‘Queer
As Folk’ with marriage in mind
LOS ANGELES (AP) -- Producers Ron Cowen
and Daniel Lipman figure they have bragging
rights when it comes to putting the ‘‘queer’’
into television.
Their
Showtime drama ‘‘Queer As
Folk’’ preceded ‘‘Queer
Eye for the Straight Guy’’
by three years. Unlike Bravo’s G-rated
makeover show, Cowen and Lipman also brought
steamy, unabashed gay sexuality to TV.
They’re
unabashedly proud of the show’s
impact.
‘‘Now
people are used to seeing gay personas,
gay characters,’’ Lipman said.
‘‘I think ’Queer As
Folk’ had a little something to
do with people perceiving gay people in
a way they hadn’t before, and with
gay people perceiving themselves.’’
In
the fourth season (10 p.m. EDT Sunday)
and with a significant change in the political
and social climate, Cowen and Lipman are
eager for viewers to take note of the
show’s immediacy.
‘‘Gay
people and gay issues certainly are in
the spotlight now, in a way they have
never been before,’’ said
Cowen, citing the growing controversy
over gay marriage.
‘‘I
don’t think ’Queer As Folk’
has ever been more relevant than it is
now,’’ said Lipman, echoing
his personal and professional partner.
Their other credits include the groundbreaking
AIDS movie ‘‘An Early Frost’’
and the NBC series ‘‘Sisters.’’
They
have been stirred by the fight for same-sex
marriage and the resistance to it, which
they called an insult and threat to homosexuals.
Their creative response is an emboldened
show.
It
started its 14-episode run this month.
Showtime, which this season started the
lesbian drama ‘‘The L Word,’’
hasn’t announced whether ‘‘Queer
As Folk’’ will return for
a fifth year.
In
an earlier season, two lesbian characters
engaged in a sweet commitment ceremony;
this year, the producers said, there will
be a wedding. Gay bashing, which in the
first season was greeted with a sense
of helplessness, sparks a far different
response this time out.
Justin,
played by series co-star Randy Harrison,
hears an impassioned call to arms at a
community meeting and joins a vigilante
group -- the colorfully named Pink Posse
-- to target attackers.
‘‘That
speech is very important because it raises
the question of how much are you willing
to take before you stand up and say, ‘I’ve
had enough and I’m going to fight
back,’’’ Cowen said.
‘‘It’s certainly a question
that needs to be asked, when is enough
enough?’’
He
said he had enough when President Bush
supported a constitutional ban on same-sex
nuptials.
‘‘It’s
creating second-class citizens, it’s
making gay people subhuman because they
don’t have the same rights as everyone
else,’’ Cowen said. ‘‘It
opens the door for prejudice, perhaps
even violence, because the president is
saying gays are not the same as straight’’
people.
The
show was completed well before it started
airing, making inclusion of the marriage
issue seem prescient. But the producers
credit their alertness to time spent in
Canada, where the series films.
Same-sex
marriage has been declared legal by provincial
courts in three Canadian provinces which,
together, represent more than half the
country’s 32 million people. Canadian
Prime Minister Paul Martin promised to
introduce a bill to legalize it.
‘‘It
certainly made an impression upon us as
Americans living in a foreign country
that gay people have certain rights we
don’t back home,’’ Cowen
said.
He and Lipman say they’re grateful
to have a forum in ‘‘Queer
As Folk’’ and point out they
never shied away from using it.
Cowen
ticks off a list of issues they’ve
tackled, including AIDS discrimination;
relationships between HIV-negative and
positive men; drug and steroid addiction
and adoption.
The
wide-ranging topicality may have been
clouded early on by the show’s sexuality,
embodied by freewheeling stud Brian (Gale
Harold), Cowen suggested.
‘‘People were so shocked they
didn’t see the other aspects of
the show. All they saw was Brian’s
behavior,’’ he said. That
included club carousing and a succession
of one-night (or shorter) stands.
Cowen
and Lipman contend the sex scenes were
honest, not gratuitous. To them, it was
a chance to finally give homosexual passion
a bit of the screen space reserved for
heterosexuals.
But
they discovered that not all gays felt
the same way.
‘‘A
lot of gay people feel it’s dirty
laundry and they don’t want people
to see it,’’ Lipman said.
‘‘But sex is a big part of
the gay community. To deny it ... is not
real.’’
Others
in the gay community embraced the depiction,
he said, and he believes time will vindicate
the approach. He likes to imagine the
show in DVD collector boxes with a place
on fans’ shelves.
‘‘I
always felt ’Queer As Folk’
would be a reflection of where gay people
stood, where the issues were, where the
gay community was at the turn of the 21st
century,’’ he said. ‘‘So
we try to be as reflective of what’s
going on as possible.’’