Olivia Fader remembers going to Video Difference in Halifax to rent the film But Iâm A Cheerleader.
âA lot of people that I grew up with, this movie in particular was almost always the first queer movie that anyone saw,â she says. âItâs so silly and campy and outrageous and enjoyable. It really holds up over the years.â
Thatâs one reason why the film was selected to kick off this yearâs Big Gay Film Fest. Spearheaded by Fader, ±«Óătvâs 2SLGBTQIA+ advisor, the fest will see the Sexton Campus Commons âÌęa new downtown location for the fest this year â Ìętransformed into an outdoor theatre over three successive Wednesday nights. Members of the Dal community and the public can bring their lawn chairs, blankets and favourite snacks and enjoy a curated lineup of films by and about the queer community.
Behind the film fest
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Fader has fond memories of attending the Atlantic Film Festivalâs AlFresco filmFesto series on the Halifax boardwalk growing up, and always wanted to bring a film festival to campus.
âIt was such a magical experience to see a movie outside for free and I wanted to recreate that,â says Fader. âThatâs how the Big Gay Film Fest was born, and itâs something that I hope to continue every summer.â
As ±«Óătvâs 2SLGBTQIA+ advisor, Fader champions university-wide programming and events, provides one-on-one advising, referrals to gender-affirming care, support navigating name or gender marker changes, and more.
Related reading: ±«Óătv hires first advisor to support 2SLGBTQ+ students
âQueer students now have grown up with the Internet and have more access to culture and communities online,â says Fader. âThereâs an element of me being older than the students Iâm serving where we had such a different experience growing up. [The film festival] is a way to bring in that cultural component and share that âcult classic energyâ over time.â
Movie selection
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The Big Gay Film Fest will showcase three films.
The first film this year, which will be screened on Wednesday, July 10, is the aforementioned But Iâm A Cheerleader (1999), stars Natasha Lyonne (American Pie, Poker Face) as a high school teenager sent to rehab camp when her straitlaced parents and friends suspect her of being a lesbian.
The second is The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert (1994), in which two drag performers and a transgender woman (played by Hugo Weaving, Guy Pearce and Terrance Stamp) travel across the desert to perform their unique style of cabaret.
But the series isnât all vintage. âI donât only want to show the cult classic films. I want to be able to bring in queer cinema thatâs happening now,â says Fader.
Thatâs why the third and final film being showcased at the Big Gay Film Festival is The Queen Of My Dreams, just released last year. The Canadian production focuses on Mariam (), a Pakistani Muslim woman, and her Canadian-born daughter Azra () Ìęcoming of age in two different eras against the backdrop of a shared love of Bollywood fantasy.
Related reading:
Directed by Fawzia Mirza, The Queen Of My Dreams had its world premiere at the 2023 Toronto International Film Festival, has received .
±«Óătv community
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Fader says itâs special âÌęand important âÌęto get to experience cultural events with other queer people.
âFor me, thatâs one of the most magical parts of Pride and these kinds of events. Itâs not that you get to meet people necessarily, but that feeling of being in a shared space and the excitement and rareness that Pride brings out.
âI talk about this a lot, but as queer and trans people, weâre not born into the communities that we exist in. We have to create that community and connect with people.â
Related: Learn more about the Queer Faculty Staff Caucus
Broader celebrations
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The film fest is one of the ways that Dal is celebrating Pride. In Truro, where Pride celebrations take place in June, Dal had a float in the parade on Saturday, June 22. In Halifax, the Progress Pride flag was raised and a community BBQ was hosted on July 9, while the Big Gay Film Fest will lead into the broader Halifax Pride Festival from July 18-28. Dal will participate in the Halifax Pride ParadeÌę on Saturday, July 20.Ìę Ìę Ìę Ìę Ìę Ìę ÌęÌę
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This yearâs Halifax Pride features more events dedicated to the BIPOC community, sober spaces, American Sign Language interpretation, descriptive and Elder viewing areas for the parade, and more.
âThereâs something so cool that happens with the Halifax Pride Parade because of the volume of people but at the heart of it, itâs groups of queer and trans people coming together and celebrating and thriving. Weâve also seen a resurgence of individual community pride parades.â
For students and community members who arenât in Halifax this the summer, Fader encourages heading out to their own local celebrations.
Visit dal.ca/2slgbtq for more information about Pride events at Dal. Film screenings will begin at dusk with doors opening at 8:30 p.m. each night. Access the Sexton Campus Commons through the Richard Murray Design Building (also the rain location).
Learn more about the and view a .