Entertainment
Tuesday Thomas opens doors for trans comics in the L.A. comedy scene at the Pack Theater
Tuesday Thomas is aware of that when reserving an all-trans comedian lineup, the very last thing she desires is identical perspective and punch traces rehashed by each performer on stage. As a substitute, Trans Hilarious, debuting tonight on the Pack Theater, goals to keep away from tokenism by altering issues up and exhibiting that there are as some ways to be trans as there are to be humorous.
“We are able to discuss all completely different sorts of issues that make you snigger,” Thomas says. “You’re not going to witness 5 completely different tutorials on inverting your penis within the vagina surgically … I feel that’s what’s holding some individuals again once they consider an all-trans comedy present.”
As one of the vital energetic trans comics in L.A., Thomas is used to standing out like a sore thumb on most cisgender lineups. On a latest evening on the Comedy Chateau, the brash blond is the primary to flaunt her identification, flaws and all, in entrance of a crowd. “I seem like if The place’s Waldo and Joan Rivers had a hate f— on the Gathering of the Juggalos,” she stated to chuckling viewers. “In the event you ordered Jennifer Coolidge off of Want, that is what you’d get.”
For the final 10 years, making an attempt to interrupt into the standard, male-dominated comedy membership scene has been a battle. Which is why she’s spent most of her profession blazing trails that require studying new tips, even at 60 years outdated (nevertheless, she does prefer to remind the viewers that “my pussy is barely 40”). She wears her age as a badge of honor within the trans neighborhood — even going by the nickname “Tranma” on TikTok.
Tonight, Thomas pulls collectively a wide range of trans and intersex comics from throughout L.A. to create the primary Trans Hilarious present. With Thomas taking the reins as host, the inaugural present options 5 comedians — Fifi Dosch, Leah Mansfield, Seven Graham, Alexia Jasmene and Sammy Mowrey.
As small theaters and native golf equipment reopen their doorways, Thomas hopes that additionally means extra openings for marginalized performers who have been shut out of a giant a part of the native comedy scene lengthy earlier than COVID got here round.
“All people at all times stated you bought to get on this membership or that membership and I wasn’t getting picked for any of those signup lists on the main golf equipment,” Thomas stated. “I really had one of many paid regulars name in and put me on the listing at a membership after two years of making an attempt and that’s after I realized that is bull—.”
Being handed over for stage time impressed Thomas to curate her personal queer comedy gatherings. In 2015, she began Freak Present — a raunchy and irreverent circus of burlesque, comedy, music and improv. The favored month-to-month occasion circulated by a number of L.A. comedy venues and finally branched out throughout 16 cities within the U.S. for 5 to eight reveals a month, together with a residency in Vegas proper up till the pandemic hit.
That’s when Thomas actually needed to get inventive.
Thomas rebranded her occasion, calling it CHURCH@Freakshow, and bought it acknowledged by the U.S. authorities as a spiritual 501(c)(3) group. She enlisted fellow comedian Julian Michael to be her co-pastor. The reveals now double as spiritual providers the place congregants worship laughter as a method of therapeutic. A portion of their proceeds are donated to numerous LGBTQ organizations and charities.
Trans Hilarious retains the punk rock spirit of Freak Present below Thomas’ steering and within the number of the evening’s performers like Alexia Jasmene, who in a former life was a part-time church pastor within the U.S., transitioned in China, and now does a mixture of performing, comedy and music. As somebody coming again to stand-up after a virtually four-year break, Jasmene says it’s refreshing to come back again to the stage with a present like this.
“It’s nice that there’s nonbinary performers and one of many artists is intersex,” Jasmene says. “It’s a reminder that we’ve got a neighborhood in title, however actually, it’s not possible to make an precise neighborhood due to simply how variant and disparate every thing is.”
Comic Fifi Dosch is the proper instance of how completely different trans comedians’ experiences may be. Dosch, who beforehand did stand-up repeatedly as a person on the Comedy Retailer, transitioned in the course of the pandemic and says she was welcomed again to the legendary membership with open arms when she got here again for her first present final November. Whereas it’s been a spotlight of her profession to carry out on the Retailer once more as a trans lady, Dosch realizes the highway is usually powerful for comics in her place.
“It may be form of isolating these golf equipment generally, they’re nonetheless for probably the most half very straight locations,” Dosch stated. “I wouldn’t say stand-up comedy is probably the most welcoming surroundings for anyone. And for those who’re trans on prime of that, life can really feel unwelcome to you generally. I feel it’s good to have a [show like Trans Hilarious] for individuals to really feel accepted.”
Pack Theater managing director Royce Shockley says reveals like Trans Hilarious have change into a part of the venue’s mission to be extra accessible to all types of comedy reveals, particularly these produced by members of marginalized communities. At present greater than 50% of the Pack’s reveals are produced by individuals from BIPOC and LGBTQ communities round L.A. seven nights every week.
“The primary factor about our theater is that anybody can put up a present, anybody can get on stage,” Shockley stated. “Just about each evening of the week, there’s a present the place somebody can simply undergo get some stage time. We didn’t really feel that it must be this coveted factor that’s solely doled out to sure individuals, from sure individuals — comedy‘s for everybody.”
Thomas’ aim is to maintain the present occurring each second Thursday of the month on the Pack, and as extra trans comedians change into anxious to step out into the highlight, she desires them to have a spot to be seen.
“I’m hoping this present simply reveals folks that we’re right here and we’re good,” Thomas says.
Entertainment
A culture that's ready for a different kind of closeup
Book Review
Hello Stranger: Musings on Modern Intimacies
By Manuel Betancourt
Catapult: 240 pages, $27
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It’s telling that Manuel Betancourt’s new book, “Hello Stranger: Musings on Modern Intimacies,” grounded in queer theory and abolition, takes its title from a line from the 2004 film “Closer,” about two messed-up straight couples.
The choice of “Closer,” “a bruising piece about the rotting roteness of long-term intimacy,” as Betancourt puts it, is an experience familiar to many. 2024 was a year in which marriage, specifically heterosexual marriage, was taken to task. Miranda July’s most recent novel, “All Fours”; Sarah Manguso’s scathing novel “Liars”; nonfiction accounts such as Lyz Lenz’s “This American Ex-Wife”; Amanda Montei’s “Touched Out”; and even the late entry of Halina Reijn’s film “Babygirl” all show that, at the very least, women are unsatisfied with heterosexual marriage, and that some are being destroyed by it.
The straight male experience of sexual promiscuity and adventure is nothing new. It has been well trod in novels by writers such as John Updike and Philip Roth and more recently, Michel Houellebecq. In cinema there are erotic thrillers — think “Basic Instinct,” “Fatal Attraction,” “Eyes Wide Shut” — in which men are the playboys and women the collateral damage. Betancourt tells us that “Hello Stranger” begins in “a place where I’ve long purloined many of my most head-spinning obsessions: the movies.” But this book isn’t interested in gender, or heterosexuality. It’s an embrace of what makes us human, and the ways in which we avoid “making contact.” Betancourt wants to show that the way we relate to others often tells us “more crucially” how we relate “to ourselves.”
Through chapters focused on cinematic tropes such as the “meet cute” (“A stranger is always a beginning. A potential beginning,” Betancourt writes) and investigations of sexting, cruising, friendship, and coupling and throupling, “Hello Stranger” is a confident compendium of queer theory through the lens of pop culture, navigating these issues through the work of writers and artists including Frank O’Hara, Michel Foucault and David Wojnarowicz, with stories from Betancourt’s own personal experience.
In a discussion of the discretion needed for long-term relationships, Betancourt reflects: “One is about privacy. The other is about secrecy. The former feels necessary within any healthy relationship; the latter cannot help but chip away at the trust needed for a solid foundation.” In the chapter on cruising, he explores how a practice associated with pursuit of sex can be a model for life outside the structure of heteropatriarchy: “Making a queer world has required the development of kinds of intimacy that bear no necessary relation to domestic space, to kinship, to the couple form, to property, or to the nation.”
The chapters on cruising and on friendship (“Close Friends”) are the strongest of the book, though “Naked Friends” includes a delightful revisitation of Rose’s erotic awakening in “Titanic.” Betancourt uses the history of the friendship, and its “queer elasticity” using Foucault’s imagining of friendship between two men (“What would allow them to communicate? They face each other without terms or convenient words, with nothing to assure them about the meaning of the movement that carries them toward each other.”) to delve into Hanya Yanagihara’s wildly successful novel, “A Little Life.” He quotes Yanagihara, who echoes Foucault when she says that “her interest in male friendships had to do with the limited emotional vocabulary men (regardless of their race, cultural affiliations, religion, or sexuality—and her protagonists do run the gamut in these regards) have.”
Betancourt thinks about the suffocating reality of monogamy through Richard Yates’ devastating novel of domestic tragedy “Revolutionary Road” (and Sam Mendes’ later film adaptation), pointing out that marriage “forces you to live with an ever-present witness.” In writing about infidelity, he explores Stephen Sondheim’s musical “Company” and quotes Mary Steichen Calderone, former head of Sex Information and Education Council of the United States, in her research on adults who engage in extramarital affairs: “They are rebelling against the loneliness of the urban nuclear family, in which a mother, a father and a few children have only one another for emotional support. Perhaps society is trying to reorganize itself to satisfy these yearnings.” These revelations are crucial to Betancourt’s argument — one of abolition and freedom — that call to mind the work of queer theorists like the late Lauren Berlant and José Esteban Muñoz.
Betancourt ultimately comes to the conclusion popularized by the writer Bell Hooks, which is that amid any discussion of identity comes the undeniable: our humanity. He quotes Hooks’ quotation of the writer Frank Browning on eroticism: “By erotic, I mean all the powerful attractions we might have: for mentoring and being mentored, for unrealizable flirtation, for intellectual tripping, for sweaty mateship at play or at work, for spiritual ecstasy, for being held in silent grief, for explosive rage at a common enemy, for the sublime love of friendship.” There’s a whole world outside the rigid structures we’ve come to take as requirements for living.
“Hello Stranger” is a lively and intelligent addition to an essential discourse on how not only accessing our desires but also being open about them can make us more human, and perhaps, make for a better world. “There could possibly be a way to fold those urges into their own relationship,” Betancourt writes. “They could build a different kind of two that would allow them to find a wholeness within and outside themselves without resorting to such betrayals, such lies, such affairs.” It’s the embrace of that complexity that, Betancourt suggests, gives people another way to live.
When asked how he could write with such honesty about the risk of promiscuity during the AIDS epidemic, the writer Douglas Crimp responded: “Because I am human.” “Hello Stranger” proves that art, as Crimp said, “challenges not only our sense of the world, but of who we are in relation to the world … and of who we are in relation to ourselves.”
Jessica Ferri is the owner of Womb House Books and the author, most recently, of “Silent Cities San Francisco.”
Movie Reviews
Game Changer Movie Review: Ram Charan and Shankar deliver a grand political drama
Game Changer Review: The highly anticipated film Game Changer, directed by Shankar and featuring Ram Charan, Kiara Advani, and Anjali alongside SJ Suryah and Srikanth in pivotal roles, is a political action drama that delves into the murky waters of corruption within the Indian political system. Shankar, renowned for his grand storytelling, makes his Telugu directorial debut with Game Changer. His signature style is evident in the film’s lavish production and narrative structure. The story, penned by Karthik Subbaraj, weaves together action, drama, and social commentary, though it occasionally leans heavily on familiar tropes.
Ram Charan delivers a compelling performance in dual roles, seamlessly transitioning between the principled Ram Nandan and the rustic Appanna. As the central figure of the story, he carries the narrative with remarkable ease. While his portrayal of Ram Nandan is high on style and swag, it is his heartfelt performance as Appanna that truly resonates with the audience.
Kiara Advani, as Deepika, plays Ram Nandan’s love interest. Her character moderates Ram’s anger and inspires him to take up the IAS. While Ram and Kiara light up the screen, their love track feels somewhat clichéd. Anjali, as Parvathy, gets a meaty role as Appanna’s wife, championing his principles and cause. The emotional depth she brings to the story bolsters the film’s core.
Srikanth, as Bobbili Satyamurthy, surprises with his antagonist role. His dynamic interactions with Appanna add layers to the narrative. SJ Suryah, known for his distinct style and mannerisms, delivers yet another solid performance as Bobbili Mopidevi.
The film opens with Ram transitioning from an IPS officer to an IAS officer, featuring a stylish action sequence where he settles old scores. The first half chronicles his journey from a fiery college student to a committed civil servant. Although it employs some usual tropes and forced humour, the first half ends with an interval twist, setting the stage for an engaging second half. The latter part of the film takes a different trajectory, transitioning into a politically driven narrative rooted in the soil. The screenplay, treatment, and even the colour palette shift to complement this transformation.
Thaman’s musical score elevates the film, with a soundtrack that complements its themes. Tirru’s cinematography captures both the grandeur and grit of the story, employing dynamic visuals that enhance the viewing experience. Editing by Shameer Muhammed and Ruben ensures a cohesive narrative flow. The production values reflect Shankar’s commitment to high-quality filmmaking, with grandiose visuals in the song sequences. “Jaragandi” stands out as the highlight track, while the popular “Naanaa Hyraanaa” is yet to make its way into the final cut. The team has announced its inclusion starting January 14.
While Game Changer impresses with its grand visuals and socially relevant themes, it falters in areas that detract from its overall impact. The narrative occasionally veers into predictability, relying on familiar tropes of love, political corruption, and systemic injustice. The screenplay’s didactic tone, though impactful at times, can feel heavy-handed, leaving little room for subtlety.
Overall, Game Changer is a well-executed commercial film. Shankar’s grand scale and Ram Charan’s brilliant performance, combined with strong supporting roles and technical excellence, make it a compelling watch for enthusiasts of the genre.
Entertainment
Pacific Palisades' Bay Theater survived the blaze, says Rick Caruso
Amid the devastation of downtown Pacific Palisades caused by this week’s firestorm, the Bay Theater has emerged relatively unscathed.
While nearby buildings were reduced to ash, developer Rick Caruso, who owns the Palisades Village retail-restaurant-residential complex that includes the movie theater, confirmed in an email to The Times on Thursday, “The theater is fine.” Palisades Village sustained damage in the fire but remains standing.
Netflix operates the five-screen luxury theater and uses it as a showcase for its original theatrical films, often in exclusive engagements, along with curated classic movies. The theater’s design pays homage to the original Bay Theatre, which operated just a few blocks away from 1949 until its closure in 1978, after which it was repurposed as a hardware store.
Mexican theater chain Cinépolis opened the current location of the Bay Theater in late 2018 as a dine-in theater with a full bar and specialized kitchen to cater to the area’s affluent community.
“The Bay is one of those rare places that’s modern but also feels like a throwback experience of your local Main Street cinema,” Scott Stuber, then-head of global films at Netflix, said in a statement when the streaming giant took over the theater in 2021.
Netflix also operates the historic Egyptian Theatre in Hollywood, which like the Bay, remains temporarily closed due to the fires.
Times deputy editor Matt Brennan contributed to this report.
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