Gay Village photograph

Gay Village

Use attributes for filter !
Provinces Quebec
Borough Ville-Marie
RestaurantsComplexe Sky
O-Thym
Steak House Village
HotelsHôtels Gouverneur Montréal
Hotel St. Andre
RCM Montreal
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID1106507
Send edit request

About Gay Village


The compact Gay Village has an upbeat vibe and a lively club scene. In summer, the main drag, Rue Sainte-Catherine, is pedestrian-only and strung with pink decorations, and bars and eateries spill onto terraces in the street. Rue Amherst is known for its boutiques and antiques shops. Nearby, the neoclassical Saint-Pierre-Apôtre Church contains the Chapel of Hope, dedicated to AIDS victims.

Commonwealth Games: Countries with homophobic laws unlikely to host

Commonwealth Games: Countries with homophobic laws unlikely to host
Jul 22,2022 2:40 am

... Located in the city s Gay Village, Pride House Birmingham, which launched on Friday, is led by 50 volunteers who will welcome people - athletes, spectators and allies - to Birmingham and celebrate the diversity of the city and be a safe and inclusive space during the games...

Reynhard Sinaga: the father, the rapist says: the punishment fits his crimes,

Reynhard Sinaga: the father, the rapist says: the punishment fits his crimes,
Feb 16,2020 9:52 am

... live near Manchester s Gay Village, he was able to Express his sexuality openly in a way that was impossible back in Indonesia...

Reynhard Sinaga: How the Manchester-rapist his victim

Reynhard Sinaga: How the Manchester-rapist his victim
Feb 16,2020 9:49 am

... When you have goals, you follow it to the bottom of the impressive Victorian town hall on Albert Square, past the bars, shops, restaurants and textile warehouse, you will reach the limits of two of the city s most popular trip - China Town and the Gay Village...

Manchester Pride faces racial prejudice claims

Manchester Pride faces racial prejudice claims
Feb 16,2020 5:42 am

... Eight black and Asian people who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender told the BBC of issues with staff in and around the Gay Village...

Does a Pride event need Kylie or Ariana Grande?

Does a Pride event need Kylie or Ariana Grande?
Feb 16,2020 5:34 am

... But as it grew it got more expensive to put on and in 2003 it was controversially decided to close off Manchester s Gay Village and sell tickets to pay for the event...

Ariana Grande to play Manchester Pride in return after 2017 attack

Ariana Grande to play Manchester Pride in return after 2017 attack
Feb 16,2020 3:19 am

... It marks an expansion for Manchester Pride, which has previously been centred in the city s Gay Village...

How Queer as Folk broke the mould for gays on TV

How Queer as Folk broke the mould for gays on TV
Feb 16,2020 3:15 am

... It portrayed the lives of three central characters living in Manchester s Gay Village in a frank, funny and explicit way that had never been seen on screens before...

Bruce McArthur: Toronto serial killer destroyed gay safe space

Bruce McArthur: Toronto serial killer destroyed gay safe space
Feb 16,2020 12:41 am

... In a small park in the heart of Toronto s Gay Village, about 200 people assembled in the snow to mourn the victims of an alleged serial killer...

How Queer as Folk broke the mould for gays on TV

Feb 16,2020 12:40 am

When Queer as Folk landed on screens 20 years ago, it immediately divided opinion.

It portrayed the Lives of three central characters living in Manchester's Gay Village in a frank, funny and explicit way that had never been seen on screens before.

But gay campaign groups protested at The Launch that it failed to tackle issues such as Aids .

And conservative critics such as then-Daily Express columnist that "the whole thing seemed to me to be some form of cultural propaganda" intended to convince viewers that "homosexuality is normal behaviour".

Today it is regarded as a milestone in LGBT representation on TV. We spoke to viewers, critics and insiders about its impact and enduring appeal.

'It showed gay men being unapologetic'

Owen Corrigan was 15 and living in rural Ireland when he chanced upon Queer as Folk while channel-hopping at home on a Friday Night .

"I had never really met a gay person, I'd just heard the schoolyard taunts. I didn't know I was gay at the time, or I hadn't acknowledged it," he says.

As a teenager, Mr Corrigan says he was a "bit of a mummy's boy" and normally he would wait up for his mother to return from her job where she worked nights.

Now he found himself being drawn into this portrayal of a "sexy and slightly outrageous and exciting" world, clutching the Remote Control and hoping he could finish watching before his mother walked in.

He says: "It helped me to overcome whatever sense of shame I had because it showed gay people without shame. But watching it with My Mother was absolutely out of the Question . "

For Owen Corrigan in rural Ireland, Queer as Folk showed gay people living without shame

When he watched the programme, moments of camaraderie and Fun - Like the characters getting together to watch a recording of Princess Diana's Funeral - had as much impact on him as the explicit scenes that made headlines at the time.

"What it showed, that I had never seen before, was gay people being normal. They had this circle of gay friends, having a laugh and hanging around," he says.

The Show 's unabashed depiction of sex was not only shocking for older, straight critics.

"It shocked me, the explicit stuff. Some of it is Still risqué 20 years later," says Mr Corrigan, recalling frank scenes involving bodily fluids.

"What was so refreshing about Queer as Folk was that it showed gay men being unapologetic. It showed without shame that all these people were sexual beings with inner Lives ," he says.

Characters ranged from the "extremely beautiful" to those with "normal bodies", from the "completely confident" to the "more buttoned-down".

A year after he saw the programme, he realised he was gay (with the additional help of The Internet and a Jennifer Aniston movie).

"British TV channels corrupted me," he jokes.

'Nothing Like it had existed before'

Writing about her first experience of seeing "explicit homosexual sex On Television " in 1999, the Daily Mail 's Lynda Lee-Potter said she felt "intense sadness that actors are being exploited this way".

Even reviewers which praised The Show , such as AA Gill in the Sunday Times, celebrated it for not making gay rights a "tub-thumping issue".

But few of these responses seemed to be written with a LGBT audience in mind.

James Luxford, a film critic for the Radio Times and City AM who is bisexual, was 15 when The Show first aired and says it provided his "first glimpse of LGBT life".

"I was so far in the closet that this glimpse was overwhelming," he says. "There just wasn't anything Like that On Television . "

Critic James Luxford says The Show was a pioneer in putting LGBT stories Centre Stage

Soaps such as EastEnders and Brookside had featured gay relationships but such portrayals were rare and often controversial.

"At the time, the usual depiction of LGBT people on TV was as an accessory to the main straight Character - the 'gay Best Friend ' stereotype," says Mr Luxford.

"To see gay people living full Lives , having sex Lives , being fully-formed characters was startling. "

If it were being made today, he says that the characters might be a bit more nuanced and that as the story unfolded, it did slip into melodrama.

"It's difficult to judge it because it was a pioneer. It didn't borrow from Anything Else because nothing Like it had existed before," he says.

But it left a legacy of shows which put LGBT Lives Centre Stage , including a US remake which ran for five seasons, as well as the L Word, Looking and Channel 4 's The Bisexual .

Queer as Folk's taboo-breaking nature means parts of the story Still shock today, such as the casual portrayal of a relationship between a 29-year-old man and a 15-year-old.

"That's not something that would fly today," says Mr Luxford, who says audiences would be much more sensitive to The Power imbalances in the #MeToo era. "But it was all taboo then. "

'People Still say it changed their Lives '

Queer as Folk started with an idea to bring gay characters out from supporting roles and into the limelight, according to executive producer Nicola Shindler .

Writer Russell T Davies had frequently written gay supporting roles until Channel 4 executives suggested he create a show dedicated to them.

But he refused to take on The Burden of representing a whole community, and faced protests by gay campaigning groups when The Show launched for not including issues such as Aids .

Executive producer Nicola Shindler says the series aimed to show its own Fun -loving take on gay life

"We kept saying, we're not representing anyone or anything. Russell T Davies got attacked from the gay community and the homophobic community. His gay men were Fun -loving and sex-loving and drug-taking," says Ms Shindler.

"'It's not my job,' Russell said, 'to represent the whole of the gay community'. He was brilliantly strong about it. "

Channel 4 was "brilliantly supportive" but bosses got last-minute nerves about a show featuring underage sex, moving it to a later timeslot of 10. 30pm.

"The channel were scared because they had never seen anything Like it before," she says.

Ms Shindler says she and Mr Davies have since discussed the issues about age and consent raised by The Show . "We probably would make that Character 16 now," she says.

But she says the teenage role, played by Charlie Hunnam , is part of the reason The Show made an impact on Young People discovering their identity.

"There were people who had never seen an underage boy who was allowed to be gay on screen before. That made such a difference. "

Ms Shindler says she would want to include more gay actors if she were making The Show today, when.

Queer as Folk helped to make stars of Aidan Gillen , now in Game of Thrones, and Charlie Hunnam , from Sons of Anarchy. But Ms Shindler says: "We were certainly turned down for a lot of auditions. "

If The Show caused outrage and nervousness on its launch, those are not the feelings that have lasted.

She says: "It's the only show I've ever worked on where people Still say it changed their Lives . "



lgbt, television

Source of news: bbc.com

Related Persons

Next Profile ❯