Fest on the edge
Where, and who, the boys are
By Gerald Peary
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CONNIE FRANCIS:
“I really have a lot of nerve being at a film festival!”.
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Is it my fault? I couldn’t make a screening of the documentary Southern Comfort at the
fabulous Third Provincetown International Film Festival. How was I to know when I met the film’s
genial star at a fest party that Lola Cola is not a transvestite but a transsexual? I referred
to Lola as “he,” only to be corrected by Lola’s female lover: “Lola is a she!”
Oops! And I hope I wasn’t too much of a pill when I requested a fan for my hotel room to drown
out the disco from the basement leather bar. Alone of the guests, I needed my sleep. Don’t get
me wrong: I had cool moments, smiling back when cruised by a bearded nun outside a sing-along
screening of The Sound of Music‘and sharing a heart-to-heart with a drag queen from Minnesota
whose nightclub act, he/she explained, encompassed Celine Dion and Reba McIntyre.
To find out what was really hopping at the Provincetown Film Festival, I checked in with filmmaker
John Waters, who has been coming to P-Town for 37 years. He’d agreed to appear on a “Filmmaking
on the Edge” panel and also to introduce a favorite movie. No Andrei Tarkovsky for Waters — he chose
Baxter, a 1991 French flick about a bull terrier who bites people who are sentimental
about dogs.
Mostly, he was giddy about the upcoming evening with ’60s songster Connie Francis, who’d be
appearing at Town Hall with a new 35mm print of her 1960 superhit Where the Boys Are.
Waters ran through headlines of Francis’s tragic life: a controlling father, a rape, failed
marriages, a brother murdered by the Mafia. Over the sounds of volume #4 of Connie Francis’s
Greatest Hits, he defended Dancer in the Dark, which I mostly hate, as a sublime
kitschy melodrama (“Catherine Deneuve as a factory worker! I loved it!”). His 2001 obsession
is Jenna Bush, the latest of his hussy bad girls: “She wore a toe ring to court! She was
totally de ant!”
The festival itself was total fun, jubilant audiences everywhere, and a great triumph for,
among its management, Connie White and Marianne Lampke. Is there a better spot on earth for
a sing-along Sound of Music? Hilariously raunchy comments were yelled out, and there
were boos and hisses for Christopher Plummer’s Baron von Trapp. Who in the predominantly gay
and lesbian audience could abide such a fascistic patriarch? Yet he was forgiven when he
joined in song with his psychologically battered children.
I was happy to introduce retrospective screenings of work by septuagenarian animator Faith
Hubley and documentarian Albert Maysles. “I don’t like Hitler . . . I don’t like Walt Disney,”
is the way Hubley (a sexy 77-year-old — trust me!) introduced herself to me. I know exactly
what she means.
At the screening of Maysles’s 1976 classic Grey Gardens, which is about the symbiotic
relationship of an eccentric adult mother and daughter in East Hampton, a man in the audience
said he’d like to make this documentary into a Broadway musical. “It’s up to Edie,” Maysles
replied, referring to Edith Bouvier Beale Jr., the surviving daughter (also Jackie Kennedy’s
weirdo cousin). “They wanted to make a Hollywood film with Julie Christie as Edie. Edie was
horrified and said, ‘The only person who can play me is me!’ ”
On to Connie Francis. There was some trepidation about her appearance: she’d never heard of
Provincetown! Also, she’s not in the best of health, five weeks with a broken foot. Would she
be the good sport who could justify the $25 ticket price? Not to worry. After a bevy of tanned
muscle guys pranced through the audience in bathing suits, Connie hobbled in. CHEERS! She was
de nitely moved by the reception. “What a joy it is to be here tonight. Welcome to the groovy
Provincetown Festival!” she said. Then the lm rolled, the mostly boring, inanely written
Where
the Boys Are, only vaguely improved by the beautiful new 35mm print, which was struck
for the festival (Connie White’s effort) at a cost of $15,000.
Back on stage, Francis recalled how she hadn’t wanted to make the movie — “I’m a singer, not
an actress,” she told producer Joe Pasternak. But her father insisted. “I didn’t attend the
premiere. I didn’t like the way I looked, sang, acted. But Where the Boys Are was my
Gone with the Wind. The rest of my movies — Follow the Boys, etc. — were downhill
all the way.
“I really have a lot of nerve being at a film festival!”
Gerald Peary can be reached at gpeary@world.std.com.