Entertainment

INTERVIEW-Cult gay filmmaker John Waters embraces a shift from outlaw to insider – Devdiscourse

American filmmaker John Waters is well known for pushing boundaries with exuberantly provocative works exploring taboos around themes such as pornography and LGBTQ+ relationships.

But now the cult director, known as the “Pope of Trash”, says he is happy to come in from the cold, as his storytelling finds new audiences. “Everybody now wants to be an outsider,” Waters, 76, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by phone from his office in the northeastern U.S. city of Baltimore.

“Both (former U.S. presidents Barack) Obama and (Donald) Trump would call themselves outsiders, I believe. That’s why I now (want) to be an insider – because nobody else wants to.” Waters is perhaps best known for the 1972 cult classic “Pink Flamingos”, which follows two groups competing to be the “filthiest people alive”, and his 1988 hit “Hairspray”, featuring singer Debbie Harry and actor Ricki Lake.

The gay filmmaker has always featured marginalized groups, such as the late drag queen Divine who starred in many of his films, as well as transgender actors and characters. Waters has gradually attained more mainstream success and respectability – a change partly explained by his shift to more commercial projects, but which also reflects the growing acceptance of LGBTQ+ groups and culture.

Gay men, in particular, have gone from social pariahs in the mid-1960s in the United States, to largely mainstream acceptance today. Other parts of the wider LGBTQ+ community are currently under the spotlight, however, with lawmakers in at least a dozen U.S. states recently passing legislation https://www.openlynews.com/i/?id=7d77d345-6968-45e4-b0d3-35b3593173d7 restricting trans rights.

Waters said he was bemused by the furor. “To me, I’m just happy everybody’s getting to do what they want to do and be themselves,” he said, speaking on the eve of two one-man shows at London’s Barbican arts center on Friday.

“I don’t care what they want to be.” SOCIAL CHANGE

Waters’ work reflects decades of social change in the United States, with his often LGBTQ-themed movies provoking shock in the 1960s and ’70s, but garlanded with praise in the 1980s and ’90s. His films, including a notorious scene of someone being sexually assaulted by a giant lobster in the 1970s “Multiple Maniacs”, have been underpinned by camp humor in which the director revels.

“My job is to think of weird things,” Waters said. “I’m always watching people. I’m always fantasizing about things,” he added. “Then when I sit down, I let my mind go and try to make myself laugh.”

This year also saw the release of his first novel “Liarmouth”, billed as “a feel-bad romance”, that follows con artist Marsha Sprinkle as she scams her way through life. Waters says it is just as well attitudes have liberalized over his lifetime – not least as it now gives him even more license to shock.

“If (“Yarmouth”) had come out in 1954, then I’d have been in prison,” he said with a laugh. And amid growing polarisation and debates over so-called cancel culture, Waters said it was always important to listen to both sides – and then crack a joke to win over opponents.

“If you ever can make the other side laugh, then that’s the first step to ever-changing someone,” he said.

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)