What's Up!

October 11, 2020

What's Up - Your guide to what's happening in Fayetteville, AR this week!

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LIKE our Facebook page before 11:59 pm this Tuesday, Oct. 13, to be entered to win... Go to: facebook.com/BestBranson Like The Best of Branson on Facebook for a chance to win some Really Great Prizes! This week's prize: New contest each week! facebook.com/BestBranson A $25 gift cArd to be used toward purchasing tickets at Branson.com Gift Card $ 25 486 Branson Landing Blvd., Ste. #207 Branson, Mo 65616 STREAMING 40 WHAT'S UP! OCTOBER 11-17, 2020 Language Is Character In 'Boys In The Band' JOHN CARUCCI The Associated Press Revisiting Mart Crowley's seminal 1968 play, "The Boys in the Band," in a new movie adaptation on Netflix privies viewers to the early struggles of the gay community and the offensive, hurtful language of the era. While some of those gay and racial slurs were hard to speak, Jim Parsons and the cast believe it was necessary to use words now considered unspeakable to honor Crowley's dialogue, as well as make the audience feel the discomfort of the marginalization of the gay community at the time. Crowley's story follows a group of men and takes place a year before the historic Stonewall riots in New York's Greenwich Village neighborhood that solidified the gay liberation movement. Parsons, whose character, Michael, uses a fair share of the racial, gay and anti-Semitic slurs, admits he was uncomfortable. "It's ugly. And none of those words were ever uttered by me without a severe amount of trepidation and a sick feeling in your stomach going into it," Parsons said. Though uncomfortable, Parsons realized it was more important to embrace it than ignore it. "The sad part, I guess, is that because of what we're talking about, that's kind of the point. And you kind of have to go there to understand how a moment like that happens and where — why is this character willing to talk this way and see the hurt that it causes," Parsons said. Director Joe Mantello, who also helmed the play, agrees that keeping the offensive language helps understand the story and plight of the characters. "I do not believe the erasure of things that make us uncomfortable is progress," Mantello said. The offensive language was not kept to cause pain, he said. Mantello believes there's a responsibility to reflect the original story and time period. "My responsibility is to the story. And the story is: This is the cost of oppression, it allows you to act in a way that is inhumane," Mantello said. "And I felt in order to be honest to that, that you're true to that, that it was essential that we keep it." Matt Bomer, who plays Michael's friend, Donald, says he was very shocked during rehearsals when the words were said, but the weight of them hit once he took the stage. "I heard a guttural gasp the first time one of these slurs was used that I remembered and realized how powerful they really are. And I think that was a good reminder always when doing it live. The audience kind of reminded us of how potent those words were and are," Bomer said. Parsons says Crowley wrote a story that "resonates for all of humanity" because it can apply to anyone who has felt "othered and sidelined and disdained in way shape or form." "I think you don't need to be gay at all to identify and be moved by what you see," Parsons said. Jim Parsons (from left), Robin De Jesus, Michael Benjamin Washington and Andrew Rannells kick up their heels in a scene from the remade "The Boys in the Band." (Netflix via AP/ Scott Everett White)

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