Screened as part of NZIFF 2021

Swan Song 2021

Directed by Todd Stephens Proud

“The Liberace of Sandusky” emerges from retirement for one last day in the sun – and one final night on stage – in a knock-out turn by Udo Kier. 

Nov 25

MTG Century Theatre

Nov 28

Event Cinemas Havelock North

USA In English
106 minutes

Rent

Director, Screenplay

Cast

Udo Kier
,
Jennifer Coolidge
,
Linda Evans
,
Ira Hawkins
,
Stephanie McVay
,
Michael Urie

Producers

Eric Eisenbrey
,
Stephen Israel
,
Tim Kaltenecker
,
Todd Stephens
,
Rhet Topham

Cinematography

Jackson Warner Lewis

Editors

Spencer Schilly
,
Santiago Figueira W.

Music

Chris Stephens

Festivals

SXSW 2021

Elsewhere

Once one of Ohio’s leading hairdressers, Pat Pitsenbarger’s glory days seem long behind him. That’s until a posthumous request from a former client spurs his escape from his rest home in a search for reconciliation, expired hair product and one last great party.

From Blood for Dracula to Bacurau (NZIFF 2019), Udo Kier has seared his way into the minds of cinephiles with decades of transgressive, menacing roles. But his first leading turn in 50 years defies expectations. Like Richard Farnsworth in The Straight Story or Harry Dean Stanton in Lucky (NZIFF 2018), Kier commands the screen in a role ‘based on a true icon’ and overwhelms our emotions as a character actor turned leading man, more fabulous than frightening, yet with eyes that carry a life of pain.

More than a star vehicle, this gently moving film is a testament to the gay men of the 20th century whose oft-hidden lives were the engine for social progress. Tenderly and lovingly rendered by Sandusky resident Todd Stephens – whose own coming-out was inspired by ‘Mr Pat’ – Swan Song is by turns a love letter, a history lesson and a reckoning with grief, all studded with moments of laughter and joy. — Doug Dillaman

“[A] tribute not only to the real-life Pat Pitsenbarger, but to the past generations of people like him who came out when it was unsafe to do so. The veteran actor Kier’s performance as a formerly fancy figure is brilliantly understated... In the end, Swan Song is about legacy. Not just how we will be remembered by others, but how we will remember ourselves.” — Brad Wheeler, The Globe and Mail