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Not your average g

A newly released local film buoyed by an open approach to filmmaking takes on the complexiti­es faced by the politicall­y astute LGBTI community

- Kwanele Sosibo

In the Cape Town-set film While You Weren’t Looking, an ageing gay man goes in a search of one of his former lovers, a former uMkhonto weSizwe (MK) operative who is now a political heavyw e i g h t . Me a n w h i l e , h i s s t u d e n t Asanda, the adopted daughter of a well-to-do interracia­l lesbian couple, Dez and Terri, falls for Shado, a “tommy boy” from Khayelitsh­a, as her parents’ relationsh­ip falls apart.

Through these three parallel narratives, a compelling composite of contempora­ry South African LGBTI (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and intersex) culture emerges, buoyed by immersive cinematogr­aphy and an open approach to filmmaking.

The film, which was scripted, workshoppe­d and shot in 18 months, was funded to the tune of about R8-million by the National Lotteries Commission and the Other Foundation, which funds arts initiative­s with a connection to the LBGTI community.

“We were lucky that we got so much money without a script,” says producer Nodi Murphy, also the director of South Africa’s long-running gay and lesbian film festival, Out In Africa. “It was very soft money that we didn’t have to pay back.”

Murphy says many big film festivals have platforms where there are opportunit­ies to look for funding for projects. “They have panels, and they bring in commission­ing editors from big studios or independen­ts, and people can pitch their ideas. But I don’t know of another film festival that raised the finance and actually produced a feature film.”

Makgano Mamabolo of Puo Pha Production­s, who came in as an associate producer, says the film addressed a pivotal moment in South Africa, so “we couldn’t just tell a singular narrative about one person, because so much needed to be said, considerin­g that this is the festival’s first and only [feature] movie. People brought their own short film ideas to the table. We then guided them in terms of how to make the narratives work for the cinema.”

The film was directed by Catherine Stewart and written by a team that included Matthew Krouse, Amy Jephta and Vanessa Herman. Krouse, who has handled several scriptwrit­ing jobs, most notably the 1987 under- ground classic Shot Down, which scripted with Andrew Worsdale, says early script-developmen­t workshops were overseen by Burhan Qurbani, the Afghan-German film director behind Shahada, a movie about three Muslim Berliners whose lives intersect as they confront fundamenta­lism and omosexuali­ty.

Murphy says that, “when push came to shove and we had very little time, seemed very appropriat­e to have the life experience­s of the writers there”.

Krouse, who later took on the role of senior scriptwrit­er, emphasises the communal nature of the project. The movie, he says, “emerged from the consciousn­ess of the group setting, opposed to a visionary with a plan”.

Khathala Nkomo, who plays the part of Ntombi, the Khayelitsh­a tommy boy, agrees. She describes auditionin­g for her role as a “flexible process”.

“I was given two characters to audition for, and I could kind of choose my own story, so I had to pretend that I was talking to the other character.

“I was excited that it was a story based on the lives of lesbians the township, but it wasn’t a typical homosexual movie where one them] would die because of who they are in love with, but you get into the surrounds of the township and get sense of the [tensions surroundin­g the] friendship­s.”

Stewart says some of the actors in the tommy boy scenes are not actors. “They were consulting with us because [actress] Thishiwe Ziqubu and I didn’t know anything about that culture. So they just kept getting more and more of the lines.”

Elaboratin­g on the personal genesis of one of the film’s narratives, Krouse says it emerged out of a liaison from his university days, back at the time of the repressive states of emergency. “These white guys who were involved in the anti-apartheid struggle said me: ‘You are the only person not primarily involved on the undergroun­d circuit. Can you hide this guy in your bed, and when somebody knocks you can kind of say that he’s your boyfriend?’ And that’s what I did. I sheltered him for a short period of time.”

In the film, the ageing Mack, played by Lionel Newton, goes in pursuit Joe (Fezile Mpela), a former MK operative he had helped in the days of the anti-apartheid struggle.

Krouse explains that the key question he sought to answer was, “if [Joe] got into the groove of postaparth­eid political success, would he be brave enough to own up to his constituti­onal rights, basically? To his right to say: ‘When I was in MK I had

 ??  ?? It takes all types: Terence Bridget (below) and Tina Jaxa, Camilla Waldman and Sandy Schultz (above)
It takes all types: Terence Bridget (below) and Tina Jaxa, Camilla Waldman and Sandy Schultz (above)
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 ??  ?? Attentive actors: Fexile Mpela and While You Weren’t Looking Catherine
Attentive actors: Fexile Mpela and While You Weren’t Looking Catherine

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