“I was playing someone who was real, someone’s son, someone’s brother, someone’s lover. “It’s always been much more about the story than it is about us or our performances or our journey through it. Getting the story right, says Corr, was his biggest concern. There was A Flock Of Seagulls for the ‘80s and a long, curled perm down to my shoulders for the ‘70s.” “Often we would know what era we were playing by the wig we put on. Some days we’d be playing 17-year-olds in the morning, 24-year-olds after lunch and 30 in the afternoon. The filmmakers chose not to cast younger actors in the pivotal scenes in which Conigrave and Caleo, both students at Melbourne’s Xavier College, fall in love because they felt the transition might be jarring.Ĭorr says that for him, hair and make-up was a crucial part of his process of dropping a decade, although the school uniform certainly helped.
“If you’re going to be pouring resources and passing bills around this I think important to know that this is another part of the population that needs to have their needs met and served,” she says.Ryan Corr’s character Timothy Conigrave fell in love with the boy with beautiful eyelashes - Craig Stott, who plays John Caleo in a scene from new movie Holding The ManĬorr hopes the film will go some way in rectifying what he sees as Australia’s “backwardness” in such areas - and particularly on the issue of gay marriage.īut him, playing a 17-year-old, was more of a stretch. Already the House of Representatives has sent a number of bills on the issue to the Senate, although the legislation tends not to address the needs of homeless and LGBT youths. The report comes as Congress is looking at human trafficking as a rare issue of bipartisan agreement. Almost half of the participants were male, and the report includes insight into the experiences of trans males, which according to Dank is unprecedented. About 30% lived in either a friend or family member’s home or in their own apartment, often giving the money they made in the sex trade to families members in need. “They’re seeing the same things amongst the young people that they are working with, particularly with LGBT youth.”įifty-eight percent of the young people interviewed in the study lived either in a shelter or on the streets. “Having had many conversations with people who work with this population in California, Florida, the Midwest, the Northwest,” she says.
According to some estimates, as many as 40% of homeless youths are LGBT.Įven though the report focuses on New York City, Dank stressed that it is not “the place where all gay kids go to engage in survival sex.” The Department of Housing and Urban Development estimated that a total of 578,424 people were homeless on a given night in 2014-about 10% were between the ages of 18 and 24. In 2014, the Department of Education reported that 1.3 million school children are homeless. The exact number of homeless youth is hard to pin down. You put your pride to the side, you throw everything out the window and you forget who you are and you forget what you’re doing and you learn to be someone else.” Just try to think about something else.”Īnother 19-year-old gay Latino said he felt he had no choice: “If you have no food in your stomach, if you have no transportation, but you have a man in your face willing to give you money for a half hour.
like it was just like he grabbed me by like my waist and he just started doing it. One 20-year-old straight male described his experience: “He asked me like do you really need the money? At that moment I thought I did. Many of the stories detailed in the report are telling and a great deal of those who engaged in the work didn’t identify as gay-but they found themselves selling their bodies to people of the same sex in order to survive.
“And if we were really going to be able to serve the needs of these young people we needed to know exactly what their experiences were and the large breadth of their experiences.” “I realized at that point that there was so much that we didn’t know about this population,” she tells TIME. Meredith Dank, a senior research associate at the Urban Institute and lead author of the study, said she realized during earlier research on sex work that there was not enough good information about why LGBT youths made these decisions, so the study focused on letting them tell their own stories.