Russia's legislation banning
"gay propaganda", which has already cast a cloud over the 2014 Sochi
Olympics, has now reportedly prompted local filmmakers to self-censor their
portrayal of the composer Pyotr
Tchaikovsky (above) who is widely believed to have been gay.
A partly government-funded biopic of the composer of
Swan Lake, The Nutcracker and the 1812 Overture will downplay his sexuality amid the
homophobic political atmosphere in Russia, which passed a law in Junebanning the "propaganda of non-traditional sexual relations" among
minors.
The film's screenwriter, Yuri Arabov, denied
Tchaikovsky had been gay and said his script had been revised to portray the
composer as "a person without a family who has been stuck with the opinion
that he supposedly loves men" and who suffers over these
"rumours", he told the newspaper Izvestiya.
The film's producer, Sabina Yeremeyeva, said it
would not run afoul of the law against gay propaganda.
No one has been fined under the federal law,
although charges have been filed under similar regional bans that preceded it.
However, the revision of the Tchaikovsky script plays into concerns that the
law will prompt self-censorship. The vaguely worded legislation includes fines
of up to £2,000 for the "imposition of information about non-traditional
sexual relations" in the mass media.
Kirill Serebrennikov, a respected filmmaker and the
artistic director of the Gogol Theatre in Moscow, announced he would film a
Tchaikovsky biopic in August 2012 but told the cinema website KinoPoisk that he
was having trouble finding funding due to officials' concerns about the
composer's homosexuality. In July, however, the biopic became one of the films
the ministry of culture decided to finance after an open competition.
Larisa Malyukova, a film columnist at the
independent newspaper Novaya Gazeta, said that in a version of the script she
saw last year, Tchaikovsky suffered over his love for a younger man. Arabov's
comments, however, suggested that the portrayal of the composer as gay had been
edited out of the script. The Tchaikovsky screenplay went through five
revisions, and the final version "has absolutely no homosexuality, it's
entirely not about that", Arabov said.
Serebrennikov declined to comment, but Yeremeyeva
denied that the five revisions were related to concerns over Tchaikovsky's
sexuality. The producer said the controversy over the film's treatment of the
composer's orientation was "overblown and made up." Read more:
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