Georgie Girl
already a winner
06.07.2002
By KATHERINE HOBY
Yesterday
San Francisco, today the campaign trail.
Transsexual
MP Georgina Beyer made a flying visit to San Francisco last weekend to pick up
an "Excellence in Film Documentary Award" at the Frameline
International Film Festival for Georgie Girl, the documentary about her life.
Not
for her the drafty town halls and cups of tea in a dozen small towns on the
voter trail. Ms Beyer was busy appearing at a gay pride parade with Sir Ian
McKellen and picking up a trophy at a glitzy festival occasion.
The
MP for Wairarapa says she was invited to pick up the prize some time ago, and
was thrilled to do so, particularly as the film's directors could not attend.
"I
did have to think and I was dubious about going. It is election time after
all," she said.
"But
it was a quick trip. You'd hardly know I was gone."
She
said she was back on the campaign trail "100 per cent" on her return
to New Zealand on Monday. She won the Wairarapa seat in 1999 by a 3033 vote
majority.
Ms
Beyer was pleased the documentary had received such acclaim.
"It's
another small step for New Zealand film and I'm happy to be part of that."
While
in San Francisco she also attended the Lesbian Gay Transgender Bisexual Pride
Parade, which drew a crowd of half a million.
Sir
Ian McKellen, one of the stars of The Lord of the Rings, was grand master at
the parade.
"He
actually plucked me from my seat and made quite a feature of me and of New
Zealand," Ms Beyer said. "He said how progressive and
forward-thinking we were here. It was quite a promotion he gave us."
Ms
Beyer said she also used her overseas opportunity, and an earlier one in
Australia, to encourage New Zealanders overseas to get on the electoral roll
and vote.
Georgie
Girl had an ecstatic audience response at the Sydney Film Festival, where it
won best documentary and played before an audience of 4000.
At
the San Francisco Festival, the audience gave the star of the film a standing
ovation, both after the screening and during the festival award ceremony, said
Annie Goldson, who co-directed the feature-length documentary with Peter Wells.
The
film's American distributor says "the buzz" about the film on the
West Coast of America is extremely good and there is interest in giving it a
theatrical run at New York's Film Forum and in other major US cities.
Ms
Goldson says she is being inundated with requests for Georgie Girl to screen in
film festivals.
It
is already booked for the LA International Film Festival, the Melbourne and
Brisbane Festivals, the Commonwealth Documentary Festival, and the Pusan Film
Festival in Korea, among others.
It
has already sold to broadcasters SBS(Australia), Channel 4 (Britain), the CBC
(Canada) and the Sundance Documentary Channel (US). The documentary was
commissioned by TV One and screened here this year