Seattle Gay News
Issue 46, Volume 46, November 16, 2018
Arts & Entertainment
Well-acted Boy Erased a perplexing misfire
Northwest African American Museum presents
Bold As Love: Jimi Hendrix at Home, defining his Seattle roots
Lucas Hedges and Troye Sivan in Boy Erased – Photo courtesy of Focus Features
by Sara Michelle Fetters SGN A&E Writer BOY ERASED Now playing Good intentions and even better performances do not always a decent movie make. Such is the case with writer/director/ star Joel Edgerton’s adaptation of Garrard Conley’s gay conversion therapy memoir Boy Erased. The film’s episodic nature and overtly melodramatic tendencies are its undoing, as is its inability to flesh out many of the supporting characters no matter how strong the actors filling these various roles
might prove to be. Only when it focuses on the central dynamic between a loving mother and her emotionally beleaguered son does the story being told ever deeply resonate, Edgerton otherwise having a terrible time emotionally connecting the audience with the material. College freshman Jared Eamons (Lucas Hedges) is the son of Baptist preacher Marshall (Russell Crowe). While home life has all the appearances of being just fine, understandably he’s been hiding the fact he’s gay from both his parents for fear he’ll no longer be welcome in the family home. This is why,
see BOY ERASED page 10
Photo courtesy of NAAM
BOLD AS LOVE: JIMI HENDRIX AT HOME NORTHWEST AFRICAN AMERICAN MUSEUM November 27-May 5
The Northwest African American Museum (NAAM), in partnership with Experience Hendrix L.L.C.. and Authentic
see JIMI HENDRIX page 9
Center on Contemporary Framed asks – Is it art or is it hobby? Art (CoCA) presents You Got the Look
(l-r) Poison Ring by Andy Cooperman, Literal Defensen by Nancy Worde, La Ceremonie by Emiko Oye
You Got the Look is a national exhibition of contemporary art jewelers and metalsmiths that explores social and political approaches to contemporary society CoCA (Center on Contemporary Art) presents You Got the Look, a national exhibition of contemporary art jewelry and acces-
sories, from Nov. 23 through Dec. 22. In addition to accepting 26 artists from across the US, the show will feature three widely regarded US artist jewelers including Nancy Worden, Andy Cooperman, and Emiko Oye. CoCA is located at 114 3rd Ave S. in Seattle’s Pioneer Square neighborhood.
see COCA page 7
Joe Seefeldt as Nick and Jeremy Steckler as Jake in Framed – Photo by Tom Chargin
by Miryam Gordon SGN A&E Writer FRAMED SNOWFLAKE AVALANCHE (AT 18TH & UNION) Through November 25
There’s that marital saying that’s supposed to be true: “Happy wife, happy life.” Y York’s latest production, Framed, attempts to explore that idea in two very different marriages. Joan and Nick DaSilva (Susanna Burney and Joe Seefeldt) are the older couple with a long, successful marriage. May and Jake Carter (Maile Wong and Jeremy
see FRAMED page 3