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[Crowley] I don't know that I knew
what the hell I was doing,
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Official YIFY movies site:
YTS.MX
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to tell you the truth.
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I knew I was writing a play
about gay life.
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When I started to write this play,
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{\an8}I had been so advised by so many people
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{\an8}in positions of authority not to go there.
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{\an8}[harp plays]
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{\an8}[Parsons] There are
certain historical things
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{\an8}that are part of your social DNA
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{\an8}and you can be a better version
of who you are by knowing
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what came before.
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[Quinto] And for young people
who aren't familiar with Boys in the Band,
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{\an8}I think it's a reminder of just
how difficult and how painful it was.
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[Quinto] The play itself, it was
really revelatory and unprecedented.
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Nobody had ever seen
anything like it at the time.
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This is 1968, right before Stonewall.
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[crowd chanting] Gay power!
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[Crowley] And I remember it was buried
in the Times, the New York Times,
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You know, like page 18, 19 or something,
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it was some very peculiar heading on it
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like "Unpleasantness at Village Bar,"
or something, you know.
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It was not, like, an event
that would define an era of liberation.
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[Bomer] There was this combustion
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that was taking place.
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{\an8}All the frustrations and the desperation
that they were experiencing
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starts to bubble to the surface.
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{\an8}Being gay wasn't legal,
it wasn't okay, it wasn't accepted.
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{\an8}It was illegal for men to dance together,
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{\an8}It was illegal for groups
of gay men to congregate together.
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So, you ran the risk
of getting arrested socializing.
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[Crowley] I was so dumb or so young,
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I didn't even feel
like I was taking any risk.
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I just got this idea for a play.
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These nine gay guys at a birthday party.
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{\an8}He is the first person
to take up the challenge.
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{\an8}to write about gay men's lives
in a way that was completely commercial.
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{\an8}This is a monumental thing.
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Mart's play showed gay audiences
that they could be seen.
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And next came difficult conversations
about how they should be seen.
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[Bomer] What I think is wonderful
about this piece is
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that there are so many
different well-drawn gay characters.
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They're not a cliché.
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[Washington] I think they're real men
because Mart wrote them as real men
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{\an8}and they're imperfect,
as all good characters
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{\an8}and good human beings are.
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{\an8}[de Jesús] This was a cast of all out,
very out,
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proud, gay men playing gay characters.
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{\an8}There's a different type of camaraderie
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{\an8}and there's a different flow
of energy that exists
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when you get nine gay men together,
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and that's really beautiful to watch.
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[Watkins] When you've got
leading men saying,
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{\an8}"here's who I am, and I'm still working"
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{\an8}or "I get to work
not in spite of that, but because of it,"
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{\an8}that is a turn of events.
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That changes the zeitgeist.
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[Carver] There's something about it
that's so familiar to my generation
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{\an8}and it speaks to being a part of history
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{\an8}and some sort of spirit out there
in the world that won't ever change.
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{\an8}[Emory] Harold has very tight,
tight, black curly hair.
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This number's practically bald.
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Hey, thank you and fuck you!
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[Crowley] You know, I sold the play
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by couching it
as a comedy-drama situation.
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And the laughs sold it, and…
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the laughs lightened it up.
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And although I have never seen my soul,
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I understand from my mother's Rabbi
that it's a knockout.
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[laughs]
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[Crowley] I hope that they take
the serious content
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that's buried underneath to heart.
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[Parsons] It's been so long,
and we have come so far.
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If things are better today,
and I hope that's true worldwide,
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it's because of things like this
and moments in time like this.
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Fifty years later, the fact that now
everyone can be open with themselves
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and we can look back on it and go,
"Oh, wow.
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We were there, and now we're here,
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and let's thank the people
who got us to this place."
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{\an8}Hi.
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{\an8}Come in. Welcome to my apartment.
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Mart Crowley was very helpful
with sharing memories that he had
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about the process of writing the play
and a lot of personal stories
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about loosely who these guys
were based on.
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They're based on people he knew
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and they are really his group of friends,
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and they came to life
in this, you know, feat of imagination,
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this huge creative risk.
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This is sort of a New York gallery,
as you see, it's only
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wide enough for one person
to look at the pictures at one time.
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These are all my friends.
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[Crowley] The Boys in the Band
originally premiered
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off Broadway April 14th.
It was Easter Sunday, as a matter of fact,
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and the joke was,
"I hope it doesn't lay an egg."
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{\an8}The revival of the play was
April 30th, 2018, fifty years later.
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This is the photograph
that was used to publicize
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the play on Broadway,
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and it is obviously
mocking up the original.
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Here we are, the cast and me.
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I wanted to acknowledge the bravery
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of those guys that took on those parts,
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even against the advice of their agents.
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There was a tremendous
undercurrent of fear
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about what this could do
to them and their careers.
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And I think that they were all,
in their own ways,
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incredibly brave to bring it to life.
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It would have been career suicide
to have come out
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and not even acknowledge personally
that they were gay, but…
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Because some of them weren't.
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The actors all in this version
are open and out and successful,
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{\an8}but in the original, six were gay,
played by gay actors,
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{\an8}and three were played by straight actors.
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All of them, though,
had everything on the line.
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You know,
the gay community had been verboten,
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so nobody ever really talked about it
unless you were gay
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and you knew somebody else who was gay,
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and then you talked about it
within the confines of your own…
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private surroundings, but there wasn't
too much public announcement about it.
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And there's Billy Friedkin
and me on the set
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of The Boys in the Band up there.
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Here's the original set design
by Peter Harvey.
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[Parsons] I wrote to Mart, and I have
this trove of emails from him now
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that so well written and such good reads
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about all these movies
that made an effect on him,
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and, "I saw this in this country,"
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because he's another one, like Michael,
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he was always
jet-setting around or whatever.
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This cigarette box, it was a gift
from the cast and crew.
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They bought it in Tiffany's,
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but Tiffany's wouldn't engrave it
because it has a line from the play
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which is, "Thank you and fuck you."
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[laughs]
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[Donald] You know what you are, Michael?
You're a real person.
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Thank you and fuck you.
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This is who Donald was based on,
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my friend Douglas Murray,
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and the play is dedicated to Doug,
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and to Howard.
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They couldn't stand each other.
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This is my goddaughter,
and she's holding up the photo--
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the photograph
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that is a gift in the play.
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[Bomer] This play has gone through
so many different iterations
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in terms of how it's
been perceived by society.
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It was loved and adored
because it was the first time
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gay men were being
portrayed like this on stage,
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and then it was sort of reviled
because people thought it was regressive,
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then I think the nice thing
about fifty years later
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is that we're able to revisit
in a way where we could say,
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"Oh, this is a part of our history."
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[Crowley] I like this picture very much.
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There's Joe on one end…
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and Ryan on the other end,
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and me here.
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The fact that all actors involved
in this are openly gay men,
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it was a great way
to show how far we'd come
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the fact that now everyone
can be open with themselves.
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[Watkins] There were people who said,
"I remember this.
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Thank you for telling our story,"
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and then there were young people who said,
"You're telling my story."
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[de Jesús] One person, he was, like,
sobbing, crying, and he said,
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"I'm just so proud.
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I'm so proud to be an out, gay man."
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[Crowley] Ones my age that were saying,
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"Oh, we're not like that anymore."
And then...
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the youngest ones saying, "Well,
we're still just like that." [laughs]
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There is a phenomenon
as a 52-year-old gay man where you
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don't really know
how to grow old gracefully.
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Mart is, for me,
an example of what is possible.
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Here's the Tony Award that we all won.
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Well, I was totally surprised.
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Nobody believes that, but I was, I mean,
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in fact,
I didn't even have a speech prepared.
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I mean, knew who I had to thank,
I had a list.
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I got out a paper that had a list
of people that I had to thank,
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but then my eyes teared up
and I couldn't even read that.
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This telegram,
which was from my psychiatrist.
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He sent it to me on opening night.
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"Dear Mart, no one can be more pleased
nor proud of you than I."
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So, we'd come through a lot together
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and I guess he was thrilled with his work.
[laughs]
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-[man] Set.
-[director] Action.
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[jazz music plays]
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[Quinto] My character is Harold.
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He's a complicated fellow.
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I know that he's based
on someone in Mart's life,
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a guy named Howard Jeffrey.
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It's always interesting
to hear stories about people
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who have influenced characters and…
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and so that was cool.
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[Crowley] Howard Jeffrey was
my best friend.
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I would say that, you know, pretty much,
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Michael, the lead in the play,
is based on me.
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And Harold,
who is his nemesis in the play,
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was based on Howard.
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-And how are you this evening?
-You're stoned, and you're late.
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You were supposed to arrive
at this location
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at approximately 8:30 dash 9:00.
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This is Howard Jeffrey.
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That picture was taken by Jerome Robbins.
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And as you see,
Howard was a very attractive guy.
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He was a dancer.
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The top echelon of choreographers
all wanted him.
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He was born in Los Angeles,
worked all over the country.
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Many of the big movies of their era,
he was a part of.
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[Crowley] Natalie Wood,
Howard taught her all the routines
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in West Side Story the film.
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That's where I met him.
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And then the three of us became
lifelong friends from then on.
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{\an8}Big film stars worshipped him,
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{\an8}particularly if they weren't
dancers themselves.
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Barbra Streisand, when she did Funny Girl,
which was her first film,
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was so reliant on Howard that she demanded
that whenever she had to dance
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with a partner it would be with Howard.
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And so therefore he's featured
in the Ziegfeld Follies sequence
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with the pregnant bride.
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{\an8}She demanded that he be one of the waiters
in the great "Waiters' Gallop."
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{\an8}And here's Howard again.
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This is one of the last photographs
that was taken of him
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because he was very ill here.
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This is in Italy.
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In the end,
Howard Jeffrey did die in the AIDS plague.
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And he was my age, he was 52.
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And you can hear
in Mart's description of him
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a sense that he talked to him yesterday.
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He's very present in Mart's imagination,
and he's very present on the page.
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[Crowley] The play is dedicated to him.
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He didn't know about it
when I was writing it.
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I was terrified to even let him know
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because I didn't know
what the hell he would…
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how he would react.
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[laughs]
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What's so fucking funny?
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[Quinto] What I've learned about Howard
and his complexity
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and who he was
informs Harold to a certain extent.
237
00:12:31,292 --> 00:12:34,795
Life is a goddamned laugh riot!
You remember life.
238
00:12:34,879 --> 00:12:38,758
You really get a very clear sense
of who this man is
239
00:12:38,841 --> 00:12:41,218
just by, you know,
reading Mart's dialogue.
240
00:12:41,302 --> 00:12:43,971
I'm having seconds and thirds,
and maybe even fifths.
241
00:12:44,472 --> 00:12:46,849
I'm absolutely desperate
to keep the weight up.
242
00:12:46,932 --> 00:12:50,019
There are other influences in my own life,
243
00:12:50,102 --> 00:12:52,563
and in my own experience of people who
244
00:12:52,646 --> 00:12:55,441
I've sort of drawn on to help me
245
00:12:55,524 --> 00:12:58,778
shade in the colors
of who my version of Harold is.
246
00:12:58,861 --> 00:13:03,282
I know Zach to be a really
hilarious person
247
00:13:03,365 --> 00:13:04,950
with a great sense of humor.
248
00:13:05,034 --> 00:13:08,996
I kept forgetting and accidentally turning
my hateful mother on with the salad.
249
00:13:09,955 --> 00:13:11,081
But I think she likes it.
250
00:13:11,165 --> 00:13:14,084
No matter what meal she comes over for,
even if it's breakfast,
251
00:13:14,168 --> 00:13:16,420
-she says, "Let's have a salad!"
-[laughs]
252
00:13:16,504 --> 00:13:19,757
I thought it would be interesting
to really push him in that direction,
253
00:13:19,840 --> 00:13:21,884
to expose that side of him,
254
00:13:21,967 --> 00:13:25,513
which I don't think
he gets called on to do all that often.
255
00:13:25,596 --> 00:13:27,598
Now, it is my turn.
256
00:13:29,642 --> 00:13:30,476
[sighs]
257
00:13:31,977 --> 00:13:34,313
-And ready or not, Michael, here goes…
-[jazz music plays]
258
00:13:34,396 --> 00:13:38,859
[Crowley] And Howard was as he is
in the play, the truth teller, the…
259
00:13:39,652 --> 00:13:44,448
the demolisher of all pretension,
you know.
260
00:13:44,532 --> 00:13:47,451
And Howard could always read me that way
261
00:13:47,535 --> 00:13:51,080
and not let me get away with anything.
262
00:13:51,163 --> 00:13:52,957
You have left out one detail.
263
00:13:53,624 --> 00:13:56,502
The pills are paid for.
264
00:13:56,585 --> 00:13:59,755
I resented that at times,
of course, bitterly,
265
00:13:59,839 --> 00:14:02,341
and we had many fights
about a lot of things.
266
00:14:03,384 --> 00:14:05,427
Michael, thanks for the laughs.
267
00:14:06,595 --> 00:14:11,642
[Crowley] But in retrospect,
I learned more from him about myself
268
00:14:12,268 --> 00:14:13,936
than I did from anybody.
269
00:14:15,646 --> 00:14:16,689
Come on, Tex.
270
00:14:18,482 --> 00:14:19,358
You're on.
271
00:14:21,986 --> 00:14:25,447
[Crowley] When I started to write
this play, I knew I wanted Emory
272
00:14:25,531 --> 00:14:30,286
to provide Harold with a birthday present
who was a hustler.
273
00:14:30,369 --> 00:14:33,622
I just needed a hustler,
you know, as a party gift.
274
00:14:35,207 --> 00:14:37,001
I was fascinated by them
275
00:14:37,084 --> 00:14:38,878
and whenever I'd go to Fire Island,
276
00:14:38,961 --> 00:14:42,840
I mean, I knew who was out
to make some money for the evening
277
00:14:42,923 --> 00:14:46,135
and there was one particular one
that I found rather charming.
278
00:14:46,218 --> 00:14:48,429
Mary, she's gorgeous.
279
00:14:48,512 --> 00:14:52,391
[Crowley] He knew how fascinated I was
with his being a sex worker,
280
00:14:52,474 --> 00:14:55,603
and I happened to be dancing with him
281
00:14:55,686 --> 00:14:58,022
and I said to him, "Are you good in bed?
282
00:14:58,856 --> 00:15:01,609
With all these guys
that you have to go to bed with,
283
00:15:01,692 --> 00:15:03,235
I mean, how do you do this?"
284
00:15:03,319 --> 00:15:05,654
And he said back to me,
285
00:15:05,738 --> 00:15:09,283
"I'm not like the average hustler
you'd meet…"
286
00:15:09,366 --> 00:15:11,201
I try to show a little affection.
287
00:15:13,704 --> 00:15:15,789
Keeps me from feeling like such a whore.
288
00:15:15,873 --> 00:15:17,833
[laughing] And I thought, "Oh, my God!"
289
00:15:24,590 --> 00:15:26,050
I…
290
00:15:27,176 --> 00:15:29,303
I couldn't write anything that good.
291
00:15:30,554 --> 00:15:32,640
I couldn't write anything that good.
292
00:15:40,230 --> 00:15:41,398
Call you tomorrow.
293
00:15:43,651 --> 00:15:44,693
[door closes]
294
00:15:45,194 --> 00:15:47,154
[jazz music plays]
295
00:15:47,237 --> 00:15:51,200
[Crowley] Gosh, so here we are
on the set of The Boys in the Band.
296
00:15:51,283 --> 00:15:53,494
-[Crowley] "Who are you?"
-[Carver] "Who are you?"
297
00:15:53,577 --> 00:15:55,579
You seem like you've already prepared--
298
00:15:55,663 --> 00:15:57,748
-I haven't prepared, no!
-[Crowley laughs]
299
00:15:57,831 --> 00:15:59,041
This is on the fly.
300
00:15:59,124 --> 00:15:59,959
-It is?
-Yeah.
301
00:16:02,086 --> 00:16:07,883
[Carver] You, in telling this story,
have fundamentally changed pop culture.
302
00:16:07,967 --> 00:16:10,636
This was the first portrayal
of gay men anywhere.
303
00:16:10,719 --> 00:16:14,848
[jazz music plays]
304
00:16:14,932 --> 00:16:19,520
What's it like for you to see
gayness portrayed now?
305
00:16:19,603 --> 00:16:22,690
What feels familiar? What feels different?
306
00:16:22,773 --> 00:16:26,944
I'm very happy that the topic
and the subject matter
307
00:16:27,027 --> 00:16:30,114
has come to be so pervasive.
308
00:16:30,197 --> 00:16:33,617
It seems like every play
on Broadway these days
309
00:16:33,701 --> 00:16:37,579
and every musical has got
some gay element in it,
310
00:16:37,663 --> 00:16:39,039
and that's all very diverse.
311
00:16:40,082 --> 00:16:41,166
Oh!
312
00:16:41,250 --> 00:16:44,003
-[laughing]
-Oh! Hey!
313
00:16:44,878 --> 00:16:46,213
Who the hell are you?
314
00:16:46,839 --> 00:16:49,550
[Carver] You were the same age I am now
315
00:16:49,633 --> 00:16:51,552
when you wrote Boys in the Band.
316
00:16:51,635 --> 00:16:54,847
I suppose that's a question for myself,
"What does that feel like for me?"
317
00:16:54,930 --> 00:16:57,599
Yeah, I think so,
but I don't wanna panic you
318
00:16:57,683 --> 00:17:01,979
because, I tell you,
all I remember about being your age,
319
00:17:02,062 --> 00:17:03,856
and I'm not even gonna say what it is,
320
00:17:04,398 --> 00:17:08,110
-Oh, please do, though.
-Well, you've turned a corner, you're now…
321
00:17:08,610 --> 00:17:10,738
-in, you know, thirty…
-Yeah.
322
00:17:10,821 --> 00:17:13,532
…one. [laughs]
323
00:17:13,615 --> 00:17:14,867
Yes!
324
00:17:14,950 --> 00:17:20,456
♪ Happy birthday to you! ♪
325
00:17:21,331 --> 00:17:22,541
[Crowley] And I thought,
326
00:17:22,624 --> 00:17:27,713
when I was 31 I thought,
"Oh, shit. I'm past 30."
327
00:17:27,796 --> 00:17:30,174
I mean, I haven't done anything.
328
00:17:30,257 --> 00:17:31,467
I gotta do something.
329
00:17:31,550 --> 00:17:34,011
[Cowboy] I never use the steam room
when I go to the gym.
330
00:17:34,803 --> 00:17:37,014
It's bad after a workout.
It flattens you down.
331
00:17:37,848 --> 00:17:43,937
I don't like to foreground my sexuality
or that aspect of my life,
332
00:17:44,021 --> 00:17:46,190
but at the same time,
I got to a point in the business
333
00:17:46,273 --> 00:17:48,192
where I felt like
334
00:17:48,275 --> 00:17:52,362
I was suffering and then I felt
like I had to keep part of myself hidden,
335
00:17:52,446 --> 00:17:56,575
and I knew other people
working the business
336
00:17:56,658 --> 00:18:00,954
who were suffering and that they
were hiding their true selves,
337
00:18:01,038 --> 00:18:04,708
or getting set up on fake dates
by their manager and stuff like that.
338
00:18:04,792 --> 00:18:07,753
And that was about perpetuating
339
00:18:07,836 --> 00:18:11,715
this omission of the truth
to young audiences,
340
00:18:11,799 --> 00:18:15,594
and you've spoken at length
about how Boys in the Band was
341
00:18:15,677 --> 00:18:18,514
-sort of born out of your frustration
-Yeah.
342
00:18:18,597 --> 00:18:20,933
with the business and with the world,
343
00:18:21,016 --> 00:18:23,727
and my coming out was kind of like that
for me too.
344
00:18:23,811 --> 00:18:26,730
And what do you do for twenty dollars?
345
00:18:27,314 --> 00:18:28,273
I do my best.
346
00:18:28,357 --> 00:18:31,485
This is the kind of production that…
347
00:18:31,568 --> 00:18:34,571
I think and hope moves the ball forward,
348
00:18:34,655 --> 00:18:37,825
and kind of expands
that whole conversation.
349
00:18:37,908 --> 00:18:38,784
Well, I do too.
350
00:18:39,993 --> 00:18:43,539
[Carver] Do you ever have conversations
in your head
351
00:18:43,622 --> 00:18:46,125
with actors who are no longer with us?
352
00:18:46,208 --> 00:18:48,293
[Crowley] I'm a really sentimental slob,
353
00:18:48,377 --> 00:18:51,547
and you know that because I break up
and tear up too easily.
354
00:18:51,630 --> 00:18:54,883
I mean,
I completely fucked up at the Tonys.
355
00:18:54,967 --> 00:18:56,677
-I got to the stage
-[Carver laughs]
356
00:18:56,760 --> 00:18:59,221
and there the nine of you were behind me.
357
00:18:59,304 --> 00:19:03,392
So, I wanted to dedicate the thing
to the guys that were brave enough
358
00:19:03,475 --> 00:19:05,102
to do the play in the beginning.
359
00:19:05,185 --> 00:19:06,979
-Yeah.
-And I owed it all to them.
360
00:19:07,062 --> 00:19:12,442
Like I owe all of this production
and this revival to you,
361
00:19:12,526 --> 00:19:15,487
and the other eight actors,
and Joe Mantello.
362
00:19:15,571 --> 00:19:18,448
And I was so happy
that you were all there
363
00:19:18,532 --> 00:19:22,369
-that I forgot to say thank you!
-[both laugh]
364
00:19:22,452 --> 00:19:24,872
[Cowboy] It would be terrible
if you got that stuff in your…
365
00:19:24,955 --> 00:19:26,456
[jazz music plays]
366
00:19:27,708 --> 00:19:28,542
I'll be quiet.
367
00:19:30,294 --> 00:19:32,462
Is there anything that you would want
368
00:19:33,213 --> 00:19:35,132
audiences to take away
369
00:19:35,215 --> 00:19:38,760
from the play or this movie in 2020?
370
00:19:38,844 --> 00:19:41,054
Yeah, I want them to take it all away,
you know?
371
00:19:41,138 --> 00:19:43,682
-[Crowley laughs]
-[Carver, laughing] Oh, God!
372
00:19:43,765 --> 00:19:46,268
-Take it away and get out of here.
-Oh, man!
373
00:19:46,351 --> 00:19:48,562
No, I mean really, seriously.
374
00:19:48,645 --> 00:19:52,566
They can take what they like
and leave what they don't like behind.
375
00:19:52,649 --> 00:19:54,526
You know what? I like your attitude, Mart.
376
00:19:54,610 --> 00:19:56,361
I think I'm just gonna
adopt this approach.
377
00:19:57,112 --> 00:19:59,489
"Take it all away,
you can have what you want."
378
00:19:59,573 --> 00:20:01,909
-[laughs] But it's true, isn't it?
-Please enjoy.
379
00:20:01,992 --> 00:20:05,662
Just look at what's happened
through the years.
380
00:20:05,746 --> 00:20:08,624
Fortunately, you and I can sit here
and laugh about it,
381
00:20:08,707 --> 00:20:11,627
but it was no laughing matter then,
in any way.
382
00:20:11,710 --> 00:20:14,296
But yet, there's always humor
in the darkness, isn't there?
383
00:20:15,756 --> 00:20:17,716
I'm gonna get that down right now!
384
00:20:17,799 --> 00:20:19,760
[both laugh]
385
00:20:19,843 --> 00:20:21,845
-[man] All right, thank you!
-[woman] Thank you!
386
00:20:21,929 --> 00:20:24,723
[cheering and applause]
387
00:20:24,806 --> 00:20:27,100
[jazz music plays]
388
00:20:28,101 --> 00:20:29,978
Let's do it please, guys. Here we go.
389
00:20:33,857 --> 00:20:35,025
[director] Action.
390
00:20:35,108 --> 00:20:39,154
[Michael] Oh, no. No.
We all have to call on the telephone
391
00:20:39,238 --> 00:20:43,867
the one person
we truly believe we have loved.
392
00:20:44,493 --> 00:20:47,871
[Crowley] I love their approach.
I mean, it's all realistic.
393
00:20:48,914 --> 00:20:51,375
-Am I stunning?
-You're absolutely stunning.
394
00:20:51,458 --> 00:20:53,627
[Crowley] You know,
when you look back on something,
395
00:20:53,710 --> 00:20:58,173
you see the "oh, you're dressed funny,"
or "your hairstyles are funny"
396
00:20:58,257 --> 00:21:00,425
or nostalgic, or whatever.
397
00:21:00,509 --> 00:21:03,387
But if you lived through the period,
you don't think anything of it.
398
00:21:04,304 --> 00:21:06,223
[Michael] I butched it up quite a bit.
399
00:21:06,306 --> 00:21:09,393
And I didn't think I was lying to myself,
I really thought I was straight.
400
00:21:09,476 --> 00:21:12,396
[Crowley] Yeah,
it was a very closeted society.
401
00:21:12,479 --> 00:21:15,899
Everybody was just taken,
generally, to be straight,
402
00:21:15,983 --> 00:21:18,402
but that certainly wasn't true.
403
00:21:19,486 --> 00:21:22,030
[Washington] I think Bernard is
very comfortable in his own skin
404
00:21:22,114 --> 00:21:24,199
and the fact that he is two minorities.
405
00:21:24,283 --> 00:21:28,620
He's gay, he's Black, but he's also
an intellectual and he's in New York City.
406
00:21:28,704 --> 00:21:32,958
So I have these examples
of openly gay Black men who wore suits
407
00:21:33,041 --> 00:21:35,335
and functioned
inside of white worlds all the time,
408
00:21:35,419 --> 00:21:37,462
and never compromised
their racial identity.
409
00:21:37,546 --> 00:21:41,591
You allow him to degrade you constantly
by Uncle Tom-ing you to death.
410
00:21:41,675 --> 00:21:42,968
He can do it, Michael.
411
00:21:43,051 --> 00:21:45,721
I can do it. But you can't do it.
412
00:21:45,804 --> 00:21:48,598
I mean, I just pretend like I'm having
brunch with Jimmy Baldwin tomorrow
413
00:21:48,682 --> 00:21:51,101
and I'm gonna tell him
what these bitches did to me last night.
414
00:21:52,477 --> 00:21:55,522
I'm not ready for my close-up,
Mr. DeMille.
415
00:21:55,605 --> 00:21:59,067
There's a part of me, as an actor,
that always absorbs the characters,
416
00:21:59,151 --> 00:22:03,989
so my extra-ness right now is heightened
by the fact that I'm playing Emory.
417
00:22:04,072 --> 00:22:05,949
It's very serious!
418
00:22:06,033 --> 00:22:09,536
[de Jesús] Joe and I spoke
about taking up my space as Emory,
419
00:22:09,619 --> 00:22:13,832
and that kind of messed with me
here and here,
420
00:22:14,499 --> 00:22:19,629
because Robin himself was
in a place of kind of playing small,
421
00:22:19,713 --> 00:22:22,007
so it made me learn from Emory,
422
00:22:22,090 --> 00:22:24,801
and learned that you are in fact capable
of taking up space
423
00:22:24,885 --> 00:22:27,387
while allowing others to have their own.
424
00:22:27,471 --> 00:22:29,556
Ask him if he's got any hot cross buns!
425
00:22:29,639 --> 00:22:31,224
[de Jesús] This is who I am,
426
00:22:31,308 --> 00:22:34,770
and people are gonna like it or not,
and I'm just gonna do me.
427
00:22:34,853 --> 00:22:36,063
Who is she?
428
00:22:36,855 --> 00:22:37,898
Who was she?
429
00:22:38,690 --> 00:22:40,108
Who does she hope to be?
430
00:22:40,192 --> 00:22:43,195
[jazz music plays]
431
00:22:43,278 --> 00:22:45,197
[Rannells] Well, this is Andy Rannells
in Omaha.
432
00:22:45,280 --> 00:22:48,033
I'm gonna say this was
my fifth or sixth birthday,
433
00:22:48,116 --> 00:22:52,162
and my mother gave me
a Malibu Ken and a Malibu Barbie,
434
00:22:52,245 --> 00:22:53,538
because I asked for them.
435
00:22:53,622 --> 00:22:55,791
I think the idea on paper was to give
436
00:22:55,874 --> 00:22:58,668
Andy Barbies so that he would play
with his little sister,
437
00:22:58,752 --> 00:23:00,212
but I really just wanted the Barbies.
438
00:23:00,295 --> 00:23:03,465
[Quinto] This is 1988
at the Pittsburgh Civic Light Opera.
439
00:23:03,548 --> 00:23:06,134
This was my very first professional
production of The Wizard of Oz,
440
00:23:06,218 --> 00:23:08,178
in which I played a munchkin.
441
00:23:08,261 --> 00:23:10,639
Great make-up job, you'll notice.
I did it myself.
442
00:23:11,223 --> 00:23:15,435
It's obviously Christmas time.
I guess cowboys were the thing that year.
443
00:23:15,519 --> 00:23:17,062
It looked like I'm maybe four or five.
444
00:23:17,145 --> 00:23:18,939
[interviewer] Did you have
any other siblings?
445
00:23:19,022 --> 00:23:22,234
I did. I had an older brother
who had a matching cowboy getup.
446
00:23:22,317 --> 00:23:24,986
I think he's been edited out of the photo.
Sorry, Neil!
447
00:23:25,070 --> 00:23:29,616
This was in the sort of mid-70s
in Pittsburgh
448
00:23:29,699 --> 00:23:33,745
a time where it also wasn't so okay
or encouraged to be gay, certainly.
449
00:23:33,829 --> 00:23:35,038
[jazz music plays]
450
00:23:35,122 --> 00:23:39,167
[Washington] This would have been
circa 1983 in Dallas,Texas.
451
00:23:39,251 --> 00:23:41,837
My mother loved a nice red rug.
452
00:23:41,920 --> 00:23:43,547
It's like a red carpet wherever you went.
453
00:23:43,630 --> 00:23:48,093
[Carver] Northern California, and this was
right before I got married to the cat.
454
00:23:48,176 --> 00:23:49,803
[interviewer] How did that marriage go?
455
00:23:49,886 --> 00:23:50,846
Well, the cat died.
456
00:23:50,929 --> 00:23:53,432
-Okay, you're a widower. [laughs]
-Yeah. I'm a widower.
457
00:23:53,515 --> 00:23:56,810
[de Jesús] This photo was taken
on picture day at my school.
458
00:23:56,893 --> 00:23:58,562
And what was cool about this day,
459
00:23:58,645 --> 00:24:01,022
first of all I remember
picking out this shirt,
460
00:24:01,106 --> 00:24:03,817
'cause it reminded me of my brother's
shirt and I thought I was badass,
461
00:24:03,900 --> 00:24:06,445
but also you got to pick the background.
462
00:24:06,528 --> 00:24:08,989
[Watkins] I wanted to wear
my favorite orange shirt
463
00:24:09,072 --> 00:24:11,074
and my mom said,
"You have to wear a collared shirt."
464
00:24:11,158 --> 00:24:13,160
When she went into the kitchen,
I ran back upstairs,
465
00:24:13,243 --> 00:24:15,787
put on my favorite shirt,
ran out the front door, ran to school,
466
00:24:15,871 --> 00:24:18,748
and when the pictures came home,
she saw that I was wearing this shirt,
467
00:24:18,832 --> 00:24:21,668
and when she saw how happy I was,
she realized,
468
00:24:21,751 --> 00:24:23,962
"I should let the kid wear
any shirt he wants to wear."
469
00:24:24,546 --> 00:24:26,256
[interviewer laughs]
470
00:24:28,467 --> 00:24:31,094
Don't you wonder,
was that before or after I…
471
00:24:31,178 --> 00:24:33,388
-[interviewer laughs]
-threw down in the toilet.
472
00:24:33,472 --> 00:24:35,932
-That looks like an after smile.
-It's got to be.
473
00:24:37,058 --> 00:24:39,060
-[interviewer] All right, lightning round.
-Oh, yes!
474
00:24:39,144 --> 00:24:40,687
-Ooh!
-[laughs nervously]
475
00:24:40,770 --> 00:24:43,148
[interviewer] She's never gonna run out
of ideas about…
476
00:24:44,232 --> 00:24:46,693
-Her hair. [laughs]
-[interviewer laughs]
477
00:24:46,776 --> 00:24:47,777
The color red.
478
00:24:47,861 --> 00:24:50,405
I remember being so obsessed
with the color red.
479
00:24:50,489 --> 00:24:52,949
The Thanksgiving family talent show.
480
00:24:53,033 --> 00:24:55,285
It's just so hard to get
into the psyche of a four-year-old
481
00:24:55,368 --> 00:24:58,914
I like that I'm standing in the exact
same position and I didn't even realize,
482
00:24:58,997 --> 00:25:01,833
but that's what's happening right now.
[laughs]
483
00:25:01,917 --> 00:25:03,460
[interviewer] And she would never…
484
00:25:04,044 --> 00:25:07,255
She would never upset her mother.
485
00:25:07,339 --> 00:25:08,215
Play soccer.
486
00:25:08,298 --> 00:25:11,593
Let her sister win a lip-syncing contest.
487
00:25:11,676 --> 00:25:13,345
Eat all her vegetables.
488
00:25:13,428 --> 00:25:16,097
Which is very opposite from me now,
as you can attest,
489
00:25:16,181 --> 00:25:19,518
pretty much all I eat are vegetables.
So, parents, don't give up hope.
490
00:25:21,186 --> 00:25:23,021
I'm usually good at this stuff, Charlie.
491
00:25:23,104 --> 00:25:24,773
What does she--
You know what I think it is?
492
00:25:24,856 --> 00:25:26,483
I think the pronoun's really throwing me!
493
00:25:26,566 --> 00:25:28,985
[interviewer] She doesn't even want
to hear about…
494
00:25:29,069 --> 00:25:30,820
Okra. She hated okra.
495
00:25:32,155 --> 00:25:33,782
Not Oprah. Okra.
496
00:25:34,533 --> 00:25:36,284
[interviewer] And who did she hope to be?
497
00:25:36,368 --> 00:25:39,204
She hoped to be a movie star.
498
00:25:39,287 --> 00:25:41,915
-Ariel in The Little Mermaid.
-[interviewer laughs]
499
00:25:41,998 --> 00:25:42,958
A good friend to people.
500
00:25:43,750 --> 00:25:46,211
I hope I lived up
to your hopes and dreams, honey.
501
00:25:53,885 --> 00:25:58,557
[jazz music plays]
502
00:26:00,934 --> 00:26:02,519
-[interviewer] Here we are.
-Oh, hi.
503
00:26:03,687 --> 00:26:05,355
Fancy meeting you here.
504
00:26:05,438 --> 00:26:06,690
Where are we today?
505
00:26:06,773 --> 00:26:09,276
We're in Julius' bar,
506
00:26:09,359 --> 00:26:12,279
where I've been many times in my life.
507
00:26:12,821 --> 00:26:14,072
[director] Background!
508
00:26:16,324 --> 00:26:19,369
[Crowley] And this is fun, being
in the film, especially with you,
509
00:26:19,452 --> 00:26:23,665
and this lovely silk tie
with this golden ring
510
00:26:23,748 --> 00:26:25,834
that will not stay in place.
511
00:26:26,501 --> 00:26:31,339
[jazz music plays]
512
00:26:31,423 --> 00:26:34,217
[interviewer] Are there
any palpable differences filming
513
00:26:34,301 --> 00:26:37,012
this version versus the previous?
514
00:26:37,095 --> 00:26:40,640
I'm a grown-up, officially.
I was 84 yesterday,
515
00:26:40,724 --> 00:26:44,853
so I guess I count as an adult these days.
516
00:26:45,520 --> 00:26:48,356
I was just a frisky young thing back then
517
00:26:48,440 --> 00:26:50,400
and feeling my oats.
518
00:26:51,610 --> 00:26:56,698
I don't feel my oats much anymore.
[laughs]
519
00:26:56,781 --> 00:27:00,035
Anyway.
It's nice to be standing in front of it
520
00:27:00,118 --> 00:27:03,371
on this beautiful day
when we're shooting around the corner.
521
00:27:04,247 --> 00:27:07,042
[jazz music plays]
522
00:27:07,125 --> 00:27:07,959
Yesterday?
523
00:27:08,043 --> 00:27:09,544
-Yesterday.
-Happy belated!
524
00:27:10,962 --> 00:27:12,047
That's fantastic.
525
00:27:12,130 --> 00:27:13,214
Excuse us.
526
00:27:13,298 --> 00:27:15,675
-When was your debut?
-Just tonight.
527
00:27:15,759 --> 00:27:17,385
-Tonight? In acting?
-Yeah.
528
00:27:17,469 --> 00:27:19,596
This is the best birthday present
you could have gotten.
529
00:27:19,679 --> 00:27:21,890
Absolutely, it was fantastic.
530
00:27:21,973 --> 00:27:24,934
Home again. I'm back after 50 years.
531
00:27:25,018 --> 00:27:26,227
-That's incredible.
-Comeback.
532
00:27:26,311 --> 00:27:28,021
-Yeah. Love it.
-[Crowley laughs]
533
00:27:28,772 --> 00:27:30,774
That's fantastic. Legend coming back.
534
00:27:30,857 --> 00:27:32,984
Thank you.
Well, good luck on your close up.
535
00:27:33,068 --> 00:27:34,277
Thank you very much.
536
00:27:34,361 --> 00:27:35,403
[applause]
537
00:27:35,487 --> 00:27:37,947
♪ Happy birthday to you ♪
538
00:27:38,031 --> 00:27:42,160
♪ Happy birthday to you ♪
539
00:27:42,243 --> 00:27:46,706
♪ Happy birthday dear Mart… ♪
540
00:27:48,917 --> 00:27:52,671
[man] Mart is the first one
that planted the flag with the play.
541
00:27:52,754 --> 00:27:56,132
It's held up
as a great piece of dramatic literature
542
00:27:56,216 --> 00:27:59,094
and that can stand the test of time.
543
00:27:59,177 --> 00:28:01,930
{\an8}[jazz music plays]