Lorre
and Gayle were heartbroken when they learned their two great-aunts – sisters
who’d lived together their entire 80+ years – were
on the verge of losing their 1850’s home because it
was too big a burden to care for anymore. “Having to
leave your home just because you’re older?” Lorre
asks. “After living there 60 years?” Gayle adds. “Unfair,” they
agree. So they did something about it. Lorre and Gayle broke
their apartment rental lease and moved in with a very grateful
Gertrude and Germaine, to be financial, emotional and physical
caregivers for their elderly aunts. “We were the Golden
Girls for a while there, and we still call ourselves that,
even though we lost Auntie Gert last year,” Lorre adds. “But
Auntie Germaine is still feisty and we do for her because
that’s what we’ve both been taught. You take
care of family.”
With that, the first few moments of THE GAY MARRIAGE THING
paint a picture of what it means to be a family. Gayle and
Lorre, thirtysomething college sweethearts who marked their
15th anniversary a year after the Massachusetts Supreme Court
ruled a ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional, form the
heart of this documentary scrapbook.
From the protests outside the Massachusetts State House,
to the churches of the Reverends Rich Wiesenbach and Carlton
Smith, to the historic chambers echoing State Representative
Kathi-Anne Reinstein’s perspective, THE GAY MARRIAGE
THING captures how all of these voices swirl in the air around
Gayle and Lorre as they approach May 17, 2004, the first
date same-sex couples could file for marriage licenses in
Massachusetts. While eavesdropping on the emotional and spiritual
toll this issue has taken upon all parties, the story carries
forth to the everyday angst and anticipation of Lorre and
Gayle’s own wedding.
THE GAY MARRIAGE THING is not some historical commentary
on gay rights in the United States. It is instead a small
cinematic story with big implications. By focusing on one
suburban couple and the multitude of events that directly
affect that couple’s otherwise average life, THE GAY
MARRIAGE THING strives to show a different side of this issue
than documentaries or television newscasts have thus far.
With protesters and their colorful signs serving as a Greek
chorus, and an array of opinions from church, state, and
everyone in between, this is the film that family members
can finally watch together. THE GAY MARRIAGE THING is the
documentary that opens the dialogue, fully expecting the
audience to continue it. |