Sordid Lives
Sordid Lives | |
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Directed by | Del Shores |
Written by | Del Shores |
Starring | Bonnie Bedelia Delta Burke Leslie Jordan Beau Bridges Olivia Newton-John |
Music by | George S. Clinton |
Distributed by | Regent Releasing |
Release dates
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Country | United States |
Language | English |
Box office | $1,010,000 |
Sordid Lives is a 2000 independent film, written and directed by Del Shores. The movie is based on Shores' play of the same name and includes elements of his life, according to the director's DVD commentary. The film was followed by the 2008 television series Sordid Lives: The Series.
The original stage play premiered in Los Angeles on May 11, 1996 and ultimately won 14 Drama-Logue Awards.[1] The film met with mixed reviews from mainstream audiences but became a cult classic with LGBT fans, particularly in the South. The movie tells the story of a Texas family coming together in the aftermath of the matriarch's death. To keep the stories going, Viacom's new station Logo produced twelve episodes of Sordid Lives: The Series. The television version begins at a point before that covered in the film, with Rue McClanahan as the mother, Peggy Ingram. Much of the film cast returned, including Leslie Jordan and Olivia Newton-John. Delta Burke was replaced with Caroline Rhea, while the part of Ty Williamson, formerly played by Kirk Geiger, is now portrayed by director Del Shores' ex-husband Jason Dottley.[2] Dottley has been on the national tour of the stage production of Sordid Lives since September 2007.
The television series began airing in July 2008.[3] It ended after one season.
Synopsis
A colorful family from a small Texas town must come to grips with the accidental death of the elderly family matriarch during a clandestine meeting in a seedy motel room with her much younger, married neighbor. The woman's family must deal with their own demons while preparing for what could be an embarrassing funeral.
Cast and characters
Actor | Character | Notes |
---|---|---|
Olivia Newton-John TBASequel |
Bitsy Mae Harling | A local singer with "a reputation" who is a close friend of Peggy's. |
Kirk GeigerFilm/Sequel Jason DottleySeries |
Ty Williamson | The son of Latrelle, Ty is a closeted 20-something gay man who left behind the small Southern Baptist town in Texas and moved to West Hollywood to become an actor. |
Sarah Hunley | Juanita Bartlett | Wardell's short-term memory friend and regular patron (a/k/a 'the town drunk') of Bubba's Bar. |
Newell Alexander | Wardell 'Bubba' Owens | G.W.'s friend and the object of Brother Boy's affection. |
Beau BridgesFilm David SteenSeries/Sequel |
G.W. Nethercott | Noleta's unfaithful husband, who feels responsible for Peggy's death. |
Earl H. BullockFilm David CowgillSeries/Sequel |
Odell Owens | Bubba's brother who is scarred for life by a pig-bloating incident. |
Beth Grant Dale DickeySequel |
Sissy Hickey | Peggy's much younger sister, and aunt to Brother Boy, LaVonda and Latrelle. Sissy just wants to stop smoking. |
Delta BurkeFilm Caroline RheaSeries/Sequel |
Noleta Nethercott | Sissy's next-door neighbor, the distraught wife of G.W. Nethercott and best friend to LaVonda. |
Leslie Jordan | Earl 'Brother Boy' Ingram | A fan of the women of country music, Brother Boy has been institutionalized for 23 years by his parents for being a cross-dressing homosexual. |
Mitch Carter | Bumper | The security guard at the mental institution that taunts Brother Boy. |
Bonnie Bedelia | Latrelle Williamson | Ty's mother, who is primarily concerned with keeping up appearances. Latrelle wants to persuade her sister LaVonda and Aunt Sissy not to bury her mother, Peggy in a mink stole in Texas during the summer. She is Peggy's elder daughter. |
Sharron Alexis | Sara Kaufman | Ty's deranged ex-girlfriend who is obsessed that they are meant to be together. |
Ann Walker | LaVonda DuPree | Peggy's younger daughter, a free spirit who is also Noleta's best friend. |
Mary-Margaret Lewis | Ethel | Brother Boy's confidant and best friend at the mental institution. |
Rosemary Alexander | Dr. Eve Bolinger | "Doctor Evil" wants to de-homosexualize Brother Boy so she can write a book, appear on the Oprah television show and quit her psychiatrist job at the mental institution. |
Gloria LeRoyFilm Rue McClanahanSeries |
Peggy Ingram | The recently deceased sister of Sissy Hickey and mother of Latrelle, LaVonda and Earl "Brother Boy". |
Soundtrack
Track listing | ||||
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No. | Title | Writer(s) | Performer | Length |
1. | "Sordid Lives" | Olivia Newton-John | 02:07 | |
2. | "Opening" | George S. Clinton | George S. Clinton | 02:12 |
3. | "Trash Talk" | Delta Burke / Beth Grant | 00:49 | |
4. | "Better a Painful Ending, Than an Endless Pain" | Sharyn Lane / Mark McGuinn | Bobbie Eakes / Doo Wah Riders | 04:08 |
5. | "Blue Country" | George S. Clinton | George S. Clinton | 02:28 |
6. | "Tallywacker Talk/Mano a Mano" | Bonnie Bedelia /George S. Clinton / Kirk Geiger / Beth Grant | 02:48 | |
7. | "Truth Talk" | Bonnie Bedelia / Beth Grant / Ann Yvonne Walker | 00:54 | |
8. | "Will the Circle Be Unbroken" | A.P. Carter | Olivia Newton-John | 02:05 |
9. | "Ty's Theme" | George S. Clinton | George S. Clinton | 01:34 |
10. | "Someone to Grow Young With" | Kacey Jones / Sharyn Lane | Kacey Jones | 03:44 |
11. | "No Fault Love" | Kacey Jones / Sharyn Lane | Kacey Jones | 03:11 |
12. | "Sh*t Talk" | Beau Bridges / Earl H. Bullock | 00:13 | |
13. | "Get off the Cross, We Need the Wood" | Kacey Jones / Sharyn Lane | J. Scott Jones | 02:24 |
14. | "Cheatin'" | Newell Alexander | 01:39 | |
15. | "Break-Out Talk/Escape" | Newell Alexander /Rosemary Alexander /Mitch Carter /George S. Clinton / Leslie Jordan / Mary Margaret Lewis | 01:39 | |
16. | "Please Don't Be Gay" | Sharyn Lane | Sharron Alexis | 02:19 |
17. | "Mother/Son Talk" | Bonnie Bedelia / Kirk Geiger | 01:55 | |
18. | "Coming Home" | Olivia Newton-John | 02:10 | |
19. | "In Daddy's Eyes" | George S. Clinton | George S. Clinton | 04:17 |
20. | "Tex-Mex" | George S. Clinton | George S. Clinton | 01:59 |
21. | "Funeral Talk" | Olivia Newton-John | 01:03 | |
22. | "Just As I Am" | William B. Bradbury / Charlotte Elliot | Olivia Newton-John | 01:01 |
23. | "Transvestite Talk" | Bonnie Bedelia / Beau Bridges / Kirk Geiger / Beth Grant / Leslie Jordan / Olivia Newton-John /Ann Yvonne Walker | 00:32 | |
24. | "Just As I Am (Conclusion)" | William B. Bradbury / Charlotte Elliot | Olivia Newton-John | 00:41 |
25. | "Mama Talk" | Leslie Jordan | 00:05 | |
26. | "Sordid Lives (Reprise)" | Olivia Newton-John | 00:58 | |
27. | "Trust Yourself" | Olivia Newton-John | Olivia Newton-John | 05:38 |
Total length:
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54:33 |
Sequel
In Fall 2014, Del Shores announced that he was working on sequel to the film titled A Very Sordid Wedding. Shores' Beard Collins Shores Productions launched an Indiegogo fundraising campaign to assemble the project and secure investor financing. The campaign ended on October 29, 2014, and filming for the sequel is set to being in October 2015.[4]
The film picks up sixteen years after the events of the first film and deals with the impact of the advancement of same-sex marriage in the conservative, southern community. Several actors from the original Sordid Lives film are reprising their roles, including Bonnie Bedelia, Leslie Jordan, Newell Alexander, Sarah Hunley, Rosemary Alexander, Ann Walker and Kirk Geiger. Joining them from the Sordid Lives series are David Steen, David Cowgill and Caroline Rhea. Original actors Beth Grant and Olivia Newton John turned down offers to return for the sequel. While Grant's role of Sissy is being recast, Newton John's role of Bitsy Mae was written out of the script. Shores also announced that several new actors would be joining the returning performers. In Spring 2015, Whoopi Goldberg was added to the cast as Ty's mother in-law.[5][6][7]
References
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External links
- Official website at Regent Releasing
- Lua error in Module:WikidataCheck at line 28: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value). Sordid Lives at IMDb
- Review at DVD Future