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Honoring Ghana, Malawi Troublesome for Some In Local LGBTQ+ Community

Two annual springtime festivals in Memphis honored African countries this year, both of which outlaw basic LGBTQ+ rights, and those choices face critics who wish the organizations would have picked other countries to celebrate. 

Africa in April (AIA) this year honored Malawi for its festival held last weekend. Memphis in May (MIM) picked Ghana to celebrate in 2018 for its 2020 festival and kept the country in place through Covid-canceled and pared-down festivities until this year. 

Same-sex intercourse is banned in both countries, punishable by imprisonment, according to the U.S. Department of State. Gay marriage is illegal in both, according to Equaldex. Discrimination is tolerated in education, housing, and employment, according to the State Department. 

In 2019, Human Rights Watch reported LGBTQ+ Malawians face “routine violence and discrimination in almost every aspect of their daily lives.”  In February 2021, the LGBT+ Rights Ghana advocacy group headquarters was raided by police, shut down, and remained closed. A law under review in Ghana would make identifying as gay or a gay ally punishable by five years in prison. The new law would make LGBTQ advocacy punishable by 10 years in prison. 

“We honor the culture of the country.”

David L. Acey, Africa In April organizer

“We honor the culture of the country,” said David L. Acey, an organizer of AIA. “We don’t get involved in the politics.” 

Acey said his group checks with government officials in choosing its honored country to help ensure “they’re not just killing each other.” 

MIM picks its honored countries three years in advance, said Randy Blevins, spokesman for the group. They are chosen by an International Selection Committee comprised of people with international experience from business, government, education, and the arts. This group looks for ties between nations and the Mid-South to exchange culture and foster economic connections. 

He said Ghana fit the selection guidelines but did not address local criticism of the country’s LGBTQ+ record.  

“A large portion of the population in Memphis and the Mid-South can trace ancestry to West Africa and Ghana in particular.”

Randy Blevins, Memphis In May spokesman

“A large portion of the population in Memphis and the Mid-South can trace ancestry to West Africa and Ghana in particular,” Blevins said in a statement. “There’s a lot of excitement around the festival’s salute to Ghana and we look forward to showcasing the people of Ghana’s art, music, dance, cuisine, and more.” 

Memphis filmmaker Mark Jones said he’s eager to get MIM’s Ghana celebration over with but said, “I don’t ever want to see Memphis In May do this again.” 

“They cannot honor a country with such a horrific viewpoint against LGBTQ+ people.”

Mark Jones, local filmmaker

“They cannot honor a country with such a horrific viewpoint against LGBTQ+ people,” Jones said. “It just sends a bad signal to the LGBTQ+ folks here in Memphis and the Mid-South that we would honor a country that does not honor all of its citizens.”

Should MIM honor such a country like Ghana again, Jones threatened to organize a “Memphis In Gay” festival. 

OUTMemphis executive director Molly Rose Quinn said much of the world is unsafe for LGBTQ+ people, including Tennessee with its litany of discriminatory laws passed this year and years before it. It’s also unsafe for the group in Memphis where “many kids are not safe from bullying, violence, and harassment at school.”

“We hope those same people and same institutions spend even a fraction of the same time and resources invested in the basic human rights not afforded to queer and trans Memphians.”

Molly Rose Quinn, executive director OUTMemphis

“We stand in solidarity with LGBTQ+ people everywhere, and while Memphis learns about and celebrates Ghanaian culture this spring, we hope those same people and same institutions spend even a fraction of the same time and resources invested in the basic human rights not afforded to queer and trans Memphians,” Rose Quinn said. 

Shahin Samiei, Shelby County organizer with the Tennessee Equality Project, said it wasn’t long ago that LGBTQ+ people were criminalized in the U.S. He’s hopeful in the cultural exchange from these festivals. 

“This gives us an opportunity to collectively learn from, and impart positive examples back with those countries, examples like equality and defending the human rights of all persons.”

Shahin Samiei, Shelby County coordinator with the Tennessee Equality Project

“This gives us an opportunity to collectively learn from, and impart positive examples back with those countries, examples like equality and defending the human rights of all persons,” Samiei said. “In time, these may influence positive changes in their laws. After all, it has taken decades of visibility, representation, and advocacy to expand equal rights in the United States and we’re by no means done. 

“It is critical that we support the fight toward equality, justice, and freedom for all here at home, and thereby still prove ourselves an ever-evolving shining beacon of those for other countries as well.”

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Cover Feature News

Memphis Pride: A New Historical Marker, and Four Who Are Making a Difference

“Memphis’ Stonewall”

Halloween was once the only time a man could get away with dressing in drag in Memphis. That’s because a 1967 city ordinance prohibited “any person … to appear in public in the dress of the other sex.”

Vincent Astor Collection

Bill Kendall

And that’s why Bill Kendall, manager of the Guild Theater, cleverly planned the city’s first drag show for October 31, 1969. He still had to walk a fine line, so for an added layer of protection against a possible police raid, he made sure to pack the Guild (now the Evergreen Theatre) with plenty of real women — gussied-up females.

John Parrott remembers heading to the Guild that Halloween, but he stopped off at a bar first. People inside were dressed like they too might be heading to the theater, but they weren’t.

“I talked to some folks who said, ‘Oh, I wouldn’t go there tonight,'” Parrott remembers. “There’s a chance of it being raided.”

Parrott wasn’t intimidated — it was going to be his first-ever drag show — but he understood why others might be.

“Go back and look at the press coverage in the early 1960s,” Parrott says. “If a place was raided — and that was what they feared — the papers didn’t hide anything. If you were caught in a place like that, they would print your name, your place of employment, your age — everything. If you got caught in a raid, you got fired. That was almost a certainty. That’s what they were afraid of.”

But the Guild wasn’t raided by police that night. In fact, Parrott says the evening was “euphoric.”

That show — which happened 50 years ago, this Halloween — was a touchstone for the Memphis gay community. The event, which was called the Miss Memphis Review, cracked open the city’s closet door and set a path to greater acceptance for those who would follow. It was the city’s first public pride celebration. Historian Vincent Astor calls the event “Memphis’ Stonewall.”

To honor its impact, a marker will be erected on the site on October 31st — the city’s first acknowledgement of its gay history.

The Mid-South LGBTQ+ Archive, Special Collections Department, University of Memphis, University Libraries

The Miss Memphis Review, held in the Guild Theater (now the Evergreen), was the city’s first public gay pride event. The event, held on Halloween night in 1969, was more pageant than drag show — and it was a huge first step for the LGBTQ community.

The Mid-South LGBTQ+ Archive, Special Collections Department, University of Memphis, University Libraries

The Mid-South LGBTQ+ Archive, Special Collections Department, University of Memphis, University Libraries

“Absolutely Unbelievable”

Parrott remembers the show got started late, maybe 10 p.m., or even midnight. Edd Smith, the emcee, got up on the stage, made the proper announcements, and the pageant began. Parrott says it was just that, a pageant, not really a drag show.

“There was a piano, a Hammond organ, and a palm tree, painted in Day-Glo colors with a black light,” Sharon Wray (an owner or partner in many gay and lesbian bars in Memphis) told Astor.

“Drag was done live with piano accompaniment,” Astor wrote in a 2017 post on the Friends of George’s website, “and much of it was camp and comedy.”

Parrott says a “good many were dressed up in tuxedos,” adding that “it was pretty packed. The euphoria was absolutely unbelievable. There were some who got scared and didn’t go, but the ones who did go realized exactly what they were doing.”

One by one, the 18 contestants (Pearl, Sandy, Dee Dee, and Brig Ella among them) came out dressed in evening gowns or whatever the pageant category demanded. There were waves of applause, hooting and hollering, and torrents of laughter.

While those at the Guild may not have known they were making history that night, they were certainly aware they could get in trouble. In addition to the city’s cross-dressing ordinance, another city law prohibited acts “of a gross, violent, or vulgar character.” This was aimed at same-sex dancing.

No doubt, such specific laws targeting gays still worried pageant-goers, no matter how euphoric the revelry. That’s where Kendall’s precautions — and timing — paid off.

“It was Halloween night, and [the police] would have to arrest people at bars all over town for cross-dressing,” Astor says. “That was one thing that saved them. There were also a lot of RGs (Real Girls) in costume. We know the differences between a DQ, a drag queen, and an RG.”

The hope was that the cops might not.

A Quick Evolution

The pageant was a giant step out of the shadows for the Memphis gay community. A similar pageant had been held the year before, but it was at a private party in Victorian Village’s Lowenstein-Long house, Astor says.

The fact that no one was arrested at the Guild the following year emboldened the community. Drag bars began to pop up around town, including Frank’s Show Bar and George’s Infamous Door. All of this happened even though the word “gay” wasn’t used, Astor says, “because that would just have been more fuel for the fire.”

In 1971, four men were arrested for “female impersonation,” according to a timeline of Memphis gay history compiled by OUTMemphis. They were arrested at George’s Infamous Door (as was owner George Wilson), but the charges were dismissed as the court failed to prosecute.

In 1974, Tennessee’s obscenity law was deemed unconstitutional, thanks to the perseverance of Kendall, who’d been repeatedly indicted for showing a variety of “obscene” foreign films and art films at the Guild.

By 1975, Memphis had five gays bars — Tango, Psych-Out, B.J.’s, Entree Nuit, and George’s. Five people leaving one of the bars that year were arrested for solicitation, three of them charged with “female impersonation.” The charges were dropped, but instead of taking a plea deal, they fought the case in court, won, and had their records expunged.

That same year, the group The Queen’s Men took over what they were now proudly calling the Miss Gay Memphis pageant. The first issue of Gaiety, the city’s first LGBTQ newspaper, was also published in 1975.

In 1976, the Metropolitan Community Church organized and welcomed “gays and straights of all faiths.” The city’s first public pride event — “Gay Day at the Park” — was held in Audubon Park. And the first Gay Student Association was founded that year at what was then Memphis State University.

Within seven years of that first Miss Memphis Review pageant at Midtown’s Guild Theater, several big steps had been taken.

Justin Fox Burks

Mark Jones and Vincent Astor

The Legacy of Stonewall

Rallies, parades, and other commemorative events marked this year’s 50th anniversary of the police raid on New York City’s Stonewall Inn — and the several days of violent conflict and protests that followed. It was a tumultuous chapter in gay history but one that’s now seen as a pivotal moment for LGBTQ rights.

Astor was in New York for the celebration and says, “I haven’t seen so many rainbow flags in all my life.” Astor says the Miss Memphis Review, staged just a few months after the Stonewall unrest, was “our Stonewall. That’s what we’re celebrating.”

The driving force behind the new marker has been veteran Memphis filmmaker Mark Jones. Jones says Kendall was a “flamboyantly gay man” and “a hero.”

“He did a lot for Memphis and was a very early LGBTQ pioneer,” Jones says. “The Miss Memphis Review was an important LGBTQ event in those early, pioneer days.”

When the marker is put up next month, it will be the first physical commemoration of Memphis’ LGBTQ history, and the second such marker in Tennessee. Nashville erected a marker to commemorate its historic gay bars last December.

The Memphis marker was unanimously approved by the Shelby County Historical Commission. Jones says he was “happy and surprised” there was no dissent. The only discussion was over grammar. And one member insisted the sign have the word “gay” on it, to ensure people would know its true significance.

“Let’s be honest, there’s been gay folks getting together since 1819 in Memphis, but it’s all been hush-hush and in secret,” Jones says. “[The Miss Memphis Review] was the first time it happened in public. It’s the 50th anniversary. So, we need to honor that.”

Astor and Jones will do so with an unveiling ceremony for the marker at the Evergreen Theatre on Thursday, October 31st at 6 p.m. Inside the Evergreen, there will be artifacts from the Miss Memphis Review that Astor has collected.

What follows will be a “moveable feast,” he says. It will start at the soon-to-be-open Dog Houzz, a gourmet hot dog restaurant on the former site of the Metro gay bar. The party will then move to Dru’s Place for a special drag show at around 8:30 p.m.

Astor says all events are open to everyone, but he especially welcomes anyone who was present for the 1969 Miss Memphis Review.

Jones hopes the marker and the event are the first of many celebrations of Memphis gay history. “We need our history told,” he says. “We need our history honored, and we need it spread out across our city.”

Justin Fox Burks

Jeremy and Matthew Thacker-Rhodes

Jeremy and Matthew Thacker-Rhodes

Taking Care of Business

When I was assigned to write a profile of Jeremy and Matthew Thacker-Rhodes, my colleague Toby Sells told me, “These guys have a lot of irons in the fire.” 

He wasn’t kidding. They founded Pride Staffing Agency. They are part of the team behind the Downtown jazz lounge Pontotoc. They own their own barbershop, Baron’s Man Cave. And they’re preparing to start yet another business that provides merchant services such as credit-card processing, point of sale technology, and consulting.  

“One thing leads to another when you open up a business and you have success. You start networking, meeting people, and then opportunity comes to you,” says Jeremy. “We both have the type of mindset that just thrives off the stress.” 

Jeremy is from Arkansas; Matthew is from Alabama. The couple had a six-month, long-distance relationship before coming together for good at the 2013 Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest. They were married in San Francisco in April 2014 and are currently parenting three children, the youngest of whom just turned two.

Jeremy says their relationship works because their personalities complement each other so well. “[Matthew] is my balance, if that makes sense. We have almost two totally different types of personalities, but he has strength I don’t have, and that makes me stronger. And I feel like I do the same with him.” 

Jeremy says they have found acceptance in Memphis they could not find in their rural hometowns. “One of the reasons I came to Memphis was to come to a Southern city and to start fresh being who I was. I still struggled with whether people would accept that, even in the business community. I’ve had clients that I’ve lost for being part of the LGBT community. But you reach a point in life where, I’m tired of trying to pretend to be someone I’m not, and it’s time to be myself. Life is short. I am who I am, and I’ve been this way since birth, and I can’t change who I am. You get to a point where you own who you are when you’re gay. And that’s something to accept when you grow up very religious in the South and in a small town.

“Moving to Memphis gave both of us the opportunity to come out of the box and be who we are and realize that we can be accepted for who we are and not be judged and still own our own businesses. Do we still catch stuff from people? Absolutely. Some people are going to be close-minded till the day they die, and you can’t do anything about it. Now does it affect some volume of business? Yes, but I think it balances out because you have others who love to deal with you because you are who you are. … It doesn’t matter if you’re gay or straight or whatever. Being successful owning a business is all about doing things ethically, doing things right, delivering on what you say, and just keeping your nose to the grind and staying focused. That’s what makes you a success. It’s not about being gay or straight or whatever that makes you successful, it’s about who you are as a person, and being gay is just a small part of who I am.” — Chris McCoy

Justin Fox Burks

Kayla Gore

Kayla Gore

Human Rights Warrior

Kayla Gore wrote last year that the average life span of a transgender woman of color is 35. She just celebrated a birthday — her 34th.

“It kind of makes you live your life in your own lifestyle, and for a person like me it’s almost impossible to not be visible,” Gore says. “A lot of advocates are saying our visibility will get us killed because the number of trans murders is rising every year.”

Twenty-six transgender people were murdered [in the U.S.] in 2018, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Eighteen transgender people have been murdered so far this year, Gore says. The majority of these were black transgender women murdered by acquaintances, partners, and strangers, with some cases showing a clear anti-transgender bias.

If advocates ever suggested that Gore should keep a low profile because of the murders (or anything else), she didn’t listen. Earlier this year, she stood before a podium in Nashville, telling the press, state lawmakers, lobbyists, advocates, and anybody else who would listen that they didn’t get to define her.

“I have been a woman my entire life,” Gore said. “However, the state of Tennessee refuses to recognize my identity and forces me to carry incorrect identity documents.”

Gore is the lead plaintiff in a case challenging a state law prohibiting transgender people from changing the gender marker on their birth certificates. The suit is still pending.

While the birth-certificate lawsuit is a high-profile moment for Gore, it’s hardly the beginning of her activism work. She arrived in Memphis — homeless — nine years ago. She found other homeless, transgender people, and they invited her to a meeting for Homeless Organized for Power and Equality (HOPE). At the time, the group was fighting against housing organizations that preyed upon the homeless and those with mental health issues.

“That made me so passionate,” Gore says. “There are actually people out here doing things about the things we need to do things about. It lit a fire in me.”

That fire was fueled with some wins. She helped to secure federal funds for the chronically homeless through the Mid-South Peace & Justice Center and helped shut down some of those organizations preying upon the homeless.

For the last six months, Gore has been working as the Southern Regional Organizer for the Transgender Law Center through Southerners on New Ground (SONG), a social justice advocacy organization supporting queer, lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people primarily in the South.

About two years ago, Gore started her own group, My Sistah’s House. It provides a place for transgender, gender non-comforming adults who have been released from incarceration and are experiencing homelessness or anti-transgender violence.

When asked about the climate for transgender people in Memphis right now, Gore says, “It’s bad, nearing a storm.”

“On July 1st, [the state began] criminalizing trans folks for using restrooms,” Gore says of the “indecent exposure” bill passed by state lawmakers this year and signed by Governor Bill Lee in May. “If someone complains and calls the police, [transgender people] can be jailed, tried, and put on the sex offender registry just for using the restroom. It’s something that trans folks have never had a problem with.”

But Gore says she is hopeful, noting a “few good candidates” will be on the ballot this year in Memphis. “I’m always optimistic about the future because I see the headway we’re making.” — TS

Justin Fox Burks

Diane Duke

Diane Duke

A Friend for Life

Diane Duke moved to Memphis three and a half years ago to take the reins of Friends For Life. “When I was in Los Angeles, I’d been working around HIV issues,” she says. “I was looking at some job openings, and, from my time working at Planned Parenthood, sexual health is something that’s important to me. Looking at Memphis, the numbers I saw about the high rates of HIV and the ways that it was broken down made me wonder what was going on here, as far as why this area has such a high rate of new infections.”  

Duke, who has three decades of nonprofit work under her belt, was born in Virginia to a father who was in the Coast Guard. Growing up, she traveled around the South before settling in Oregon. “I knew what the South is, as far as the Bible Belt and the conservatism and how that impacts what’s going on with HIV. Coming from Los Angeles, where people are HIV-positive and there’s no stigma, I had an understanding that there was a lot of work to be done in Memphis. With all the medical advances that we have saying that people are still dying of AIDS and that new transmissions of HIV were so high, I knew this would be a place where my work would be very fulfilling. And that has been the case. I I love it here. I love the work that I do. I love the people I work with. And I love the community.”

Friends For Life, which was originally organized in 1985 as the Aid To End A.I.D.S. Committee, is one of the oldest HIV-centric organizations in the South. Duke leads a team of 50, which serves more than 2,700 people annually. Their goals are to prevent new HIV infections, help people with HIV stay on their treatment plans, reduce and prevent homelessness among those who are living with HIV, and educate the Mid-South about HIV prevention and the treatment and spread of the disease. 

“It’s difficult because sometimes you want to bang your head against the wall,” Duke says. “You just wanna say, ‘Hey folks, all you have to do is take a pill. Just get tested. Find out about this.’ But because of the stigma, where people get thrown out of their house, thrown out of their faith communities, thrown out of their friend community, it’s not safe if people find out that they are HIV-positive. There’s just so much work to be done to really change the stigma and the community’s view around HIV and LGBTQ issues.” 

But with recent medical advances and a robust organization that is expanding its outreach to the hard-hit African-American LGBTQ community, Duke says she is optimistic about the future. “I’m a dreamer. People call me Pollyanna.” — CM

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Jones Rolling With Short Films

Mark Jones hasn’t made a feature film in several years, but he’s on a roll with short films.

“I’ve kind of stumbled upon something. ‘Winding Brook’ is the exception. But if you look at ‘Death In A Small Town,’ ‘The Best Wedding Gift,’ and ‘Henry,’ they all take place on one set with few characters.”

Corey Parker in ‘Death In A Small Town’

Jones will screen these four films at Studio on the Square on Tuesday, April 24 at 7 PM.

Taken together, the snack-sized scenes form their own universe of domestic drama with a cynical, sometimes soapy edge. The dark comedy “Death In A Small Town” contrasts the feel-good political speech of a small town mayor with the horrible reality behind his rise to power. The short is built around a pitch-perfect performance by Corey Parker.

“He’s a top-notch actor,” Jone said. “We’re fortunate to have someone like him in our community.”

Drew Smith in ‘Henry’

Jones loves to put the pieces on the table and watch them snap into place, as he does in “Henry”, which features a tour-de-force performance by Drew Smith as a single father having a heated conference call with his siblings about the arrangements for his mother’s death. Here, the big reveal is used for pathos rather than a punchline.

Savannah Bearden in ‘The Best Wedding Gift’

In “The Best Wedding Gift,” Savannah Bearden gets to go full soap opera anti-heroine.

“Savannah knocked it out of the park,” says Jones. “I’ve been wanting to work with her for a while, but it hasn’t been the right opportunity. So, when I conceived of this script, I thought, ‘man, Savannah will be great.’ She owns this film.”

Bearden is a bride to be who has an icy confrontation with the best man, played by Jacob Winfield.

”Jacob is a theater actor,” says Jones. “Usually, when I work with theater actors, they’re great, but their first three or four takes are huge. That’s not needed in film. Usually theater actors are playing to the guy in the twelfth row. But he played it so well, I had to tell him to play it up. He was too small.

Jones says careful casting and preparation is the key to a good performance.

“I really try to work with the actor individually, and then in pairs with their cast mates to give them the background of their character,” Jone says. “Why are you entering this scene thinking what you’re thinking?

“That’s something I really believe in as a writer: character motivation. I go to too many films and think, ‘Why is the character doing that? That doesn’t make sense. No one would actually do that. What’s their motivation?’ Jacob’s motivation in this film comes from a very good heart. He really thinks he’s doing the right thing.”

His care with the actors pays off in “Winding Brook”.

“Cecilia Wingate is only in about 45 seconds of ‘Winding Brook,’ but she does great,” Jones says. “That’s a great example of someone who has a really small role — she’s a nurse — but she owns that 45 seconds. There are no small parts.”

Corey Parker, Kim Justice, Ryan Azada, and Jack Prudhome in ‘Winding Brook’

Jones was recently named Honorary Director for Life of the Outflix Film Festival and is the primary mover behind Indie Memphis’ IndieGrant program.

All proceeds from this screening will go to the Indie Memphis Youth Film Festival. His next short film “Football Jocks vs. Theater Fags Memphis Style” is already in the can.

“It’s different,” he says with a laugh. “I want to make another feature, but I’m enjoying this two-year run of short films.”

The Mark Jones film showcase starts at 7 p.m. on Tuesday, April 24 at Studio on the Square. You can purchase tickets on the Indie Memphis website.

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Film/TV Film/TV/Etc. Blog

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 2: Triumph, Tragedy, and Restaurants

The countdown of our Best Of Indie Memphis poll results rolls on! In case you missed it, here’s part 1.

“Above God” (2005)

Brett Hanover is one of the best talents to emerge from the Media Co-Op scene. He was still in high school when he made a big splash at Indie Memphis. From the beginning, it was clear he has a knack for finding exactly the right subject for his documentaries. In 2005, he fielded two short docs: “Shaivo”, an experimental treatment of the line between life and death, inspired by the conservative cause celeb Terri Shaivo case, and the now classic “Above God”. One of the crazier sites that went viral in the early days of the internet was Time Cube, which presented an unbelievably extensive theory of the universe that made flat earthers look like pikers. Hanover managed to track down and get an interview with Time Cube guru Gene Ray, who described his mental powers as being “above God”. Hanover didn’t take the easy way out and just point and laugh at Ray—he tried to understand him. And that’s what made the first short film on our list something really special.

“Brett Hanover made this in high school and it featured one of the best scenes in a documentary ever. When the main subject falls asleep on camera. And being 15 or however young he was at the time, Brett was already smart (and ruthless) enough to keep that epic shot in his final cut rather than view it as a misstep. Brett’s style was both antiquated, yet somehow very fresh, and when I first saw this strange film I instantly knew Brett was one of the most promising filmmakers around, and I couldn’t wait to see what he would create in the future.” -Morgan Jon Fox

What Goes Around… (2006)

2006 was a banner year for local filmmakers at Indie Memphis. After Craig Brewer’s Hustle & Flow made a big splash at the box office in 2005 and at the Oscars in 2006, it seemed that anything was possible. The first generation of digital rebels were making their second features, and a whole new crop emerged as both the technology and know-how got better. In 2006, there were seven Hometowner features (“And all of them good!” said Les Edwards in my Memphis Magazine history of Indie Memphis.) Since the very beginning, the Indie Memphis crowd had been diverse in terms of sexuality and gender, but it was overwhelmingly white until Rod Pitts and his crew stormed into Indie Memphis 2006. PItts was a University of Memphis film student when he followed the Poor & Hungry blueprint and got his friends together for What Goes Around… The film is a sex comedy with a big heart featuring outstanding performances by soon-to-be local indie film legend Markus Seaberry, Christina Brown, Arnita Williams, and Domino Maximillian. Pitts also contributed heavily to that year’s Hometowner winner Just The Two Of Us by Keenan Nikkita.

Rod Pitts on the set of What Goes Around…

Pitts threw himself into helping others with their projects, most notably DeAara Lewis’ 2007 film Tricks. But he never directed another film himself. He faced a series of escalating health problems, including a stroke, and was diagnosed with lupus. He died in May, 2012; that fall, he was awarded Indie Memphis’ first ever Lifetime Achievement Award.

“Rod Pitts was a brilliant filmmaker, and What Goes Around was an interesting love story.”- Markus Seaberry

“Rod Pitts, man! Damnit it breaks my heart when I think about what a beautiful soul he was and how much he had left to offer the world with his incredible talent. He knew how to capture real humanity on screen, something that it seems you either have in your arsenal or you don’t. He had it, and he was just getting started.” -Morgan Jon Fox

Fraternity Massacre at Hell Island (2006)

The biggest box office hit of 2017 so far is It, which finally brought Stephen King’s Pennywise to the big screen. But eleven years ago, Memphis producer/director Mark Jones was way ahead of the game. Fraternity Massacre at Hell Island, Jones’ first feature, was a slasher movie parody whose villain was, you guessed it, a knife-wielding clown. To add a little social satire edge to the comedy, Jones’ lead character decided to confess his love for another fraternity brother at the same time they’re being stalked. Which one is scarier to toxic masculinity, Jones asks: Serial killers or coming out of the closet?

“The only film I’ve ever known of to be shot almost entirely on Mud Island. Killer clowns, adventure, hilarious and a great cast.” -Anonymous

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 2: Triumph, Tragedy, and Restaurants

Eat (2006)

Here’s a pro tip for you: If you’re a low-budget filmmaker, don’t write a film with 54 speaking parts. Still, if I could go back in time and tell my 2006 self what a logistical nightmare it would be to keep track of all those actors on a production that cost less than most used cars, I would have probably done it anyway. Heady from the success of Automusik, my then-girlfriend Laura Jean Hocking and I wanted to do something more ambitious. We had met while working in restaurants together, and we collected funny waiter stories for years. It’s the perfect venue for comedy, so we decided to write a screenplay mashing up our story file. Our setting was three restaurants—a fine dining establishment, a corporate fast casual, and a dive bar—each with a girl named Wendy on the floor. I would direct and Laura, who had been working as crew on Memphis productions for years, would use the opportunity to learn to edit. We held auditions and got together a huge cast to simulate the crush of people you meet working in the service industry. Among our Memphis a-list acting crew were two then-unknown musicians named Amy LaVere and Valerie June. The shoot was an extraordinarily difficult two weeks—especially considering we were all working full time day jobs. We made many lasting friends on that shoot, and soon after our sold-out premiere at Indie Memphis, Laura and I decided to get married.

“A generation from now, Eat will be the film people look to for a Who’s Who of the mid-’00s Memphis film scene.” – Adam Remsen

clip from EAT (2006) from oddly buoyant productions on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 2: Triumph, Tragedy, and Restaurants (2)

The Book of Noah (2007)



Hardcore punk musician Patrick Cox made his debut in Eat before becoming the breakout star of Drew Smith’s first directorial feature, The Book of Noah, and he capitalized on it in a big way. He soon left Memphis behind for the wilds of Los Angeles, where he was cast in a series of bit parts and heavy roles (including Christopher Nolan’s Dark Knight Rising) until landing a major role in Two Broke Girls. Now he’s got 48 IMDB credits under his belt and will be appearing in the new DC movie Aquaman.

“There were a lot of “firsts” in that movie for all of us,” says Smith. “It was the first time I wrote a feature, the first time I directed, the first film Ryan Earl Parker shot, and the first that Pat Cox starred in. It was intimidating, not only for the amount of work we had to do, but more so for the amount of people that believed we could do it. We spent just about every weekend together for two years shooting it. I was terrified I’d let them down, but I couldn’t have asked for a better group of people to help get the film done.

“We had no budget, so everything you see in the film was donated: actors, locations, gear, crew, editing. That is with the exception of Noah’s van. It had been abandoned, and I paid a tow truck company $300 for it. It was a piece of junk, but it ran, and we used it to haul gear to the locations. It finally died with about five scenes to shoot, so we shot those scenes by towing in with a rope to the location, or Ryan shooting while I bounced on the back bumper to simulate the motion. When we were finished, we left it in front of Ryan’s house until someone reported it as abandoned and the city towed it away.

“Because I wanted the dialogue to be as natural as possible, I told the actors to reword the script to fit their speech patterns. Apparently for me, that meant cursing a lot more. When we screened at Indie Memphis, my family came along with a lot of folks from my church. I must have counted myself saying the F-word about 40,000 times. At the end of the movie, I was embarrassed and already trying to figure out how to cut out some of my cursing. My priest came up and shook my hand, and he leaned into my ear and whispered “Great F-ing Movie.” It was kinda my proudest moment. Indie Memphis gave me that moment, and that’s why I still try to help with the festival as much as I can. It’s a great F-ing Festival.”

The Book of Noah from Drew Smith on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 2: Triumph, Tragedy, and Restaurants (3)

The American Astronaut (2007)

Filmmaker Corey McAbee created The American Astronaut in 2001, and it slowly spread through the festival circuit for the next decade. Festival director Erik Jambor brought it to Indie Memphis as one of his first acts, and its mix of sci fi and musical comedy made it a cult favorite. In the years that followed, McAbee returned to Indie Memphis with Stingray Sam and Crazy and Thief.

The American Astronaut / Trailer from Cory McAbee on Vimeo.

Indie Memphis’ Greatest Hits 2: Triumph, Tragedy, and Restaurants (4)

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Film Features Film/TV

IndieGrants

Look to the credits of each short film represented in the 2016 IndieGrants bloc, and you’ll find recurring names of actors and crew members collaborating on one another’s projects.

That’s the film community here — a tight-knit family willing to lend a hand to artists scraping up funds to bring their vision to the screen. But what could a DIY filmmaker accomplish with a full crew and professional resources for production? Mark Jones, who started the IndieGrant program in 2014, wanted to find out.

“My starting IndieGrant is both from an artistic point of view and an economic point of view,” Jones, whose resume includes the 2012 comedy Tennessee Queer, says. “Film is art. Film is jobs. I thought that if Indie Memphis could help fund short films, then perhaps one of those short films made in Memphis could get some funding, and then it could be made as a feature film here in the city.”

What started as two $4,500 grants and two $500 grants has grown considerably in just two years. Now, two winning film proposals not only receive $5,000 while two others receive $500, but they are also awarded an additional $2,500 from FireFly Grip and Electric for lighting work and equipment, and, beginning this year, $1,500 from LensRentals and $1,000 for sound mixing from Music + Art Studios.

“I think you’d be hard pressed to find another film festival the size of Indie Memphis or perhaps bigger that gives this much out in grants to local filmmakers,” Jones says.

Seven films, financed between the 2014 and 2015 Indie Memphis festivals, will debut at 8:15 p.m. on November 1st at the Halloran Centre. That includes Sarah Fleming’s Carbike, a city-trotting, sightseer told through the perspective of two Japanese visitors; G.B. Shannon’s touching family drama Broke Dick Dog; the Flyer‘s Chris McCoy and Laura Jean Hocking’s road trip comedy How to Skin a Cat, which depicts the Collierville, Midtown, and rural divide; Morgan Jon Fox’s Silver Elves, an almost dialogue-free, true crime reverie; On the Sufferings of the World, an collaboration between experimental auteur Ben Siler, director Edward Valibus, actor Jessica Morgan, and musician Alexis Grace; Dirty Money, by Jonas Schubach, who also served as cinematographer on Indie Memphis’ closing night feature documentary Kallen Esperian: Vissie d’Arti and Jones’ black comedy Death$ in a $mall Town.

How to Skin a Cat

IndieGrant serves as a launch pad — a motivator to stay accountable and follow through with a film, says Joseph Carr. He’ll make his directorial debut at this year’s festival after a $500 IndieGrant and a few thousand dollars in personal fund-raising. Returns is inspired by the years he worked in a bookstore, watching as the digital takeover made in-store interaction almost extinct.

“The film is a profile of people who love their profession and, while struggling with honest bouts of ennui, continue to provide their service in the face of an uncertain future,” Carr says.

A testament to the community’s kinship, Carr committed to filmmaking after working on Sarah Fleming’s crew as a production assistant. Years later, he was cast in Fox’s play Claws and, later, in Feral. Fox produced Carr’s short, along with two others in the block, Fleming’s Carbike and Jones’ Death$ In A $mall Town. Carr, in turn, produced Fox’s Silver Elves.

Death$ in a $mall Town

“The Memphis scene is like a family, and, at some point, we’re all working on each other’s productions one way or another. It’s always an honor,” Fox says.

Since 2002, Fleming has captured multiple perspectives of Memphis. Carbike depicts the city through the eyes of tourists. Aside from Fox playing an amiable Airbnb host, the dialogue between lead actors Kazuha Oda and Hideki Matsushige is in Japanese.

“[Carbike] is part of a larger series focusing on stories of Memphis visitors — all of which are inspired by true stories,” Fleming says. “I’m a huge fan of this city and enjoy exploring our unique landscape.”

At last year’s festival, Jones was asked why there were only two big winners. Rather than hand two people $5,000 each, why not give 10 people $1,000?

“My response was that I want to see the bar raised,” Jones says. “The IndieGrants are important to me because I want to see Memphis grow as a film city. This is one way I can directly help make that happen.”

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Strong Local Offerings Lead Indie Memphis Lineup

Indie Memphis announced its full lineup for the 2016 festival at a bustling preview party at the Rec Room last night. 

Bad, Bad Men,

The most striking feature of the 150-film collection is the strongest presence by local filmmakers since the early-2000s heyday of DIY movies. The Hometowner Competition boasts six feature films, including Old School Pictures’ Bad, Bad Men, a wild comedy of kidnapping and petty revenge by directors Brad Ellis and Allen Gardner, who have racked up several past Indie Memphis wins. Bluff City indie film pioneer Mike McCarthy will debut his first feature-length documentary Destroy Memphis, a strikingly heartfelt film about the fight to save Libertyland and the Zippin Pippen rollercoaster. Four first-time entrants round out the Hometowner competition: Lakethen Mason’s contemporary Memphis music documentary Verge, Kathy Lofton’s healthcare documentary I Am A Caregiver, Flo Gibs look at lesbian and trangender identity Mentality: Girls Like Us, and Madsen Minax’s magical realist tale of lunch ladies and gender confusion Kairos Dirt and the Errant Vacuum. 

‘Silver Elves’


Usually, Hometowner short films comprise a single, popular, programming block; This year, there are enough qualified films to fill four blocks. Sharing the opening night of the festival with the previously announced Memphis documentary The Invaders is a collection of short films produced by recipients of the Indie Grant program, including G.B. Shannon’s family dramedy “Broke Dick Dog”, Sara Fleming’s whimsical tour of Memphis “Carbike”, Morgan Jon Fox’s impressionistic dramatization of the 1998 disappearance of Rhodes student Matthew Pendergrast “Silver Elves”; Indie Grant patron Mark Jones’ “Death$ In A Small Town”, actor/director Joseph Carr’s “Returns”, experimental wizard Ben Siler (working under the name JEBA)’ “On The Sufferings Of The World”, and “How To Skin A Cat”, a road trip comedy by Laura Jean Hocking and yours truly. 

Other standouts in the Hometowner Shorts category include three offerings from Melissa Sweazy: the fairy tale gone dark “Teeth”; “A.J”, a documentary about a teenage boy dealing with grief after a tragic accident, co-directed with Laura Jean Hocking; and “Rundown: The Fight Against Blight In Memphis. Edward Valibus’ soulful dark comedy “Calls From The Unknown”, Nathan Ross Murphy’s “Bluff”, and Kevin Brooks’ “Marcus”, all of which recently competed for the Louisiana Film Prize, will be at the festival, as will Memphis Film Prize winner McGehee Montheith’s “He Coulda Gone Pro”. 

The revived Music Video category features videos from Marco Pave, Star & Micey, Preauxx, The Bo-Keys, Vending Machine, Nots, Caleb Sweazy, Faith Evans Ruch, Marcella & Her Lovers, John Kilzer & Kirk Whalum, Alex duPonte, Alexis Grace, and Zigadoo Moneyclips. 

Internationally acclaimed films on offer include legendary director Jim Jarmusch’s Paterson, starring Adam Driver; Manchester By The Sea from Kenneth Lonergan; and Indie Memphis alum Sophia Takal’s Always Shine. Documentary cinematographer Kirsten Johnson’s spectacular, world-spanning Cameraperson, assembled over the course of her 25 year career, promises to be a big highlight.

Michelle Williams and Casey Affleck in Manchester By The Sea

The full schedule, as well as tickets to individual movies and two levels of festival passes, can be found at the Indie Memphis web site. 

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Bad Movie Double Feature

There is a point in retrograde at which a bad movie becomes so bad it is alchemically transformed into a good movie. If the actors are terrible enough, the direction inept enough, and the script godawful enough, then the fine line between enjoying something for being excellent is indistinguishable from enjoying something that is terrible.

Indie Memphis, Black Lodge Video, and local filmmaker Mark Jones (who makes movies that are not horrible) present two such terrifically dreadful films on Wednesday, June 25th, at Malco’s Studio on the Square. The Room and Miami Connection screen in double-feature fashion beginning at 7 p.m.

The films are so very bad-good. The Room (2003) is considered by many to be the worst film ever made; Entertainment Weekly calls it “the Citizen Kane of bad movies.” (Perhaps one day we’ll see a loving treatment of The Room‘s filmmaker, Tommy Wiseau, and the making of his film, à la Tim Burton’s Ed Wood, about the charmingly bad director of Plan 9 from Outer Space.) The Room will screen on 35mm film, which is like presenting a turd on a Tiffany platter (in other words: great idea!).

Miami Connection (1987) is a retelling of the classical plot that dates back to Homer or Virgil or something: a rock-synth band called Dragon Sound, comprised of black belts in Taekwondo, battles an army of ninjas in Florida.

Shakespeare, it ain’t, which is a good thing.

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Film Features Film/TV

Local feature Tennessee Queer gets encore screening as Outflix fund-raiser.

The third comedic feature from writer/producer Mark Jones (following Eli Parker is Getting Married and Fraternity Massacre at Hell Island), Tennessee Queer stars Christian Walker as Jason Potts, a gay man who left his small Tennessee hometown for New York but is lured back for what he thinks is an intervention for his alcoholic brother. Instead, Jason finds his supportive family angling for a full-time return, insisting that the town has become more gay-friendly.

Tennessee Queer was written in February of 2011 and filmed the following fall. After a one-night local premiere and a festival run last year, it’s getting an encore Memphis screening this week as a fund-raiser for Outflix, Memphis’ annual gay and lesbian film festival.

“I was sort of reacting to events in Memphis and Tennessee over the previous couple of years,” Jones says of the film’s concept, which finds the film’s protagonist petitioning for a gay pride parade in his ostensibly conservative hometown. Jones cites a rally against gay rights sponsored by some Shelby County elected officials and the controversy over the state-wide “don’t say gay” bill as influences.

Back home, Jason seeks to disprove his family’s claims by petitioning to hold a gay pride parade down the town’s Main Street and is shocked to find his petition approved by the positive vote of conservative council member DeWayne Cotton (Billie Worley), who has his eye on a mayoral race and may have ulterior motives.

“I wanted it to have a positive message,” Jones says of a film where his protagonist finds some resistance but also plenty of support. “He’s sort of a reluctant hero, but one person can make a difference.”

Tennessee Queer sketches a legacy of small-town homophobia with a tidy opening sequence that reveals a “smear the queer” wall in the locker room of the high school football team, where the humiliation of suspected gay students — including Jason — has been noted for decades.

“I wanted to do something to get across to the audience that it’s not a new issue in this town,” Jones says of the opening conceit. “It’s a quick way to present the history and establish that Jason has been a part of it.”

The film turns Midtown’s Broad Avenue into its small-town main street and also uses locations such as the P&H Café and Minglewood Hall.

Jones collaborated again here with cinematographer/editor Ryan Parker — whose technical hand is as sure as ever — and a talented crew that includes assistant directors Sarah Fleming and Morgan Jon Fox, both significant figures on the local film scene. Jones was initially set to direct the film but had some health problems on the eve of the shoot, making the direction a collective affair. To acknowledge this, the film is credited to “Earl Goshorn,” a mash-up of Parker’s and Jones’ middle names.

The film debuted last year at the Philadelphia Q Festival and has had screenings at gay and lesbian festivals in Atlanta, Indianapolis, and North Carolina. It’s set to screen at the Oxford Film Festival, in Mississippi, next month. Proceeds from this week’s local screening will go to the Outflix Film Festival, which is sponsored by the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center and which will run September 6th through 12th.

Tennessee Queer

Studio on the Square,

Thursday, January 24th, 7 p.m.; $10

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Memphis Gaydar News

Tennessee Queer Screening

In the locally made film Tennessee Queer, a gay Tennessee native returns to his rural hometown after spending a few years up north in New York, only to find that nothing has changed there with the treatment of LGBT teens.

Eager to help the teens boost their self-esteem, Potts helps them put on the town’s first gay pride parade. But a conservative city councilman and a closed-minded minister plot to round the teens up and send them to a straight camp.

Mark Jones’ comedy will screen on Thursday, January 24th at Studio on the Square as a fund-raisier for the annual Outflix Film Festival. Tickets are $10, and all sales go toward the film fest. Tickets can be bought in advance at the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center (892 South Cooper). Remaining tickets will be sold at the movie theater on the 24th starting at 6PM.

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Film Clips

Morgan Jon Fox (pictured) and John Michael McCarthy are key crew members on Craig Brewer’s $5 Cover, but they are notable local filmmakers in their own right. Both have other projects on tap.

Fox has been particularly busy. His newest film, OMG/HaHaHa, premiered at NewFest, the New York LGBT film festival, June 14th, where, according to Fox, representatives from 12 distributors attended the screening.

“I went up there hustling. I brought 30 [electronic press kits] and screener copies and networked as much as possible. We got a couple of e-mails back from different distributors. One distributor, Water Bearer Films, which put out Mike Leigh’s earlier films and Pasolini’s earlier films, like Accatone … they loved the film and were really interested in it, so we started talking and reached a general agreement. I don’t know when they’re going to release it. It might be later this year. It might not be until next year.”

The deal with Water Bearer is for DVD, digital, and television rights, according to Fox. The film is likely to make its Memphis debut this fall at the Indie Memphis Film Festival.

Fox has also recently struck a cable deal with the Here! network to show Blue Citrus Hearts and secured funding to complete his documentary This Is What Love in Action Looks Like. In the meantime, he’s also producing the next feature from local filmmaker Kentucker Audley, whose Team Picture won at Indie Memphis last year.

“It’s been a good year for me to take the leap into trying to do this full time,” says Fox.

McCarthy has recently finished a script with Craig Brewer for a project called War Bride, which has both filmmakers excited. While Brewer tries to get his next feature project — likely the long-rumored Maggie Lynn — off the ground, McCarthy is working on turning the War Bride script into a graphic novel, with hopes of eventually bringing the concept to cinematic life.

In the meantime, McCarthy has been filming music videos, most recently one for Amy LaVere‘s “Pointless Drinking” and one for Seattle punk band The Cute Lepers, on Joan Jett‘s Blackheart Records label. Both music videos can be seen at McCarthy’s website, GuerrillaMonsterFilms.com.

Brewer isn’t the only local filmmaker working on a web-based project. Mark Jones (Eli Parker Is Getting Married?, Fraternity House Massacre at Hell Island) has begun production on a five-episode web-based series called On the Edge of Happiness. A serialized soap opera/murder mystery, Jones hopes to launch the series — with one episode debuting per week — in November.

Joann Self Selvidge‘s True Story Pictures will screen its latest local history documentary, Leveling the Playing Field: 20 Years of Bridge Builders, at Malco’s Studio on the Square Thursday, July 31st. The 42-minute documentary looks at the history and impact of Bridge Builders — a local youth leadership development program that brings together students of different ethnic and cultural backgrounds —  since its inception 20 years ago. The screening is at 7 p.m. Tickets are $10, or $15 with a DVD of the film. RSVP for the screening at True Story Pictures: 274-9092 or info@truestorypictures.com.