Filmmaker Tim McCarthy talks about his recent trip
to Uganda to complete the filming of his documentary “Voices of the
Abasiyazzi – Combatting Homophobia in Uganda” that he is producing with
Pepe Julian Onziema with Emmy Winner Charlotte Robinson host of
OUTTAKE VOICES™. Abasiyazzi is the Ugandan equivalent of the
American word queer. McCarthy has been exploring our LGBT community in
Uganda since 1999 and filming his documentary on location for the last
five years. Tim tells us that Uganda ...
Filmmaker Tim McCarthy talks about his recent trip
to Uganda to complete the filming of his documentary “Voices of the
Abasiyazzi – Combatting Homophobia in Uganda” that he is producing with
Pepe Julian Onziema with Emmy Winner Charlotte Robinson host of
OUTTAKE VOICES™. Abasiyazzi is the Ugandan equivalent of the
American word queer. McCarthy has been exploring our LGBT community in
Uganda since 1999 and filming his documentary on location for the last
five years. Tim tells us that Uganda is fifty years behind our country
in achieving LGBT equality. His work in Uganda also includes teaching
video techniques to our Ugandan LGBT community so they can continue to
tell their stories. Tim has traveled the world exploring and filming
LGBT culture in 91 countries and all 7 continents. He has built an
incredible LGBT film archive that he is in the process of preserving. We
talked to Tim about the inspiration for his work and his spin on our
LGBT issues.
When asked what his personal commitment is to LGBT civil rights McCarthy
stated, “I came out at thirteen years old because it was essential to
me for my own life. I knew that coming out was my only way to really
hold on to who I was because it was something of value that I knew I
had. I didn’t understand what it was but I knew it was there. My entire
life, I’m now 58, has been fighting for LGBTI rights, not just here in
the United States but around the planet. My life’s dedication is to
every single country there is and finding our people, particularly going
to non-American, non-Capitalistic, non-Christian places and seeing how
LGBTI people live there and of course we have. I’ve been to 91 countries
now and I’ve never failed to find us. But what’s important in that is
in our society there’s still the understanding in some rightwing
quarters that we are not proper and that AIDS was God’s revenge and a
variety of other crazy things. When you go to non-American,
non-Capitalistic, non-Christian places you see that we exist there. So
those arguments fundamentally are false and the empirical evidence is
inequitable. To me my entire life has been spent fighting for but not
just us as a people, to be clear with you, but for me as a person. I
deserve to know who I am before I die and that is what I extend to
everyone.”
Tim McCarthy is an LGBT Video Historian who has traveled the world since
April 1990 in search of LGBT culture in 91 countries so far and all 7
continents. Some of Tim's archival footage appeared in the Oscar
Nominated documentary "How To Survive A Plague". He is also an award
winning filmmaker and has filmed Life Portraits with Harry Hay, James
Broughton, Marvin Liebman, Urvashi Vaid, Barney Frank, Edward Albee,
Steve Endean, Barbara Gittings and hundreds of others. He is currently
completing his documentary “Voices of the Abasiyazzi – Combatting
Homophobia in Uganda” and in the process of preserving his archive of
our LGBT stories and Provincetown’s video archives at liptv.us.
For More Info: abasiyazzi.com
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