The Phoenix Network:
 
 
About  |  Advertise
Adult  |  Moonsigns  |  Band Guide  |  Blogs  |  In Pictures
 
Features  |  Reviews
FIND MOVIES
Find a Movie
Movie List
Loading ...
or
Find Theaters and Movie Times
or
Search Movies

Wrestling with Tony

Freida Lee Mock does Kushner
By GERALD PEARY  |  January 31, 2007

070202_fimlcult_main
NO SMUT, NO DIRT, just Tony the Mensch — and that’s fine.
In the case of Wrestling with Angels: Playwright Tony Kushner, which opens this Friday at the Kendall Square, director Freida Lee Mock’s typically hagiographic approach can be forgiven. So what if Kushner walks through the movie without any display of temperament, saying encouraging things to eager students, hugging chubby old ladies, getting along with his brother, being respectful to his father? And his only bad words are for outright villains: Adolf Hitler, Roy Cohn, the Taliban, George W. Bush? And his only vice, as far as we can ascertain, is a monstrous desire for chocolate-chip cookies?

What a charming guy, what an arresting and witty speaker, what a curious secular Jewish thinker, what excellent politics, what a mensch! The truth is, I don’t want to know the smut and dirt about the Angels in America dramatist, whom I admire more than ever thanks to this intimate, moving documentary.

Mock makes the interesting decision to structure the first third of the film with hardly any allusion to Kushner’s homosexuality, or to Angels in America. It’s only after we’ve been backstage at an Off Broadway production of Kushner’s Afghanistan play, Homebody/Kabul, that we’re told he’s gay. That’s when the documentary travels to Lake Charles, Louisiana, his boyhood home. “I was this sissy. I thought boys were cuter than girls at six,” the former bar mitzvah boy tells the camera. But he waited until Columbia University to come out. Just like his hero in Angels in America, he called home on a public phone and announced, “Mother I’m a homosexual.” She cried for six months.

His dad, Bill Kushner, explains here how he finally came around, sending Tony a letter that said, “I would be proud to be Tchaikovsky’s father.” Today, Bill and Tony are best pals. Bill does a lovely toast at his son’s wedding to Entertainment Weekly editor Mark Harris. That’s a moving moment in the film, but the best scenes of all surround the HBO filming of Angels in America: Kushner on the exterior set in Central Park, when actors and playwright look up in awe at the actual stone angel that inspired this great and beautiful American drama.

Freida Lee Mock won a Best Documentary Oscar with her 1994 Maya Lin: A Strong Clear Vision, which is about the architect of Washington’s Vietnam War Memorial. She considers her Kushner film a natural follow-up. “I found their personalities oddly similar,” she said at last April’s Full Frame International Documentary Festival in Durham. “They both operate at the intersection of art and politics.

“I wrote a letter to Tony, sent him some of my work. Eventually, we talked on the phone, I told him about the life cycle of a movie, from film to video and DVD. He said, ‘I want to be a DVD!’ That was the tipping point.

“There was a three-year time frame that I filmed. Sometimes I felt like a stalker, popping up everywhere. Tony was hilarious and inspiring and serious. But as much as he’s a public figure, there’s a certain shyness.

1  |  2  |   next >
Related: It's a mitzvah, Wave, goodbye, Angels sing, More more >
  Topics: Film Culture , Entertainment, George W. Bush, Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky,  More more >
  • Share:
  • Share this entry with Facebook
  • Share this entry with Digg
  • Share this entry with Delicious
  • RSS feed
  • Email this article to a friend
  • Print this article
Comments

ARTICLES BY GERALD PEARY
Share this entry with Delicious
  •   REVIEW: DEFAMATION  |  December 02, 2009
    Yoav Shamir, a young Israeli documentarian, goes off to America and Eastern Europe with a camera and a question: is anti-Semitism an important concern today for Jews, or are those anxious about it being unduly paranoid?
  •   REVIEW: PANDORA AND THE FLYING DUTCHMAN  |  December 02, 2009
    In this soupy 1951 romantic melodrama, Ava Gardner plays Pandora, a self-loathing vixen who toys with the affections of sundry panting males while waiting without hope for her real love to appear.
  •   REVIEW: WILLIAM KUNSTLER: DISTURBING THE UNIVERSE  |  November 11, 2009
    “Bill” Kunstler was the flamboyant, contentious, proudly revolutionary lawyer for the Chicago Eight, a handsome man with an unruly mane of black-and-white that was as impressive and iconic as the head of hair on Susan Sontag.
  •   REVIEW: THE HORSE BOY  |  November 04, 2009
    Rupert Isaacson and Kristin Neff seem the best of parents and yet they’re worn down by their four-year-old autistic son, Rowan, with his four-hour tantrums, his rejection of toilet training, his inability to answer to his name.
  •   REVIEW: EARTH DAYS  |  October 07, 2009
    Those who worry that the eco-movement seems incapable of getting beyond its white upper-middle-class base will be disturbed anew by Robert Stone’s Earth Days , where every talking head is a well-bred Caucasian.

 See all articles by: GERALD PEARY

MOST POPULAR
RSS Feed of for the most popular articles
 Most Viewed   Most Emailed 



  |  Sign In  |  Register
 
thePhoenix.com:
Phoenix Media/Communications Group:
TODAY'S FEATURED ADVERTISERS
Copyright © 2009 The Phoenix Media/Communications Group