SHORT FILM PROGRAM
Resident Alien
FREE
with A Letter to Harvey Milk
A portrait of 81-year-old Quentin Crisp, who emigrated to Manhattan at the age of 73 when he was riding the crest of a publicity wave… the film traces the character of this indefatigably witty, wildly-dressed and outlandishly coiffured sexual revolutionary and bohemian king. In turns joyful, pathetic, criticized and adored, Crisp continues to fascinate.
At age 73, writer and melancholy master of the bon mot, Quentin Crisp (1908-1999), became an Englishman in New York. Nossiter’s camera follows Crisp about the streets of Manhattan, where Crisp seems very much at home, wearing eye shadow, appearing on a makeshift stage, making and repeating wry observations, talking to John Hurt (who played Crisp in the autobiographical TV movie, “The Naked Civil Servant”), and dining with friends. Others who know Crisp comment on him, on his life as an openly gay man with an effeminate manner, and on his place in the history of gays’ social struggle. The portrait that emerges is of one wit and of suffering.