Dominic Wetzel,
"HIV Positive: Saints, Sinners, and AIDS protest movements in Fig Trees' Queer Religion"
(page 2 of 4)
Fig Trees follows Zackie's teetering T-cells amidst activists'
stand-off with the primary AIDS "sinners": a pharmaceutical industry
putting "profits before people"; AIDS denialists, South African President Mbeki and his
health minister, Manto Tshabalala-Msiman, who questioned whether HIV
caused AIDS, and advocated beetroots, lemon, and garlic instead of
anti-retrovirals for South Africans; their inspiration, Dr. Matthias
Rath, the opportunistic German vitamin entrepreneur who claimed AIDS
drugs were toxic and advocated his vitamins instead; and lastly,
inactive and ineffectual South African, Canadian, and United States
governments and their leaders, such as Ronald Reagan, who famously never
said the word AIDS while President.
While Zackie is better known to Western audiences, through interviews
and archival footage, Fig Trees documents other notable, but less
known AIDS activists from the South African struggle, which led the struggle for
access to drugs for people with HIV/AIDS in developing nations around
the world: St. Simon Nkoli, a prominent anti-apartheid and LGBT
activist, one of the first South Africans to publicly come out as
positive; St. Gugu Dlamini, killed by an angry mob for bringing "shame
on her community" two weeks after speaking about living with HIV on the
national radio (many of her murderers turned out to be HIV+ and later
died of AIDS themselves); St. Nkosi Johnson, the eight-year-old who came
out as having AIDS at his school so he could get the special help and
care he needed; and Zackie's friend St. Kwiney, who he couldn't bear to
visit at the end of her life, dying because she couldn't afford the
drugs, spending her last night in the hospital writing 39 postcards to
President Mbeki pleading with him to reverse his AIDS denialist
policies. The film also includes interviews with St. Stephen Lewis, UN
special envoy for AIDS to Africa, recording his bitter and trenchant
criticism of the absence of global political leadership on AIDS, and the
inadequate and sensationalistic "celebrity leadership" that filled its
void.
Playing with a transgressive re-appropriation of religious imagery
and hagiography, this central plot line is intercut with apparitions by
St. Teresa of Avila and other saints and an ironic abduction of Tim and
Zackie by St. Gertrude Stein herself resulting in a tragic opera about
their struggles—abandoned, ironically, once the threat of death fades.
I say "re-appropriation" of traditional religious imagery rather than
simply "appropriation," as there must always already have been queer
"single, celibate" priests, monks, martyrs, nuns, and saints throughout
the centuries, realized or not. Vignettes of saints, historical and
postmodern, criss-cross through the film in ways that weave together the
heroism of traditional saint stories and mythology with those of today,
all narrated somehow by a young St. Martin of Tours who at times
mysteriously morphs into a singing albino squirrel. This subplot is
at turns interrupted by vignettes of a wailing, endlessly
tuberculosis-stricken Maria Callas; altered and re-imagined clips from
famous AIDS movies, such as Philadelphia; critical exegesis by
opera-and-queer theorist Wayne Koestenbaum on the predominance of anal
erotic imagery ("ass") in Stein's famous "Pigeons on the gr-ass,
alas(s), al(l)-as(s)," and the role of sexuality in classical and modern
music.[3]
An imaginary "mock-MTV"[4]
mixed "top 100 AIDS songs of
all time" countdown is hosted by seductive, pink-spandexed, bed-ridden
AIDS patients singing and querying in high camp to "Dollar Bills" (Gates and
Clinton): "when [are we] gonna get [our] ARVs?" and other songs,
amidst the occasional imaginary downpour of colorful pills. This
phantasmagoric inclusion of desire and the cultural imaginary allows the
viewer, particularly queers of a younger generation who grew up
associating being gay with getting AIDS, to project their own
experiences of fear and desire into the work, allowing it to transcend a
simple documentary format about what happened to a certain generation of
gay men and South Africans from decades ago. In the dizzying, famously
amnesiac culture of North America,[5]
Fig Trees preserves
important queer historical memory, and provides access to the different aspects of
battles fought and won, lives lost, and lessons learned by previous
queer social movements.
As a postmodern, avant-garde figure in the so-called "new queer
cinema," Greyson's controversial and political films have mostly been
met with critical, but not popular, success. 1988's Pissoir, a response
to the homophobic climate of the time, exposed police entrapment of gay
cruising in parks, toilets and the crackdown on bathhouses. Zero
Patience challenged AIDS orthodoxy's erroneous notion (popularized by
Randy Shilt's And the Band Played On) that HIV/AIDS was introduced to
North America by a single person (a gay flight attendant). Lilies, his
most well-known film, through a clever plot twist thrusts a bishop back
into confrontation with his childhood homosexual encounters. Greyson is
infamous for his heady and kaleidoscopic counter-positioning of
different mediums, realism with magical realism, and in Fig
Trees' case, social movement documentary with avant-garde opera. No
stranger to controversy, John Greyson made headlines in his protest of
the 2009 Toronto International Film's highlighting of Tel Aviv and lack
of support for the international economic boycott of
Israel.[6]
Why hasn't anyone made an opera about the eminently operatic, global
tragedy of AIDS? Greyson asks. In comparison, how
many divas tragically (and glamorously) died of tuberculosis
(consumption) in early heroin-chic on stage at the end of various 19th
century operas? (Just ask St. Callas.) So Greyson proceeds to do it
himself, though in an ironic, self-critical fashion, playing with his
own appropriation of the two activist saints and the potential
fetishization of their suffering queer AIDS
bodies[7] through the
parodic subplot of Stein and Thompson's time transport to the 20th
century to appropriate their stories, replete with scenes of composers and
producers angling to market and exploit them. Greyson probes Stein's
politically transgressive, avant-garde use of Harlem singers as saints
in the original 1934 Four Saints in Three Acts, while at the same time
querying the exploitative dimensions of casting and staging black
bodies.[8] By applying the
healing power of music to the historical and political tragedy of AIDS,
Greyson seeks to access the socially-conscious roots of opera: "taking
on opera as this conservative, elitist monolith, but on the other hand,
trying to tease out a tendency that's sometimes forgotten, a tendency of
resistance, a tendency of social activism buried within [all] those sir
titles and grand divas parking and barking on centre stage."[9] Unlike more trite and
simplistic AIDS films like Philadelphia—which Fig Trees
uses to repackage famous clips with imaginary and transgressive dialogue
between Tom Hanks and Denzel Washington—Fig Trees draws on the
more radical roots of opera through its combination of the ironic, the
tragic, and the political. As activist Tim McCaskell deadpans in
response to the interviewer's question as to his favorite AIDS songs: "I
don't have any."
Fig Trees' beauty and tribute is in its ability to preserve,
distill, and recuperate queer historical memory through art, music, and
re-configured religious imagery for a phantasmagoric appreciation of the
early "saints" of global AIDS movements and their/our loss, without
"memorializing" and mythologizing away their subjectivity to a timeless,
and ultimately irrelevant, martyrdom.[10]
In one of the most affecting
scenes in the film, four activists whose deaths were influential in
inspiring the creation of Treatment Action Campaign are commemorated.
As Sarah Henstra describes, the scene "begins with close-up frames,
first of a needle being set to a record-player turntable on which a
candle is burning, and then of tiny musical notes being drawn in pen on
an actor's neck. The actor's head slowly rotates as he sings, so that it
becomes clear he is singing the line now encircling his throat like a
garrote." The split screen juxtaposes each disembodied singer with news
and other media footage that fill in the events of each activist's
history, ending with the turntable's candle being snuffed. As Henstra
argues:
Despite the introduction of each character as a saint ... the
words they sing explicitly refuse the status of martyr. [...] But the
eerie blend of unfamiliar and familiar tropes in the scene—the
haunting harmonies, the sameness of the actor's unfocused gazes and
collared necks, the rising candle-smoke—summon such an affective force
that the viewing experience is somewhat akin to kneeling at an altar.
The saints' repeated refusals to become objects of pity or reverence in
fact intensify the scene's mournfulness rather than dissipating it:
instead of being allowed to refer their deaths to a familiar scheme of
sacrifice-to-a-cause or to sublimate them through elegiac models of
continuance, we are forced into a prolonged confrontation with a loss
whose hermeneutics opens only onto the still-yawning gulf of political
injustice.[11]
Fig Trees plays with the way in which the drama of AIDS
protest movements sparked and created memory, belonging, and community
in ways not unlike traditional religious
structures.[12] For instance,
its playful mixture and imagery of religious "brothers" and "sisters" in
the film invokes one of the remarkable, if not always acknowledged,
aspects of AIDS protest movements—the role of queer sisters as
advocates for their queer brothers. The pairing of Gertrude Stein and
Virgil Thompson in their surreal vignettes throughout the film, the
blurring of their identity with the two main activists at times (as well
as various singing saints), invokes this bonding across sex and gender.
To the extent that much of the substance of religion and religious
affiliation can be linked to the desire for belonging, community, and
preservation of a "chain of memory," it is a tribute to the queer
community, and queer women in particular, that community needs
transcended the boundaries of identity in the struggles over AIDS.
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