Longtime Companion
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Longtime Companion | |
---|---|
Directed by | Norman René |
Produced by | Stan Wlodkowski Lydia Dean Pilcher (co-producer) |
Written by | Craig Lucas |
Starring | Campbell Scott Bruce Davison Dermot Mulroney Mary-Louise Parker |
Music by | Greg De Belles |
Cinematography | Tony C. Jannelli |
Editing by | Katherine Wenning |
Distributed by | Samuel Goldwyn Company |
Release date(s) | 1990 |
Running time | 96 minutes |
Country | USA |
Language | English |
IMDb profile |
Longtime Companion is a 1990 film with Bruce Davison, Campbell Scott and Mary-Louise Parker. The first wide-release theatrical film to deal with the subject of AIDS, the film takes its title from the words The New York Times and other newspapers used to describe the surviving same-sex partner of someone who had died of AIDS.
Contents |
[edit] Storyline
Longtime Companion chronicles the first years of the AIDS epidemic as seen through its impact on several gay men and the straight female best friend of one of them. The film is split into several sections identified by dates.
[edit] July 3, 1981
Willie (Scott) and his friend John (Mulroney) are spending time with couple David (Davison) and Sean (Mark Lamos) on Fire Island. Sean is a screenwriter for a soap opera. Back in the city, Howard (Patrick Cassidy) is preparing to audition for Sean's soap. His boyfriend is Paul (John Dossett) and their next-door neighbor is Lisa (Parker), who's also best friends with Fuzzy (Stephen Caffrey), a lawyer who represents Howard.
That morning, The New York Times publishes its first article about the rise of a new "gay cancer." The news spreads as friends call each other. Some are immediately concerned, others dismissive. Willie meets Fuzzy and they begin a relationship. Howard lands the role.
[edit] April 30, 1982
John is the first among the group to be diagnosed with the new disease, contracting pneumonia. Howard is given script pages in which his character is slated to become the first openly gay character on daytime television. He's very concerned about typecasting, fearing that by playing gay he won't be offered other sorts of parts. Willie and Fuzzy move in together.
John dies shortly after his admission to the hospital.
[edit] June 17, 1983
Willie, Fuzzy, Lisa, David and Sean gather back on Fire Island, along with friends Michael and Bob, to watch Howard's character come out on the soap opera with friends Michael and Bob. That evening, Sean and David argue over Sean's fears that he's going to get sick.
[edit] September 7, 1984
Paul is hospitalized with toxoplasmosis. Sean is also hospitalized. Willie visits Sean and is so terrified of becoming infected that he dons a surgical mask and protective gown and, when Sean kisses him on the neck, excuses himself to the bathroom to scrub the spot. Michael is also visiting Sean, bringing with him homeopathic remedies and a book by Louise Hay. Howard visits Paul and breaks down sobbing.
[edit] March 22, 1985
Sean has deteriorated. David is helping with his writing and deceiving the studio into thinking that Sean is still able to work. Fuzzy tries to get Howard a movie role but the producer refuses to cast him because of the rumor that he has AIDS. Paul is back in the hospital following a seizure. David takes Sean for a walk but has to take him home when Sean urinates in a fountain. That night Willie catches Fuzzy checking himself for swollen glands and they talk about their fear of dying. "What do you think happens when we die?" Fuzzy asks. "We get to have sex again" is Willie's reply.
[edit] January 4, 1986
Sean has deteriorated to the point of near-catatonia and is in constant pain. He has to be strapped into his bed and has lost control of his bowels and bladder. After sending Sean's nurse on an errand, David sits with Sean and tells him that it's all right to let go, to stop fighting to stay alive. Sean dies. Willie and Lisa come by to help David and they pick out a suit for Sean to wear to be cremated. Fuzzy calls Gay Men's Health Crisis to find a funeral home. In a rare moment of levity, Lisa and Willie stumble across a slinky red dress in Sean's closet and consider giving it to the undertaker. "What could they say," asks Willie, "if we said we knew him and we knew that's the way he wanted to be remembered?" Ultimately they decide against it, since "it needs a hat."
The four go to a coffee shop to write Sean's obituary and include David as his "longtime companion."
[edit] May 16, 1987
David has died and this is the day of his memorial service. Bob and Willie eulogize him.
[edit] September 10, 1988
Fuzzy and Lisa are volunteering answering phones at GMHC. Willie is a "buddy" to a GMHC client, Alberto.
Howard has been diagnosed (although it's not mentioned, the presumption is that Paul has died). He exploits his remaining fame as a former soap opera star to raise money for AIDS causes by hosting a benefit, which includes a performance of the Village People song YMCA performed in a pastiche of classical style.
[edit] July 19, 1989
Willie, Fuzzy and Lisa walk along the beach. While it is again unstated the presumption is that everyone else in their circle has died. They talk about an upcoming ACT UP demonstration. They talk about remembering a time before AIDS and wonder about finding a cure. The film ends with a momentary fantasy sequence, with the friends and others lost to AIDS appearing with them on the beach, before they vanish again and the three are left to walk off the deserted beach.
[edit] Criticism
The film was criticised by some at the time for focusing almost exclusively on white gay men. Only one character, Alberto, is a person of color, and he appears only momentarily.
[edit] Awards and nominations
Longtime Companion garnered a number of awards and honors, many for the performance of Bruce Davison. Davison remains one of only a few people to receive an Academy Award nomination for playing an openly gay character. In addition to his Oscar nomination, Davison won a Golden Globe award, an Independent Spirit Award, a National Society of Film Critics award, and a New York Film Critics Circle award for Best Supporting Actor. Other awards and nominations include:
- Deauville Film Festival Critics Award - Norman René (nominated)
- GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Film (won)
- Political Film Society Award for Human Rights (nominated)
- Sundance Film Festival Audience Award - Dramatic (won)
- Sundance Film Festival Grand Jury Prize - Dramatic (nominated)
[edit] See also
- An Early Frost (1985)