![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhPyQf3H7Eb0j01JJAfY-cKXQuKOk8wg5ISkGusK1ikIwOYuW8tBK5oqOqqdh7WNCOlhY8IFbL2OuLpWHrcda89HZ2sks9RhyU81pGsNB9Z4l1Bq3WBjOUeNv3XNe86rDyUC6hinZ-n4scy/s400/Victor+Victoria+JG+JA.jpg)
1982 was a watershed year for me in terms of coming-out scenes in movies. In addition to being the year my class watched Suddenly, Last Summer (covered in part 1), it was also the year Blake Edwards’ musical-comedy Victor/Victoria
Victor/Victoria was eye-opening for me, since it can be regarded as a series of coming-out vignettes. While the central character, a down-on-her-luck singer played by Oscar-nominated Julie Andrews, is heterosexual, she is surrounded by a number of unapologetically gay, bisexual, transgender or questioning supporting characters. When Parisian club owner Toddy (delightfully played by the late, great Robert Preston) takes the naïve Victoria under his wing early in the film, she at first thinks he’s trying to take sexual advantage of her. When he reassures her by nonchalantly telling her, “I’m gay,” she responds, “That’s the nicest thing anyone’s said to me all day!”
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgrz5379z4CVqMl0RlbOuMG1f-tIyF56kzbY_Fm0L7P8Vu3cxRlwUErxGohKduLlvJQtwxwt5_eIeewHL5k4Chu3zp279wBEyzD_2XPiYfES5GX9-jftXniAy7xw0f3DblI5ytev7CcazuP/s400/Victor+Victoria+JA.jpg)
Victor and Marchand have several “coming out” conversations during the course of Victor/Victoria. Initially, Victor defends “his” male-ness and homosexuality fiercely, which naturally unsettles Marchand all the more. Once Victoria “comes out” to Marchand and admits her charade, he then has to play along as gay in order to protect both of them from jealous Norma and his fellow mobsters. This leads Marchand’s devoted bodyguard, the seemingly-straight Squash (Alex Karras), to come out to his boss, who is surprised to say the least.
While they are often comically-exaggerated, the emotional and social conundrums the characters in Victor/Victoria face aren’t unrealistic to anyone who is GLBT. Even Norma is challenged to reflect on her sexual attractions, however briefly, when she says to Toddy “I think the right woman could reform you” and he responds, “I think the right woman could reform you, too!”
Review by Rev. Chris Carpenter, resident film critic of Movie Dearest and the Orange County and Long Beach Blade.
No comments:
Post a Comment