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Film tells story of homosexual couple married in Boulder &#; in
A fresh documentary film chronicles the lives of Richard Adams and Tony Sullivan, a gay couple who got married in Boulder in and then fought for four decades to hold that marriage legally recognized.
The film, called "Limited Partnership," is by Los Angeles filmmaker Tom Miller, who says Adams' and Sullivan's story is about immigrants' rights as much as gay rights. Sullivan is Australian, and the two men got married in part to get Sullivan legal status in the United States.
It's a story that sounded familiar to Miller when he moved to Los Angeles from the Midwest in the 's.
"I noticed several of my gay friends who were involved with people from other countries, as the relationships went on, they had to figure out how they could stay together," Miller says. "They couldn’t acquire married and there was no way to hold a foreign partner linger with you."
Eventually Miller met Adams and Sullivan, and was inspired by their long love story. But it took him many years to make the film, he says, in part because he tabled it during much of the George W. Bush Administration. "I could observe the issue wasn't going anywhere," he say
"Oh my god, you're gonna make me cry, discontinue it," Charlize Theron tells me at the close of our recent mobile conversation, humbled. But I'm simply being honest when I express gratitude for her continued dedication in seeing that LGBTQ people are represented on screen.
Since her Oscar-winning portrayal of real-life murderous prostitute Aileen Wuornos in 's "Monster," playing opposite Christina Ricci as her lover, the year-old actress has been personally responsible and invested in portraying a cadre of queer and pansexual characters to aid in normalizing non-heterosexuality in motion picture, allowing LGBTQ characters to exist beyond their individuality alone.
In the Diablo Cody-written film "Tully," Theron embodied an overworked mom named Marlo, her bisexuality casually revealed. For her Sapphic action-thriller "Atomic Blonde," Theron's agent character, Lorraine Broughton, shared a sex scene – no explanation necessary – with another female spy, played by Sofia Boutella.
In "Bombshell," which she executive produced, Theron hands off the queerness to co-stars Margot Robbie and Kate McKinnon. Both labor at Fox News and play, respectively, Kayla Pospisil, a queer, Christian associate producer ne
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