Rich Lopez state Texas New York City film Rights queer Pop community performer STARS Rich Lopez state Texas New York City

CinéWilde queer film series marks 10 years with January event

Reading now: 796
dallasvoice.com

CinéWilde members speak before the screening of ‘Party Girl’ in July 2023. The queer film series marks 10 years this month. (Photo by Rich Lopez) Every month, CinéWilde presents a film screening that speaks to all aspects of queer culture.

Recent screenings have included Party Girl with Parker Posey, the landmark mainstream drag film To Wong Foo, Thanks for Everything, Julie Newmar and Frida starring Salma Hayek about the legendary queer artist Frida Kahlo.

This month’s screening will serve as the 10th anniversary of the film series. On Jan. 19, CinéWilde will go back to where it all started by screening the documentary Paris is Burning which was the orgnization’s first presentation a decade ago.

The film chronicles ball culture of from the 1980s in New York City. Surrounding the film will be pre- and post-show events.

Read more on dallasvoice.com
The website meaws.com is an aggregator of news from open sources. The source is indicated at the beginning and at the end of the announcement. You can send a complaint on the news if you find it unreliable.

Related News

06.02 / 19:35
lgbt Rights Courts country Extreme politician Russia: Supreme Court bans 'LGBT movement' for 'extremism'
Russia's Supreme Court on Thursday banned the "international LGBT movement" for extremism in the midst of the country's conservative turn, paving the way for legal action against any group defending LGBT+ rights in Russia.Judge Oleg Nefedov ordered that "the international LGBT movement and its subsidiaries be recognised as extremist and their activities banned from the territory of the Russian Federation", according to AFP correspondents on the ground.Mr Nefedov said that the ban would come into force "immediately".The hearing took place without defence counsel, as no organisation bearing the name "international LGBT movement" exists in Russia, and behind closed doors as the case was classified as "secret".In mid-November, the Russian Ministry of Justice called for the "international LGBT movement" to be described as an "extremist organisation" and banned, without clearly saying which organisation it was targeting.Any public activity associated with what Russia considers to be "non-traditional" sexual preferences could now be deemed "extremism", a crime punishable by heavy prison sentences.Until now, LGBT+ people risked heavy fines if they engaged in what the authorities called "propaganda", but not imprisonment.In recent years, Russian propagandists and politicians have increasingly referred to homosexuals as "paedophiles" and claimed they are part of an insidious attempt to "westernise" Russian society.The situation is particularly dire in the Caucasus republic of Chechnya, where gay men in particular face imprisonment, torture and murder at the hands of police.
DMCA