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One Zero One

One Zero One

One Zero One

Text JF. Pierets    Photos Stefan Braunbarth, Till Müller & René Moritz

 

One Zero One is Tim Lienhard’s first independent feature film starring Cybersissy and BayBjane. This 90-minutes long documen-tale tells a true story about a most unique friendship, about survival at the edge of society and about the final triumph over mishaps and obstacles that seemed to have one marked for a life in the shadows. The movie follows a portion of the lives of 33-year-old Maroccaine-German Mourad and 48-year-old Dutch Antoine, two drag-performers, better known as Cybersissy and BayBjane, two otherworldly spirits, who light up the stages of the international party-circuit with their boundless creativity and their well calculated freakish-ness. We meet on the eve of their German movie theatre show in Cologne. 

 

Tim  I’m so excited! Tomorrow we’re going on tour to both queer and other film festivals. We’re also invited to the porn festival in Berlin, so that’s really exciting. We’ve received 25 invitations up till now. I guess we must be doing something good.

Tim, this movie is something entirely different from what you normally do.
Tim Indeed. I produced and directed more than seventy feature-documentaries and approximately thousand tv-magazine-features, mostly for German public television-channels ARD and ZDF. Since 1999 I have expanded my range of public recognition into the French-German television-network ARTE. After 30 years it was time to do something different from television and it’s the first time I’m doing something like this. Very free, very independent, 90 minutes of film for the big screen. You can imagine I’m very, very happy that it worked.

And why this subject? How did you meet? 
Tim I saw them perform in a nightclub in Cologne.
Antoine We were huge underground stars in Cologne.
Tim I’ve always loved eccentrics – because they dare to be different, because they reinvent themselves every day. Antoine and Mourad do exactly that… That’s why it was love at first sight, when I first saw them powering up the Cologne nightlife many years ago. I was thinking: “Oops! Is Leigh Bowery still alive?” I had visited Leigh, the iconic London clublife star of the late 80’s and early 90’s, in his apartment on the seventh floor of a London high-rise where I shot a tv-documentary about his living sculptures. That was in the mid-90s. Unfortunately he died shortly after that. To me Antoine aka “Cybersissy” seemed like the reborn Leigh Bowery. Antoine was a true icon of Cologne’s nightlife and it is about time for him to gain fame in the same line as Leigh Bowery did. When we first met I was intrigued by Cybersissy’s performances, he was buzzing in the back of my head. But only about two years ago I got in touch with Antoine, visiting him in Tilburg, his hometown in South Holland. Soon I was able to convince him of the idea of creating a movie-portrait of him. Next I had to gain Mourad’s trust because he doesn’t like tv.
Mourad Tv is just one big brainfuck. A manipulation.
Antoine And they always have a long list of stupid questions like ‘how long does your make-up take?’.Tv is like one big black hole that needs to be filled. Nevertheless we are very proud to have been chosen by Tim to do the movie.

Yet it was a leap of trust?
Antoine it was a leap of trust because somebody is doing a story on you. It could have been told much different and it could be turned out a scandal movie, which we didn’t want.
Tim With my camera I followed the two, who I like to call ‘my Cyberstars’ to the international locations of their performances. It rarely felt like work, as we had so much fun and love the party life. The three of us made a good team. And we still do. A team, that was joined by our highly motivated friends and colleagues of the crew and everybody else, who participated, to make this film happen.

Is the movie a collaboration between the three of you?
Tim The movie was a total collaboration, so if one of the actors didn’t want something, it didn’t happen. Mourad had set his borders? He’s a very unusual phenomenon. The tabloid press approached him on several occasions, but he refused to have his story exploited in freak-show-style. Instead he decided to confide to me. As he told me, it were my television documentaries on Leigh Bowery, Gilbert and George and on androgyny – in particular about Orlan, a French artist who got plastic surgery in front of cameras and transformed to unnatural shapes. That convinced him to collaborate with me. Antoine, on the other hand, was in anticipation of the moment. That’s why this movie became something else than just another documentary. One of my friends lend us this villa where we could film and I can say that was the turning point where it also started to become a fairy tail. One way or another everything came very intuitive. I wanted to give both of them the possibility to tell their story which, in today television, is almost impossible. It’s a new step for me to go to the big screen. 90 minutes to expose two characters with the freedom to show it the way I really want to. So I wanted to do something which I really connected to. It’s a passion and it has to be because we’ve been seeing eachother of almost 15 months now.  So that was my goal. And it worked.Fortunately the three of us were on the same page. This is based on the desire for transformation and self-determination. We know that we have much more possibilities than playing a given role dictated by society. We want to develop and grow beyond ourselves, to mythical creatures, as well as in always new self-inventions. Not predictable, not simple, but always surprising. That’s what our heroes do with each new day. And Antoine and Mourad are my heroes. Antoine aka Cybersissy was born 1964 in the dutch city Tilburg, where he still lives. In 1988 he graduated as bachelor of arts and soon his art was recognized by his hometown and supported through a number of awards and specific grants to allow him to work independently and strive in his profession. He designed sets for five different childrens theatre productions and got nominated for the Flanders Childrens Theatre price. In 1994 he added a new line of work to his flourishing talents and started designing costumes, props and stage sets for the Club Fuck in Tilburg. At around this time he invented his stage-persona Cybersissy and started developing her unique looks. He also worked for the famous It-club in Amsterdam, the Roxy and the Danssalon in Eindhoven. Subsequently he landed a permanent asignment at the Danssalon, making him head of the Entertaintment Group: A wild bunch of performers consisting of transvestites, dragqueens and dragkings. Here he staged performances and designed stage-outfits for 2 years at this party phenomena. Two years later he left The Netherlands to mix up the German party scene. Dawnproductions GmbH in Cologne called upon his talents for the Funky Chicken Club, the Crystal Crash and gay parties at the then famous club Lulu. And here, at the Cologne club Lulu he discovered his future counterpart Mourad and his skills for being a performer and helped him developing the stage-persona BayBjane to match his own alter ego Cybersissy, making him the perfect counterpart for their successful club-performances. Together Cybersissy and BayBjane were the perfect team to rock the stages at clubs all over Europe: in Germany, the Netherlands, the United Kingdom, Belgium and Spain.

Antoine, why did you choose to go into drag performing? 
Antoine I love the energy. Transvestites are men who want to look like a women but dragqueens are party creatures.  That’s a whole different kind of energy. It’s about celebrating the drag culture in it’s original form and even lift it a little bit higher so it becomes art. Leigh Bowery is another example, but the strange thing was that he was already doing his stuff and people told me I  looked just like him. When I came to London after he died, people thought he was still alive.

 

‘It’s about celebrating the drag culture in it’s original form, even lift it a little bit higher so it becomes art.’

Tim I met Leigh in London and I can say that he and Antoine have the same spirit. I believe that there can be connecting energies in completely different places. Like Leigh, living in the UK and Antoine in the Netherlands. Not knowing eachother but kindred spirits when it comes to creativity. Antoine made all the costumes for the movie. Regarding my work in television I think I have a sense of what’s art and what’s not. And I must say that Antoine is on the same level as Leigh. It’s the same level of creativity and he makes his pieces out of almost nothing. All these materials look fabulous but they are actually made of trash. The wonderful white hat for example is made of plastic spoons. 
Antoine You’re always surprised with second hand stuff. And then it’s the trick to see something else in it. Accidents happen so one thing lays to another and they get connected.  I started making clothes in 94 when the whole house party scene came up in Tilburg.

And now your story is adapted for the screen.
Antoine We had our premiere in Amsterdam and in Stockholm and the reactions are really fantastic. We had a queer audience and people where standing up and cried. They thanked us for empowering. And that’s why we do it. To inspire and to empower eachother. To create a fountain of ideas. But it was such a nice experience to stand in front of that audience.
Tim I’m happy that the movie is not only shown in front of a queer audience but also in mainstream cinema because we also handle universal issues in order to anyone to connect. That they can relate to it.
Antoine The thing is that we always worked in all kinds of places and I like the idea not to preach for your own church. To also go to places you wouldn’t think of.
Mourad We enjoy that the people love it and that the reactions are really positive. And that’s good because when you are handicapped and not like healthy people. You can give people to power by showing that you can do whatever you want to do. And not to be forced to be in the place where handicapped people are. I could do that. Just working, sleeping and taking my medicine. But life is more than that and I want to experience life in full force. I want to give people the power to do what they want in their life and not being short winged because of their physical inability to do certain things.

Mourad aka BayBjane is, at the height of 149 cm, ‘the smallest drag queen of the world’. Multi-disabled since birth, he has spent half his life in hospitals and homes for the handicapped. His legs are of different length, he has no regular toes, no regular fingers and just one eye. And yet he has managed to overcome the limitations of his disabilities and to transform himself into a performer who shares the stage of Matinée Group parties on Ibiza with perfectly built go-go dancers and shines even brighter than them. Mourad was born in 1979 in Bonn – Germany as a child of Moroccan parents. Mourad was physically disabled from birth and handycapped and spent many years in German hospitals, later in special homes for disabled people. But Mourad wanted to live his own life, so he left the home for disabled people and started a new life in Cologne. Meeting the dutch performer Antoine here, at the famous gay club “Lulu”, turned out to be a door to a new life and into a degree of independency and recognition nobody would have thought being available to someone like Mourad. The new invented BayBjane took her first steps at the legendary Funky Chicken Club in Cologne. But Café de Paris and Salvation in London followed. Quickly she became one of the most popular national and international party-performance-artists around. Shows all over the globe at the hippest clubs and cameo appearances in music videos are proof of her uniqueness and versatility. In 2009 BayBjane became the first official worldwide mascot of the legendary Pacha-club in Ibiza. Since then David and Cathy Guetta, Campino and Fedde Le Grand have become avid fans and are beloved colleagues. In the meantime BayBjane has moved to Berlin and expanded her colourful business into producing her own music and taking part in the Dreckqueen project of collegue Cybersissy, while simultaneously taking singing lessons. Who would be surprised, if this multi-talent were to land a dance-floor hit.

Mourad In the film I say: ‘I can stay home and my father can open a shop for me’. But I wanted to do different things. I can always go back to that when I’m fed up with the performances. I spend half my life in the hospital, I’m the only sick one amongst 4 brothers and sisters and I’m the one who’s always travelling, who’s never at home.

How does it feel to be on stage?
Mourad To be on stage is work. But the most important thing is that I have fun. And to show the people: look how I am, how my body looks like. And what I do with that.
Tim I’m so happy that people are really inspired by the movie. A lot of them told me they wanted to ‘do’ something when they left the theatre. And that was my aim. To give something positive and to trigger creativity. To inspire. In television it’s all about problems. We talk about problems but we also show how wonderfully they can be transformed into something creative. I could have made a horrormovie, but that wasn’t what I was aiming for. Colourful, playful, positive.  You can do whatever you want if you want to give it your very best.

 

One Zero One
In a colorful blend of documentary, behind the scenes-episodes from clubs around the world, private video-material, probing interviews, that reveal the inner life of our protagonists, as well as artfully staged fantasy-sequences of lush opulence, the movie celebrates the unique friendship and restless life-style of these two unlikely heroes and shows the triumph of individuality and creativity over the parts that society expects us to play.

 

www.onezeroonemovie.com

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Haus of Haunt

Haus of Haunt

Haus of Haunt

Text JF. Pierets    Photos Caldwell Linker

 

The Haus of Haunt is the Pittsburgh based drag troupe around Sharon Needles, a self-described “stupid genius, reviled sweetheart, and PRB princess,” rose to prominence on the 4th. season of the reality competition series, Ru Paul’s Drag Race. She quickly became a favorite and media darling, lauded for her refreshing alternative “spooky” aesthetic and self-deprecating humor, and was subsequently crowned “America’s Next Drag Superstar” in April 2012.

 

In The Haus of Haunt: Watch Children, photographer Caldwell Linker presents 120 Pages and over 200 photos, chronicling the Pittsburgh drag troupe. With pictures of performances, backstage, personal and ever day life moments, Linker gives us a valuable document of the Pittsburg queer scene over the past 4 years.

How did you end up in the queer community?
I guess I’m just drawn to folks similar to me, wanted to be around people with divergent gender identities, radical politics, a desire to create something new, folks with a different perspective, and a desire to live a different perspective. I’m queer, most of my friends are queer, I am attracted to queers… I love the queer community, and the people who are part of it. Sometimes things are hard, but there is so much joy, so much love, and laughter. Creativity and creation.  Personally, I identify as queer because I don’t have a firm attachment to any particular gender. The people I am attracted to have a wide variety of divergent genders, and gender presentations.

Why make it the main subject of your photography?
Partially it’s a compulsion. I feel compelled to take pictures and I’m most comfortable taking pictures of the folks I know. Also, I think the queer community is incredibly important.  I’ve been taking pictures for a number of years now. When I started, things weren’t getting documented and I didn’t want to see our history lost. I see so many people doing such amazing and creative things, I feel like it’s important to archive them. Also, I love color, and the scene is wonderfully colorful, and attractive.

Are you a part of the Haus of Haunt?
Depends on how you define Haus of Haunt. I don’t perform with the Haus of Haunt, but according to how Sharon and Alaska define Haus of Haunt, I would say I definitely am. They include many people other than just the performers; fans, photographers, folks who give everyone a ride, etc. I’ve been taking pictures of these queens for a number of years now.

 

‘I wanted to show people that they don’t need a lot to create something amazing.’

Why make a book on the subject matter?
When Sharon got on Drag Race – where they have been showing my book, by the way – I started working on it. When it became obvious that she was an instant hit with the fans, I started working. There was a lot I wanted to share about the Haus of Haunt. One of the things that attracted me to the performances is how they have been able to make so much out of almost nothing. I wanted to show people that they don’t need a lot to create something amazing.

Tell me everything about your upcoming show. What/where/when…
My show at The Warhol Museum opens June 14th. 2013. I’m still not sure how many pictures I’m going to use, probably somewhere around 50ish. The show focuses on the queer community of Pittsburgh. I’m trying to focus on themes that I see running through, things that we all experience, things that make us different and set us apart. And of course things that are part of the human condition that run through all of us. Unlike my Haus of Haunt book, the show at the Warhol is more focused on the day-to-day aspects of the queer community, instead of performance.

 

www.sharonneedles.com
www.caldwelllinker.com

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House of Hopelezz

House of Hopelezz

House of Hopelezz

Text JF. Pierets   

 

If you’re lucky you can bump into them when in Amsterdam. Accompanied by a human cluster of flies, they picturesquely attract and they puzzle. With their expression of beatific good humour and their gaily coloured dresses, people are vying for their attention. With pleasurable interest they pose with them whose age range from 8 to 88 and go from place to place where their fancy takes them. One member of the gang – intelligent, big hair, big ass and a beard – paved the way for this radiant group of drag queens and –kings and brought to the surface all the things that were boiling inside. With pleasurable interest, Richard Keldoulis tells us about becoming Jennifer Hopelezz, about his role in the Amsterdam gay scene and the mere idea of creating a family. 

 

I grew up in Sydney in a kind of conservative environment. My grandparents came from Greece, I went to private schools and lived in the suburbs. By the way, they had dental implants for missing teeth. They were made by professionals. My father was a dentist and everybody around me became a doctor. So I studied medicine as well. I went straight from school to university so I was 23 when I finished studying but the last couple of years I decided that this was not what I wanted to do. I was kind of strangulated by the environment. I’ve always been bisexual anyhow but around that time I had a boyfriend so it stayed that way. Suddenly my whole childhood world became very narrow. I finished all the exams, worked for one year in a hospital but I hated it.

I would probably be alright as a doctor and could have chosen some field in medicine but I was so over that life. I wanted to leave it and discover the rest of the world. You have no life experience, and suddenly you’re in a role where people look up to you. You see how that changes people. It’s not actually very good for you. Basically I was too young and wanted to get away. So I escaped all that. I moved away from Sydney and I never went back to live there. I need to roam, that’s my character. My Chinese sign is tiger and I find it very suffocating to stay where I’ve grown up. Sydney is a big city, 4 million people. But when you grow up in the suburbs, everyone lives there; your friends, your family. So it’s more like living in a small town.

At that time, Japan was really booming and there were ads in all the Australian papers looking for English teachers there. I applied for a job and got it. I persuaded my boyfriend, landed in Tokyo and the next day I had a job and the day after we had an apartment. We stayed in Tokyo for 1,5 years but I got caught up in that making money, working system. I remember clearly being on the train at 8 in the morning, going to work with thousands of Japanese and I realised it was not what I wanted. So I left Japan and went to Amsterdam.

What brought me here was the liberal atmosphere. The only thing I hated was the weather. As an Australian you know that England has bad weather but you never get to think that it would be the same in Amsterdam. But then I met my husband Elard and I never left. I really feel at home here. I can be who I want to be. It’s a funny sort of freedom when you live somewhere without friends of family. Away from where you come from. You are given the possibility to invent your own personality. Since organising is a genetic thing I’ve got from my mother, I soon got involved in all kind of events and exhibitions. We started to create festivals for the Homomonument and on Queens day, started Pink Point, an information point for gays and lesbians and all of a sudden we had a scene.

Running a sex club
In 1998 we started organising sex parties on Sunday afternoons. People were shirtless or nude and went after a few hours.  We hardly did any publicity but it was always full. Since we were organising more and more parties, we decided to start our own club. Church. We knew these parties worked, so we just opened the door. Now it has evolved into a lot of mixed theme nights- some hardcore men-only events but also dance parties with drags, trannies and women. Not the easiest way to go because the public has strict ideas of what a cruise club should be. It has to have a cement floor and lots of metal so it was nice to mix that up too.

One problem is that there’s a thing against sex at the moment in Amsterdam. I don’t know if it’s a socio-cultural thing but I think it’s more general. At the end of the 80’s sexual freedom seemed to peak, and since then it’s been pretty much all downhill. Young people are quite conservative these days. They are cleaning up red light districts everywhere because sex has become somehow very negative. And that’s a pity. Sexy is okay but sex is not.  I have lived here for 20 years now and in that time 18 darkrooms have disappeared. Church is the only new one that has opened. Straight hetero fetish parties are also having a hard time getting a licence. Such a shame. When I read about Berlin: being the fetish capital of the world, I think that’s what Amsterdam is meant to be. Not the gay capital, but the fetish capital. That is much bigger and wider. That’s what we once were but not are anymore.

Being gay in Amsterdam
The Amsterdam gay scene can sometimes be a little misogynous, so it’s good to stir things up every now and then. I too live mostly in a world without women but it can in many ways be quite distorting. A lot of gay men are more or less anti-lesbian as well. They still harbour the weirdest clichés about them. I think it’s much more healthy to mix- apparently businesses with men and women on the board do much better than when there are only men. The gay community is really important, for the visibility of it, but it’s got a negative side as well. People start to identify you with your sexuality, your identity becomes your sexual identity. So gay people are seen like a different kind of thing. If you look at countries like Morocco, were the gay community is very low profile, boys have more experimental sex with other boys because it’s not ‘called’ gay, there’s no label. But here in the West we have become so labelled. Either you’re gay or you’re straight – you can’t be bisexual because that’s apparently weird – and that has a huge downside. People are scared to experiment with sex because it can lead to an identity crisis.

My whole life I’ve been working with the gay community and as I said, it’s important to be visible but the downside is that we are seen as a totally different animal. Like some special kind of species. Gay is a swear word at school, but kids don’t even realise that gays are even humans. So you categorise people, it’s ‘them’ and ‘us’. And that’s the flip side of a strong gay community. Because of that you live in a cocoon with your gay friends in your gay world. But then again at the gay parade in Amsterdam this year, I saw so many same sex couples holding hands in the streets. That of course is the positive side of a strong gay community.
 

‘The idea of starting a family came quite naturally. It all fitted together easily. Everybody liked the idea so much that they all hooked up.’

The birth of Jenny
Jennifer was born in 2000. Every year my husband and I go back to Australia for the holidays and take part in Mardi Gras, Sydney’s huge gay pride festival. We’ve entered lots of floats in Mardi Gras, and one year we went in drag, as a parody of Greek-Australian girls, who coincidentally are quite similar to Jennifer Lopez. A little bit too much make-up, tight dresses, custom jewellery. A bit cheap and very loud.  What I’m doing is a different kind of drag, especially with the beard and all. A lot of people like it because it shows that drags are not always bitchy queens with shaved legs. I think that was a bit of an eye opener for people here in Amsterdam, because it’s done with a lot of humour. I don’t take myself seriously by trying to look like a beautiful woman and after a while the beard and the ass even became my trademark. I like to fuck around with the different ideas on femininity and masculinity and confuse people with it… a drag with a beard and hairy legs, a macho guy who likes wearing lipstick. I think it’s empowering for a lot of people when they realise they don’t have to be a conventional drag queen or a transvestite but just who they want to be.

Jennifer goes politics.
I soon discovered that drag queen elections or lip syncing shows were not really my thing. I tried it but I always seem to come last, they were still expecting a traditional drag. So I started to get a little bit bored and wanted to move on, organise new things. I always knew that drag +  lip syncing was no novelty. But drag with sports or with politics, that would be news. The Drag Olympics were a great move. No one has ever combined Drag with sports and we were literally in every newspaper. And because I like politics on a local level and I already had dealings with the local council, talking about Pink Point or the Homomonument, I came up with the idea to run for night mayor. So I thought it would be a great thing for Jennifer to go into politics. It’s a kind of ludicrous thing, being a night mayor, since it’s not an official but a made up position. But even though it’s not a real function, you can still achieve a lot of things for Amsterdam’s nightlife.

Because of the elections we decided to build a drag family. I never had the ambition of being well known. The campaign gave me a reason to push Jennifer as a character. We had planned a year-long campaign and took it very seriously. We had a website, facebook group and started making appearances around town. The idea of starting a family came quite naturally. Jennifer Lopez had twins so I wanted twins. It all fitted together easily. Everybody liked the idea so much that they all hooked up.  Suddenly there were sisters, a nanny for the twins, godparents,…it became so big that we started the House of Hopelezz. We had to actually, because by the time we got to ‘the neighbour’s daughter’, nobody could keep track anymore.

The woman with the beard
The election itself ended somehow with a downer. Although we had over a thousand people there and were overwhelmingly voted for, we still didn’t get chosen. They didn’t take us seriously. The jury, a group of 5 people – supposedly artists – couldn’t see through the make-up.And that really shocked me. The public voted us first place, the jury gave us last place- and they ultimately decided. We were the only ones with a campaign, a website, a 10 page policy, etc. But they just couldn’t see through the drag thing. With drag, you get a lot of attention, but it is also a distraction from your message. It’s a double-edged sword. As Jennifer, I try to use the attention to get my message across. Whether it’s effective or not is another question.

Jennifer versus Richard
Jennifer is more famous and more liked than Richard. I created the character of Jennifer in my head. She’s always friendly, she’s positive and she’s nice. As Richard I’m more businesslike, a bit grumpier, but when something happens, it always goes through my mind; how would Jennifer react? But as time goes by you grow towards each other. Jennifer has grown a bit more like Richard and the other way around. I don’t feel like I have two personalities but it’s definitely a part of my character I didn’t know was there. The whole thing about being extraverted, being on stage and being all bubbly, that’s something Richard would never do. But I notice people are much more open to me as Jennifer. They tell her things they normally don’t tell Richard.  And that’s a good thing. In that matter she can help people to explore who they really are. And that’s really cool. I think because I make such a spectacle of myself as Jenny, people are less inhibited to try things themselves. I’m very curious as to where it’s all going to. With Club Church, the members of the House of Hopelezz, the acceptance of our community,.. But after all, you know that quote from Ru Paul “We are all born naked and everything else is drag”?

 

www.homomonument.nl
www.dragqueenolympics.nl
www.clubchurch.nl
www.jenniferhopelezz.com

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Et Alors? magazine. A global celebration of diversity.