Sep 16 2011

Interview with Erika Randall Beahm on The Advocate (from SheWired.com)

article on The Advocate

article on SheWired.com

Leading Ladies’ Erika Randall Beahm Comes Out Swinging

By: Tracy E. Gilchrist
Thu, 2011-09-15 22:13

An accomplished dancer, professor and first-time filmmaker Erika Randall Beahm was on the verge of delivering two ‘babies’ earlier this month, one, her first child with her husband, and the other, her feature film and pet project Leading Ladies,  which was just coming out on DVD via the LGBT-friendly distributor Wolfe Video.

A professor of dance at The University of Colorado, Beahm, with her writing partner Jennifer Bechtel and her co-director, her husband Daniel, collaborated on Leading Ladies, a dance film rife with humor and romance in the classical Hollywood vein ala  director Vincent Minnelli. That is, if Minnelli had dared direct a dance film that replaced the compulsory heterosexual couple with a lesbian couple who find love on the ballroom dance floor.

A  favorite of both mainstream and LGBT film festivals Leading Ladies is a good old-fashioned romance, complete with an overbearing stage mother (Melanie LaPatin) and a sassy gay best friend, whose high kick puts the girls to shame(Benji Schwimmer). But the story turns on two love stories of sorts. The first, sisterly love between  Tasi (Shannon Lee Smith) and Toni Campari (Laurel Vail), who couldn’t be more unalike – Tasi, the glamorous would-be star of the ballroom dance world, and Toni, the shy, unassuming pizza girl who reveals she’s got a few moves of her own.

While Tasi’s a star on the dance floor, it’s the smoldering Toni who’s at center stage of the film’s classical Hollywood romance as she meets and falls instantly in love with the vivacious Mona (Nicole Dionne) on a crowded dance floor, a scene that evokes the moment when Tony and Maria first meet in West Side Story.

A heartfelt lesbian love story that appeals to all who enjoy appreciate a compelling tango, Leading Ladies purposefully plays with a wink and a nudge to iconic dance films that came before it, turning the notion of gender and of “dancing backwards in heels” on it’s head. But then, Beahm, erudite in her film history, terpsichorean and bisexual, appears to be the perfect person to execute a dance film for the 21st century that embraces old-fashioned dance standards and modern politics.

Co-director and writer Beahm chatted with SheWired about conceiving of and executing the project with her co-writer Bechtel and her husband Daniel, the film festival circuit, the marriage of a traditional dance film with LGBT politics and the possibility that she might actually go into labor during the interview.

SheWired: I hear you’re about to go into labor, so first of all, congrats and secondly, that would be a first for me if it happens during our interview.

Erika Randall Beahm: Well I am officially in early labor, so I’ll pop your cherry on that one; it still could be days before we actually have a baby.

Well I’ll take it. You were hitting the film festival circuit pretty heavily for a while. How has that experience been for you?

It’s been amazing. I cannot believe we are first time filmmakers and we’ve played almost 60 festivals I think now. The film has had an appeal across both the LGBT lines and the quote-un-quote straight film festivals, which was our hope when my writing partner and I started writing the project.

We’ve gotten to travel all over the place. I think this fall the baby will take its first trip to Italy for a GLBT fest there. I think I’ll be in Florence — that’s the plan. It’s been amazing.

What were some highlights of the film fest experience thus far?

We’ve had great screening at Palm Springs; we had two sold out screenings, at Palm Beach Film Festival we won best feature, at the Castro we had 900 people to play to at that beautiful historic theater. At our premiere at Sonoma International we won an award. That festival is just such a boutique love fest, and to get to play with Leading Ladies there and have most of our leads be there – it’s been a pretty extraordinary time. We’ve collected a lot of fans. And fans that we didn’t expect to become fans of a lesbian musical love story.

It sounds as though you really tapped into something with your audience.

It feels like it. In some of the straight festivals we’ve had a couple of older couples leave and we’ll talk about that in the Q&A’s.

Because of the lesbian love story?

We had people say, “There were moments where I was uncomfortable,” and it’s funny because it’s a PG13 love story with a sweet make out scene. It’s just that it’s long and we indulge in it, and I think that makes people think, “How far is this going to go?” It’s our hope that they say, “But the dialogue brought me back, and I realize that gay couples have been watching straight couples kiss for decades on film, and so I felt welcomed back to the story.” I feel like we have won over a lot of people who wouldn’t’ typically see a quote-un-quote gay film. I think the dancing and the comedy does that.

Why the lesbian love story? The film could have easily been a dance film / romance about a straight couple.

I think there are three main reasons for that. My writing partner Jennifer Bechtel, the day that we met I walked into a store that she owned — she heard me say that I was a dance professor– and she said, “What do you know about gay and lesbian ballroom dance?” I mean, kind of out of the blue.

And I said, “Well, not a whole lot. But I know a lot about gay and lesbian swing dance because I use to do some of that.”  I used to live in Seattle in the 90’s and I identify as bisexual and part of the gay and lesbian swing community, kind of vicariously at first, and then started to kind of get involved. There’s a great place called the Century Ballroom there in Seattle, and it was really inspirational.

Jen said she had been doing movie night for teens at her store and she wanted to do something for the GLBT community for teens, and there were no PG13 gay and lesbian films. She had been directing musical theater, and me as a dancer, I also love social dance and swing. We got this idea to kind of use that as a jumping off point to fill both the void in the gay and lesbian community for PG13 films and the gay and lesbian community in the dance films.

Since the film is a dance film, and you’re a dancer, and there’s also a love story between two women, and you’re bisexual, how much of the film, if any, is derived from your life?

We used kind of the skeleton of my life, of no one character with any one person. They’re all composites of different people Jen and I know or we made up. But I was raised by a single mom and the year my sister got pregnant I told my mom I had a girlfriend. We kind of used the plot line of my life from– what was it?—93, as the architecture of the narrative.

I like to say that if sometimes we can’t walk in one’s shoes we can dance in them.  That there’s a certain kind of movement that can happen on a political or social political wavelength if we’re feeling something. And if we can feel something through dance we can identify maybe better with a character’s experience because it’s not overtly political or dogmatic.  It’s just two women dancing together, or two men dancing together, and then suddenly we’re kind of moved by that. And then they are literally moved into a different way of thinking. Dance felt like a great vehicle for that.

The film makes a political statement toward the end in that the lesbian couple enters the dance contest only to be turned away by homophobic judges. Why did you get political at that point when it could have just been a love story?

I think that since the audience is sort of primed at that point, they ‘re cheering,  they’re rooting for the heroines… They want them to win as they would in a typical Hollywood musical. In Strictly Ballroom (Baz Luhrmann’s 1992 film) — the under dogs, the ugly duckling — they get to compete at least, and the crowd goes wild. And so there was that push, we want to see them compete, but in the end we really want to see them win. And winning in this case is acceptance by the family. There are little analogies, like the panel of judges of course, which you can take it seems is just a ballroom panel, but yeah, you can read that that’s the whole notion of judgment, and they talk a lot about the bylaws, which could be seen as the Bible. That’s how I have always thought of it.

Just that this mom goes full PFLAG on this judge’s panel is so empowering that ultimately, it’s about family. That’s the hope, especially when making a film for youth, for gay youth and for their families, that it’s ultimately about how we support our kids to be who they are, whether they’re dancing or getting bullied at school or just coming into their own. It felt like a nice way to twist that typical Hollywood story line — put a little bit of kink in it, make a political statement without being overly dogmatic.

That you can read it that way or go, “Oh, I wanted to see them dance,” but the fact is, people who are saying that they wanted to see them dance –they are saying, “I wanted to see two women in partnership.”

I’d like to talk about when Toni and Mona meet. Their chance meeting in the middle of a dance floor evokes so much of the iconic scene when Tony and Maria meet in the gym in West Side Story.

Thank you. You are exactly right.

So that was an intentional allusion?

Yes. Both Jen and I are huge musical theater fans. And that moment when everything just stops, I get goose bumps. And her name to begin with (Toni) and then we come back to Mona’s apartment, where she says, “Antoinette, I like it. It sounds longer. What does Toni stand for?”  She references back to West Side Story. A lot of those great musical moments are in there, from Gypsy to West Side Story. There’s something that musical theater always kind of queers the human experience. Just the fact that men are skipping around instead of really beating each other and they’re in a gang. It’s just so wonderfully blithe.

We’ve been criticized for that scene being long. But to us it’s that slow sweet indulgent moment in time when you first fall in love. So that was a hope, especially in the editing, which I think that my husband did a beautiful job capturing

You got a wonderful review in Variety. Congratulations.

Amen! We were so nervous when we heard that a reviewer from Variety was at our New Fest screening. And you’re thinking, “Oh God,  if they just say good dancing and you have one cool quote…” and the whole thing was just a delight.

The Variety piece mentioned that your film had none of the frenetic pace of a Baz Luhrmann film but you’ve already referenced Strictly Ballroom, and I must say, especially in some of the rehearsal scenes with Melanie LaPatin, who plays the mom, it’s just so over-the-top in a Strictly Ballroom sort of way. I couldn’t help but be reminded of that film while watching yours.

I mean, Moulin Rouge is one of the first films that my husband and I bonded around. The over-the-top indulgent style of it. And I had always loved Strictly Ballroom. And how do you make a ballroom dance film and an ugly duckling story and pay homage to but not copy? But there’s also something that where your clearing a story to copy it can also be kind of exciting, because you are using a known form and tweaking it. So all of the references are intentional in there.

Also, the Dirty Dancing references — anybody who has watched that movie as many times as I did when I was 14 can’t miss those, and those are absolute nods to another brilliant heterosexual dance love story.

I want to get to more than just the homages but I think they are important, especially since you are appropriating them into a queer theme. There are moments in the film, like “The Toothbrush Tango” that hearken to old Hollywood Musicals in which the rhythm of everyday life becomes the dance. I’m thinking specifically of a film like Swing Time with Fred Astaire. Are you reaching back that far with your references?

Talking about this film is kind of all we’ve done for the past two years and it turns me on especially when talking with someone who notices those nuances. I’m a huge Fred Astaire fan but I think my heart is really with Gene Kelly and Leslie Caron. American in Paris — I saw it on the big screen. I had to sneak out of an Uncle’s wedding to see that and then got perform in Australia and had a dressing room next to Leslie Caron, with her star on the door. My husband and I — we love the past. That’s why we wanted the film to have kind of that timeless quality where you can’t, except for the cell phones, really nail down the time. That is in honor of the golden age of cinema.

I’d like to talk about the casting in the film. The chemistry between the sisters is just phenomenal but I’d love to know about casting the Toni and Mona, who fall in love. It’s really palpable.

We knew that casting Toni would be pivotal. We auditioned in New York and L.A. and Chicago in multiple trips to both New York and L.A., and finally on a second round in L.A., Laurel Vale, who plays Toni, and Nicole Dionne (Mona), they read together, and they did the almost break-up and my husband and I were both in tears.  It was so obvious that that was Toni and Mona, and I had seen Mona as kind of buoyant but there was something that Nicole brought that sparked Laurel into magic even more and vice versa. The challenge however, and I say this at every Q&A, when we went to do the dancing part, Laurel had never danced a step, and she was terrible (laughs).

She was at a screening of the film at Film Out in San Diego and she mentioned that.

Bless her heart, she was terrible, but you could tell she’s smart. Benji Schwimmer (costar, additional choreographer) was at that audition and I pulled him aside and said, “You’ve been working with all of them out in the lobby and in the parking lot, can she be taught?” And he said, “She’s really smart.”  We called Laurel and said, “If  you train on your own dime for the next two months we want you for this.”  She said, “Absolutely.”

I read an interview with you in which you mention that Chasing Amy, which featured a bisexual lead character, was a very important film for you.

For me, the line, “When you chose someone out of 100 percent of the population…” when I heard that line, it was just so affirming to me. It brought so much kind of clarity about the path of my own personal heart. And that my heart has always had kind of a lighthouse version of love. A 360 — it just falls in love. I don’t know that that’s true for everyone but there’s a Pollyanna part of me that would like to believe that we are all capable of that, but for me it’s true. And that film — it’s a heart breaking film in a lot of ways, and it’s a ridiculous film in a lot of ways. But to get to see a strong woman at the time, who was just strong. She knew her heart and was like, “I’m choosing you, and then I might not choose you, and I might end up falling in love with someone else. It could be a man or a woman, but right now I’m choosing you out of 100 percent of the population,” has been a strong mantra for me.

And I think for someone who really believes in telling queer stories or femme-centric stories, one of the challenges I face is, in different communities people want different endings. Where in the lesbian community if the girl doesn’t get the girl and she ends up with the guy then you’ve failed. As a bisexual person that doesn’t necessarily mean failure. I ended up with a partner who happens to be a man but we’ve been together for 12 years. And it’s a good relationship. But it’s good because of our honesty and communication and my ability to be fully who I am.

I think things are becoming more fluid now but it used to really feel like bisexual people had to choose a community.

I have felt less embraced because I am not in the overtly queer eye. Because I have long brown hair and now I’m having a kid, which, is extra points against me.

Well a lot of lesbians are doing that.

I know. Thank God now that’s cool. You don’t get the breeder status as much. So I think Chasing Amy, for me, that she didn’t end up with the man at the point in my life was really important. The guy doesn’t get the girl; the girl gets the girl in the end. But she still has a place in her heart for him. And this is a kind of a conundrum I think where you can get thrown into these binaries, especially bisexuality can be so focused on, “Oh that was the experimental years and oh, you gave up your toaster, and now you’re straight.” But can you still be both / and? Whether you’re in a monogamous relationship,  whether you’re with a man or a woman. I just think these are big and important questions, like why the lesbian community was so excited when Anna Paquin came out even though she didn’t need to.  She has a fiancé. But it was important that she still said I am capable of love 360 degrees. Chasing Amy was a fist moment for me where I thought, “Okay, I can be okay no matter who I’m with and I can’t always judge myself by the community’s standards.” When you’re in your early twenties / late teens those monikers give you energy — being a lesbian can really give you strength and power. And then it’s like, “Ok, what about just being strong and loving who I love  and not taking my identity from the community?”  Those are tough, tough challenges.

Erika Randall Beahm and Daniel Beahm

I know that your biggest upcoming project will be becoming a mom but is there anything else in the works you’d like to discuss?

We’re really thrilled about the release with Wolfe because so many of Wolfe’s fans actually buy video where most people any more wait for NetFlix or get it for free. They don’t understand how to support independent filmmaking. The festivals do but beyond that it’s tricky, you don’t get the million dollar deals that they were giving to El Mariachi (Robert Rodriguez’s 1992 indie). It doesn’t happen like that.

We made this film for very little money, and my husband did almost everything in post-production. That was how we were able to stay on budget, but that means two years, so no paycheck. So we want people to buy the video, and I think what’s great about the gay community is that they support gay film and gay filmmakers and actually buy them instead of steal them, well not steal them, but you know, download  stuff and Netflix . People don’t realize how much you don’t make on that stuff as an independent filmmaker on Netflix. So we are exciting that the video is already shipping, and it’s crazy too.  It’s shipping at the same time that this baby is about to ship out, so both our babies are coming into the world at the same time.

I have one last question. Do you have baby names picked out?

We don’t know boy or girl. If we have a boy Ezra is the boy name. It means the scribe. Being from the Midwest, both of us, and kind of having a heart for adventure,  if we have girl we will name her Indiana. She’ll be our little Indy film girl. Or Indiana Jones girl, or Indiana is where my husband is from.  Indiana, and then the middle name would be Isadora for Isadora Duncan, the rebel bisexual mother out of wedlock. We just won’t let her wear any scarves. But if we have a boy we will probably name him Ezra Indiana I think Indiana will get in there any way.


Sep 8 2011

Leading Ladies Reviewed on BlogCritics.com

http://blogcritics.org/video/article/dvd-review-leading-ladies/

There is a lot to enjoy about the film, particularly the dancing, which is capped by a wonderful fantasy number set in the local supermarket. Leading Ladies has a nice, quirky musical score. Dance is well-integrated into the film — these kids gotta dance, whether working at the pizza joint or flossing their teeth.


Sep 7 2011

Leading Ladies Review in Home Media Magazine

[printed September 5, 2011]

The Campari women live and breathe ballroom dancing.

Running the show is overbearing mother Sheri (Melanie LaPatin). She focuses most of her attention on her youngest daughter, Tasi (Shannon Lea Smith), whom she is grooming to win the regional ballroom dance competition.  Waiting patiently in the background is her oldest daughter, Toni (Laurel Vail), the one on whom they depend.  The only stable man in the Camparis’ lives is Cedric (Benji Schwimmer, season two winner of “So You Think You Can Dance”), Tasi’s saucy gay dance partner and Toni’s best buddy. Not the ideal family dynamic, but it works for them.

Soon the family balance is thrown off kilter when Tasi becomes pregnant, putting her chance at the competition in jeopardy.  Further spinning Sheri into chaos, Toni, who finds a companion she can be her true self around (Mona, Played by the charming Nicole Dionne), comes out of the closet.  Sheri is devastated, and it’s at this moment that the audience begins to see her many dimensions.  She’s not just a loud-mouthed nag factory; it’s just that the divorcee envisioned a different life for her daughters and is heartbroken knowing her dreams won’t pan out as she planned.

It’s also in that emotional scene that real-life choreographer LaPatin, making her acting debut, brings her character to life and, surprisingly, shows acting prowess.

After the daughters’ secrets come out, a heartwarming story emerges about how these hurdles ultimately make the Camparis a stronger family unit.

If you enjoy dance as much as I do, then you’ll love the bonus material, especially the outtakes.  The playful “Fruit Stand” sequence shows the cast and backup dancers, many you you’ll recognize from “So You Think You Can Dance,” shimmying atop grocery store conveyor belts, using various fruits as their props –a true visual feast.

–Ashley Ratcliff

LL-HMM-Sept5


Aug 18 2011

Leading Ladies Reviewed by Boston Edge

by Christian Cintron
EDGE Contributor
Thursday Aug 18, 2011

"Leading Ladies" is a sweet coming out story that explores the world of competitive dance. Given the current trends of musicals and ballroom dancing, this film couldn’t have come at a better time. There are lots of hilarious laugh out loud moments and tap your feet dance numbers that make the movie super approachable to all audiences.

Toni Campari (Laurel Vail) is the tomboy workhorse of her family. She spends all of her time supporting her eccentric mother, Sheri (Melanie LaPatin) and her dancer sister, Tasi (Shannon Lea Smith). Her only ally in her crazy world is her sister’s gay dance partner Cedric, played by "So You Think You Can Dance" finalist Benji Schwimmer. When she treats herself to a night out she meets Mona (Nicole Dionne), who changes her whole world. Tasi becomes pregnant, and all hell breaks loose when Toni decides to join the family business.

Vail is endearing as a girl just trying to find her voice in a family of loud eccentrics. She is able to capture the suppressed spirit of a dancer and make you root for Toni. LaPatin’s Sheri is part drag queen part soap opera vixen. Her over-the-top portrayal steals every scene she is in. Schwimmer also shines as the lovable best friend who not only offers funny quips, but also dances his way through the film.

The pacing of the film can be a little grating at times, given the length of some of the music numbers and montages. However, the blend of large-scaled choreographed dance numbers, show-stopping numbers, and even an original song or two will keep you thoroughly entertained.

It’s rare for a film to be so approachable to all audiences. The film may focus on a lesbian relationship but the story at its heart is about family. Where do you fit in a family of loud and crazy eccentrics? Toni’s mother and sister are such big personalities that they stifle her; it’s no wonder she can’t come out of the closet.

The movie also offers a sweet metaphor for what meeting your first love can be like. Toni had no idea she was even into women but when she meets Mona they engage in an elaborate dance number that would change anyone forever.

"Leading Ladies" is sweet, smart and funny. Like a great date the film will keep you entertained and full of fuzzy feelings. Part family melodrama and part first love story, it transcends the "coming out" genre by offering an entertaining film with a main character that just so happens to be coming out. It’s a definite must see for fans of dance, musicals and lady love.

…link to original…


Aug 15 2011

Melanie Interviewed for Home Media Magazine

Choreographer Dances Into First ‘Leading Lady’ Role

15 Aug, 2011 By: Ashley Ratcliff


 Melanie LaPatin (center) stars in Leading Ladies alongside newcomers Shannon Lea Smith (left) and Laurel Vail.

As a choreographer with decades of experience, Melanie LaPatin knows her way around the stage. When the Brooklynite signed on to create ballroom and swing dance routines for the lesbian-themed comedy Leading Ladies, LaPatin was in her comfort zone.

But co-director Erika Randall Beahm, who also co-wrote and co-produced, had a different role in mind for LaPatin. She asked the dancing queen to audition to play Sheri Campari, the overbearing stage mom to two twentysomething daughters whose entire lives revolve around ballroom dancing.

“I said, ‘Why not?’ I’ve never done anything like that before, and I’m always open to new ideas and new things. … I knew I was dramatic,” LaPatin said with a laugh. “But I had no idea it would lead to that. I would do it again in a minute.”

Wolfe Video releases the film on DVD ($24.95) Sept. 13. Bonus material includes a blooper reel and alternate and extended scenes. [purchase]

In Leading Ladies, the Campari family is preparing to have one of its own compete in an important regional ballroom dance championship. However, Sheri spins out of control when her youngest daughter, Tasi (Shannon Lea Smith), gets pregnant and her oldest daughter, Toni (Laurel Vail), falls for the free-spirited Mona (Nicole Dionne).

LaPatin said she drew inspiration for the part from her real-life mother, Barbara LaPatin, whom she called “very high-strung and controlling.”

“I would describe Sheri as the person that I really don’t want to be, but I have a feeling that I’m a lot like her,” LaPatin said. “I was definitely obsessed about the dancing, more than she was, actually. It was myself that I was criticizing and nothing was good enough and had to be the best, so I really understood where she was coming from. If I had children, I probably would have been the same.”

While working on Leading Ladies, LaPatin had the opportunity to reunite with several dancers she’s gotten to know through “So You Think You Can Dance,” the Fox dance competition series that she and her longtime partner, Tony Meredith, choreograph. They included season-two winner Benji Schwimmer, Katee Shean, Kherington Payne, Courtney Galiano and Sara Vongillern.

As for the film’s message, LaPatin said people should take Leading Ladies’ tagline — “Let love lead” — to heart and not judge others based on whom they fall in love with.

“Live and let live,” she said. “Don’t we have more important things to criticize? I just believe that you are who you are, and who are we to decide who you should be?”

…[Full Story]…


Jul 21 2011

Leading Ladies on WetPaint.com

See SYTYCD Alumni in the New Movie, Leading Ladies!

by Stephanie Wolf

Get your fill of So You Think You Can Dance stars in the new ballroom-inspired movie Leading Ladies, set to release on DVD September 13 from Wolfe Video. The movie follows the Camparinis, a ballroom dancing family whose lives get turned upside down when one sister gets pregnant, another comes out of the closet, and a zany, over-the-top stage mom starts to lose it in her pursuit for the family to take the titles at the Midwest Benjiwin-1301692357Regional Ballroom Competition.

Leading Ladies features many recognizable names, a flashback of sorts into SYTYCD history. Ballroom diva and SYTYCD choreographer Melanie LaPatin, as well as Season 2 winner Benji Schwimmer, snagged leading roles in the film. Making cameo appearances are Katee Shean, Kherington Payne, Courtney Galiano, and Sara Von Gillern.

The feature toured 45 different film festivals and won numerous awards — the Audience Award for Best Narrative Feature at the 2011 San Francisco United Film Festival, the "Showcase Award" from the 2010 Sonoma International Film Festival, "Best Feature" at the 2010 Palm Beach Women’s International Film Festival and "Best of the Fest" at the 2010 Newfest.

We can’t wait to check it out on DVD in September! Look for it on Amazon.

Yes, you will be able to purchase the DVD at Amazon, but please buy using this link (a much bigger percentage of the sale goes to the cast and crew!).  You can also purchase from the official Leading Ladies website.

source link


Jul 19 2011

Leading Ladies on TalkMoviesworld.com

TalkMoviesWorld.com

http://movies.broadwayworld.com/article/LEADING-LADIES-Comes-to-DVD-From-Wolfe-Video-913-20110719


Jul 7 2011

Wolfe Interviews Daniel and Erika at Frameline (as seen on After Ellen)

Here is a video interview Wolfe did with Erika and Daneil at Frameline that appears on AfterEllen.com (it’s toward the bottom of the post) and Logo TV.


Jun 25 2011

Frameline Blog Entries from University of Wisconsin Students

This year at Frameline, the festival had student guest bloggers from the University of Wisconsin contribute to the Frameline Blog.  Here are a few of the posts regarding Leading Ladies.

I find it difficult, yet extremely easy to describe the film Leading Ladies because the experience of the film was overwhelming. To be honest, I went into this film not knowing what it was about and I even forgot the title, but the impact that this film left on me was huge. A film about two lesbian dance partners? To me, this was unorthodox and I thought that it was going to completely lose my attention about halfway through, yet it gave happiness throughout.

Besides just watching the film, the director and two of the main actors talked about the film in a sense I had yet to see at the Frameline Festival. Those involved in the film were excited, funny, and were willing to talk to me after the show for a few short minutes. I could not think of a better film, or director to bring back to the Eau Queer film festival, especially because of the mutual understanding of the Midwest attitudes toward queer people. Plus, I may also be slightly biased because of my love for dancing. —Bryton Fredrick

 

I fell in love with the film Leading Ladies almost instantly. With its carefree spirit and mindless antics what wasn’t there to love about it? I had more likes about not only the story itself but also how the film was produced and put together than I had dislikes. For starters, I loved that the characters were not hypersexual. I don’t know how many times I’ve watched any gay themed film and the main characters or important characters were portrayed as extremely sexual beings. I also loved that the actors, director, and producer all had this amazing chemistry on screen as well as when they came on stage afterwards. The story itself was amazing. It was well written, funny, light hearted, and very fun. After seeing this film I will never look at a grocery aisle the same way again.

Unfortunately, like with all films, there were negative aspects to it as well. Besides a couple personal issues I had with character flaws (ahem, the mother driving me absolutely bananas and the friend/dance partner being a “stereotypical” gay man) there wasn’t too much more to complain about. While the film wasn’t slow paced by any means it did take a bit too long to get to the gay component of it.

Overall, I found this film very easy to fall in love with. It was simple and light hearted without too much “in your face” drama like some of the films that I have seen. And for all those reasons I feel it would be a great film to bring back to Eau Claire. The queer aspect of the film slyly makes it way present and you don’t really see it as “just” a queer film. –Tatjana Trommershauser

 

When contemplating which films to bring back to Eau Queer Film Festival, Leading Ladies always comes to mind, it would also be a great idea to invite the actors and/or directors to come as well. The film did a great job of presenting the message of LGBT issues in a non-threatening environment. Even though there were sad moments, I would consider the film to be, overall, light hearted.

After hearing from my classmates that the students pursuing a dance minor were not encouraged to create a same sex performance for the use of their capstone, I was saddened and appalled. The films use of same sex dance partners would help to broaden the minds of the Eau Claire community. The dancing within this film is impeccable. I have seen same sex dance partners perform prior to this film, but I had never seen it in such a beautiful, inspiring way. Their movement was so fluid, and clean; every time dancing would begin it literally took my breath away.  —Lindsay Miklya

Original Content: http://blog.frameline.org/2011/06/leading-ladies/


Jun 15 2011

Leading Ladies in SF Weekly

We are the feature photo for Frameline in the San Francisco Weekly today.

SFWeekly

 

It’s Here, It’s Queer, It’s Really Big

The buzz on the international festival circuit for the past several months presages a strong year for gay and lesbian cinema. That means a likely banner edition of Frameline35: the San Francisco International LGBT Film Festival, which includes more than 200 films from 30 countries. Pick a day, pick a program, and the odds are unusually excellent that you’ll find films to move you in multiple ways.  [. . .] Leading Ladies (9:15 p.m. at the Castro) promises more drama with a kick — along with the occasional well-executed dip and twirl — with its tale of rambunctious, rival ballroom-dancing sisters. Benji Schwimmer, the breakout star of So You Think You Can Dance, lights up the big screen in a crucial supporting role.

Nice press!