, they had hip-hop drums,” Grande says, clarifying that it wasn’t meant to make “Popular” sound like an Ariana Grande album track, exactly — it was just meant to modernize the song. “I wanted to lovingly and respectfully say, ‘Absolutely not!’ Thinking through the lens of the character — Galinda Upland does not have that bounce to her at all. She’s as vanilla as they come.” 

    The Tyler Twins for Variety

    Grande heard the updated track upon arriving in London in the fall of 2022 to start rehearsals. “I called Jon first. I was shaking. Is this something that we can meet in the middle on?” she says. “And of course, it was so understood. And that’s what happens when you have a team who loves and respects each other and can hear those truths, because nothing has to be withheld.”  

    However, Grande, a gay icon since she broke out as a pop star, embroidered an element onto the story that isn’t in the text; she’s said that she thinks Galinda is a bit queer. Asked to elaborate, she explains: “I think she’s a person who loves so much, and I do think that it goes beyond gender, and I think that’s a common theme in Oz. I also think that the ways in which she loves Elphaba so much, and that forgiveness and that unconditional love that they share — I think they’re in love with each other. I know, yes, it’s platonic …” She cuts herself off before she can say too much; this many press engagements in, she knows the game. “But we’ll talk about it more in depth in movie two.” 


    Before then, there are the Oscars, in which Chu, Grande and Erivo are all formidable contenders. (Platt, in conversation, notes that “Wicked” lost a hard-fought campaign for the best musical Tony to “Avenue Q”: “Everyone says it’s going to win the Tony; it didn’t, and it’s still the most beautiful experience.”) 

    “I never really know how to respond when the question of awards comes up. It’s not my raison d’être,” Erivo says. Then again, she’s already won a Grammy, an Emmy and a Tony for her role as Celie in the 2015 revival of “The Color Purple” — making her just an Oscar shy of EGOT status. “Do awards help for getting some space to create more? Yes, but what else can we do? I just want to continue making fucking fabulous work and widening the aperture on what’s possible for women who look like me in film.” (A recently announced first-look deal between Universal and Erivo’s production shingle,
    Edith’s Daughter, will likely help her do just that.) 

    “Maybe it can be fruitful beyond making a movie — maybe it can actually be fruitful for our lives,” Erivo goes on. “Why not more?” 

    “Indeed,” Grande adds. “And I can’t wait to be in the audience for all of it. But you, Miss Elphaba, deserve your flowers, and I can’t wait to hold your train as you get that EGOT — and your gummy vitamins, and your thermos.” (The always-equipped Erivo, caring for a voice that can reach the back row of a Broadway house, does not travel light.)  

    The original “Wicked” put forward both of its actresses as leads for the Tonys; Menzel, playing Elphaba, won the prize. For the film, Grande is running in the supporting actress category. “I’m just honored to have been that support for Cynthia’s performance, and to be able to be a part of this,” she says. “That’s how I feel.” She turns to address Erivo. “The supporting character, actor, friend, sister to what you have done in this film, which is otherworldly.”  

    Erivo returns the compliment, naturally. “I will raise hell if this lady does not get her nomination. It’s a really fucking hard job to jump into the middle of something like this and have it be your first time.” 

    Grande’s voice has an extra Galindan quiver; her lip twitches slightly. “That’s very kind.” 

    “Lucille Ball: She’s the return of that,” Erivo says. “And it made her heart happy to do this, which makes me happy.”  

    “I love you,” Grande murmurs. “That’s very kind.” 

    Regardless of what happens in March, all parties have seen their careers changed, well, for good: Erivo, an Oscar nominee for 2019’s “Harriet,” is now a box office star, while Grande has established herself outside the recording industry. And Chu looks likely to become an even more in-demand director; in fact, two forthcoming projects — adaptations of the musical “Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat” and Britney Spears’ memoir “The Woman in Me” — have been announced. “I sort of wait until someone tells me it’s time to be made,” he says of those films. “There is an urgency in both, but I’ve got to focus in on movie two.”  

    It’s no secret that the back half of “Wicked” is knottier, darker and far more complicated. “It gets messy,” Chu says. Will audiences, accustomed to the candy-coated brightness of “Popular” and “Dancing Through Life,” come along? “I think if they’re following the emotions of this movie,” he says, “they’ll walk with us.”  

    One element fans of the franchise are likely anticipating today as avidly as they awaited Erivo’s barn-burning “Defying Gravity” this time last year? “For Good,” in which the briefly reunited witches sing of what each has meant to the other.  

    “The scene that leads up to it — and afterwards — is quite a meal,” says Grande, measuring her words carefully to avoid spoilers. “I do remember, at a point, leaving my body and hovering for, like, the whole week.”  

    “That was …,” Erivo says, trailing off. There are months of promotional obligations to go, and then next year, she’ll be able to discuss “For Good” in detail. For now, all she can share is a memory. “That was a lot.”  


    Cynthia Erivo: Styling: Jason Bolden; Makeup: Joanna Simkin/The Wall Group; Dress: Carolina Herrera: Ariana Grande: Styling: Mimi Cuttrell/A Frame Agency; Makeup: Michael Anthony/Opus Beauty; Hair: Gabor Kerekes; Dress: Christian Dior; Jon Chu: Styling: Liat Baruch; Hair: Eleazar Baltazar; Grooming: Su Han Naeem



    Exciting news in the world of entertainment! Ariana Grande and Cynthia Erivo are generating major Oscar buzz for their roles in the upcoming film adaptation of the hit Broadway musical “Wicked.” Grande is set to play the iconic role of Glinda the Good Witch, while Erivo will take on the role of Elphaba, the misunderstood Wicked Witch of the West.

    Fans of the musical are thrilled to see these two powerhouse performers take on these beloved roles, and early buzz suggests that they could be contenders for Oscars come awards season.

    But that’s not all – rumors are swirling that the film will explore a queer relationship between Glinda and Elphaba, adding a fresh and modern twist to the classic story. This development has sparked excitement and anticipation among LGBTQ+ audiences who are eager to see more representation on the big screen.

    Additionally, there are whispers of a possible “Wicked” sequel in the works, which would continue the story of Glinda and Elphaba beyond the events of the original musical. This news has fans speculating about what new adventures and challenges the witches could face in a potential second installment.

    As we eagerly await more updates on the “Wicked” film adaptation, one thing is for sure – Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, and the rest of the cast are sure to dazzle audiences with their incredible talent and bring this beloved musical to life in a whole new way. Stay tuned for more “Wicked” updates and get ready to be spellbound by this magical film!

    Tags:

    Ariana Grande, Cynthia Erivo, Wicked Oscar Buzz, Queer Glinda, Part 2, Broadway news, musical theater, LGBTQ representation in entertainment, celebrity interviews, Oscars speculation

    #Ariana #Grande #Cynthia #Erivo #Wicked #Oscar #Buzz #Queer #Glinda #Part

  • Joe Burrow’s ‘Friend’ Olivia Ponton Accused Of ‘Queer Baiting’

    Joe Burrow’s ‘Friend’ Olivia Ponton Accused Of ‘Queer Baiting’


    Is Joe Burrow‘s new ‘friend’ Olivia Ponton really into being a lesbian (sometimes) or is she cosplaying? 

    That’s the charge being leveled against the Victoria’s Secret model by her fans, who were under the impression that the 22-year-old supermodel swung more from the lesbian side of the plate. 

    In her latest Instagram post where she claims that “outfits, food, work [and] painting,” are the things that make her happy, Ponton, who proudly flies the rainbow flag on her social media page, was confronted over the news that she’s a friend of Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow and just happened to be watching Burrow’s house two weeks ago while he was off playing a football game. 

    In 2021, Ponton told the world that she was bisexual, but then, there was a pivot and, as of 2023, she identified as pansexual, which means she’s attracted to ALL genders and sexual identity. 

    Blah, blah, blah.  

    The lesbians are worried that Ponton is “queer baiting” them. 

    “So Olivia I really have to ask something and answer any way you see fit cause I truly don’t mean any harm or ill will when I say this,” Instagram user Tamar Greene, who calls herself, “Your girlfriend’s favorite lesbian,” wrote on the social media platform

    “I am just having a hard time with you claiming to be a queer icon and being so out and proud as a queer woman and then popping out with a man. You have on more than one occasion said you are lesbian (you have also said you’re pan so completely understandable) and that you don’t date men,” Greene continued.

    “I understand totally if you are still figuring yourself out and I know that sexuality is fluid so if that’s the case rock on. But I can’t help to feel like this is also another sad instance of queer baiting. Regardless, I wish you nothing but love and positivity on this journey “

    Are Joe Burrow and Olivia Ponton just friends, or is the gunslinger capable of turning the pansexual into a heterosexual?

    The consensus among those who believe Ponton is queer baiting them after the Burrow news dropped also believe Ponton’s relationship with a woman named Kai Novak was just window dressing. 

    “I think those that have been following knew this the whole time. kai was for clout / being able to put the rainbow up,” one Instagram analyst wrote. 

    “She’s not attracted to men or women. She’s attracted to attention,” wrote another. 

    Is Joe Burrow capable of stealing one of the lesbian community’s top stars? Will the lesbians be forced to root against Burrow because he’s swooped in and stolen one of their heartthrobs? 

    BUCKLE UP! 





    Recently, social media star Olivia Ponton, who is known for her close friendship with NFL quarterback Joe Burrow, has come under fire for allegedly “queer baiting” on her platforms. Queer baiting is a term used to describe when someone hints at being queer or LGBTQ+ in order to gain attention or followers, without actually identifying as such.

    Many fans have pointed out that Olivia Ponton has posted several suggestive photos and videos with Joe Burrow, leading some to believe that they may be in a romantic relationship. However, neither Ponton nor Burrow have confirmed any romantic involvement.

    Critics have accused Ponton of using her friendship with Burrow to attract a larger following and increase her popularity, without being genuine about her sexual orientation. This has sparked a debate among fans and followers of both Ponton and Burrow, with some calling for more transparency and authenticity from influencers on social media.

    As the controversy continues to unfold, it remains to be seen how Olivia Ponton and Joe Burrow will respond to these allegations of queer baiting. Stay tuned for updates on this developing story.

    Tags:

    1. Joe Burrow
    2. Olivia Ponton
    3. Friend
    4. Queer baiting
    5. LGBTQ+
    6. Social media controversy
    7. Influencers
    8. Allegations
    9. Public relations
    10. Online backlash

    #Joe #Burrows #Friend #Olivia #Ponton #Accused #Queer #Baiting

  • Rainbow and Black Acrylic Bead Bracelet – LGBT Pride LGBTQ Gay Lesbian Bi Trans Queer – 7 inches

    Rainbow and Black Acrylic Bead Bracelet – LGBT Pride LGBTQ Gay Lesbian Bi Trans Queer – 7 inches


    Price: $9.99
    (as of Dec 13,2024 00:00:05 UTC – Details)



    Show off your pride and your support for the LGBTQ community! Our bracelets are handmade with love, and make a thoughtful gift suitable for many occasions.
    Package Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4.25 x 3.82 x 0.16 inches; 0.21 ounces
    Department ‏ : ‎ unisex-adult
    Date First Available ‏ : ‎ May 2, 2019
    ASIN ‏ : ‎ B07RD115CP

    Promote awareness, understanding and support for the LGBTQ community, and inspire yourself or others!
    An acrylic bead bracelet with 6mm round beads in the LGB rainbow colors – red, orange yellow, green, blue and purple, surrounded by black beads.
    Thread on strong elastic, the bracelet comfortably fits wrists up to 7 inches.
    The bracelet is allergy friendly, lightweight, comfortable and easy to wear.
    Our items come presented in a small organza bag, ready to give away.

    Customers say

    Customers like the appearance and quality of the product. They mention it’s cute, subtle, and constructed of higher-quality materials. However, some customers have reported that the beads are very small.

    AI-generated from the text of customer reviews


    Are you looking to show your pride and support for the LGBTQ+ community? Look no further than this stunning Rainbow and Black Acrylic Bead Bracelet! This bracelet features vibrant rainbow colors intertwined with sleek black beads, creating a beautiful and eye-catching design.

    At 7 inches in length, this bracelet is the perfect accessory to add a pop of color to any outfit. Whether you identify as gay, lesbian, bi, trans, queer, or simply an ally, this bracelet is a stylish way to show your support and solidarity.

    Wear it with pride and let your true colors shine with this Rainbow and Black Acrylic Bead Bracelet. Get yours today and spread love and acceptance wherever you go! #LGBTQPride #LoveIsLove
    #Rainbow #Black #Acrylic #Bead #Bracelet #LGBT #Pride #LGBTQ #Gay #Lesbian #Trans #Queer #inches

  • Queer and Fearless: Poems Celebrating the Lives of LGBTQ+ Heroes

    Queer and Fearless: Poems Celebrating the Lives of LGBTQ+ Heroes


    Price: $18.99 – $11.72
    (as of Dec 02,2024 20:21:58 UTC – Details)


    From the Publisher

    Queerand Fearless1Queerand Fearless1

    QueerandFearless2QueerandFearless2

    Publisher ‏ : ‎ Penguin Workshop (April 16, 2024)
    Language ‏ : ‎ English
    Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 32 pages
    ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0593523695
    ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0593523698
    Reading age ‏ : ‎ 6 – 9 years
    Lexile measure ‏ : ‎ 900L
    Grade level ‏ : ‎ 1 – 4
    Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 2.31 pounds
    Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 10.35 x 0.35 x 10.3 inches


    In honor of Pride Month, I wanted to share a collection of poems celebrating the lives of LGBTQ+ heroes who have fearlessly paved the way for equality and visibility. These individuals have shown incredible courage and resilience in the face of adversity, and their stories deserve to be celebrated and remembered.

    From Marsha P. Johnson, a trailblazing transgender activist who played a pivotal role in the Stonewall Riots, to Audre Lorde, a poet and civil rights activist who championed intersectionality and self-love, these heroes have left an indelible mark on history. Their voices continue to inspire and empower future generations to speak out, stand up, and fight for their rights.

    So here’s to the queer and fearless individuals who have changed the world with their bravery, authenticity, and unwavering commitment to justice. May their legacy live on in these poems, and may we continue to honor and uplift their stories for years to come. Happy Pride Month! #QueerAndFearless #LGBTQHeroes #PrideMonth
    #Queer #Fearless #Poems #Celebrating #Lives #LGBTQ #Heroes

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