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'''Quenton Allan Brocka''' (born 1972 |
'''Quenton Allan Brocka''' (born 1972)<ref>[http://www.tlavideo.com/templates/article.cfm?art_id=directors&v=2&sn=1&g=0 Directors | TLA Gay] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081216234341/http://www.tlavideo.com/templates/article.cfm?art_id=directors&v=2&sn=1&g=0 |date=December 16, 2008 }}</ref> is an American television and film director based in [[West Hollywood, California]]. He has directed and written a number of feature films while creating an [[animated]] television series for the [[Logo (tv channel)|Logo]] cable network. He also writes a column for ''[[The Advocate (LGBT magazine)|The Advocate]]''. |
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==Personal life== |
==Personal life== |
Revision as of 08:42, 22 August 2022
Q. Allan Brocka | |
---|---|
Born | Quenton Allan Brocka 1972 (age 51–52) |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | Washington High School University of Washington California Institute of the Arts |
Occupation | Film director |
Relatives | Lino Brocka (uncle) |
Quenton Allan Brocka (born 1972)[1] is an American television and film director based in West Hollywood, California. He has directed and written a number of feature films while creating an animated television series for the Logo cable network. He also writes a column for The Advocate.
Personal life
Brocka was born and spent his childhood in Guam. His family moved to the mainland United States, settling in Parkland, Washington where he attended Washington High School. He earned a degree in communications from the University of Washington in Seattle and went on to get a Masters in film from the California Institute of the Arts.
Brocka is of Filipino heritage and is openly gay.[2] His uncle was Lino Brocka, a film director in the Philippines and an advocate for LGBT rights.
Filmography and awards
This section's tone or style may not reflect the encyclopedic tone used on Wikipedia. (February 2018) |
It was in Guam where Brocka first discovered film. At the age of eight he discovered it was fun to create simple slide shows from photographs with a soundtrack. At age nine his mother, a saleswoman for Panasonic, brought home a video camera and Brocka began creating short films and sketch comedy. He found an early fascination with science fiction but after seeing The Rocky Horror Picture Show and some John Waters films as a teen he realized sexuality was a legitimate subject. Also, while living in Seattle, he directed a queer public-access television show for several years.
In 1999 the first of Brocka's films seen by the public was the animated short Rick & Steve: The Happiest Gay Couple In All The World, an irreverent story of a lesbian couple and gay couple who dislike each other, but decide to have a baby together. The short was done as a school project that Brocka then submitted to Spike and Mike's Sick and Twisted Festival of Animation. It went on to show and win awards at seven different film festivals.
Brocka went on to create another short, Roberta Loved, a story of a morbidly obese woman who is fired from her job and learns she will die. Roberta Loved won another set of awards, and Brocka learned that his audience was willing to be disturbed by his subject matter, whether through humor (as in Rick and Steve) or drama (as in Roberta Loved and Seventy).
His next works were iconic documentaries of popular culture, Porno Valley, a reality show featuring pornographic actresses from Vivid Entertainment and Camp Michael Jackson about the encampment of fans and media outside the court trial of pop-music star Michael Jackson.
Brocka was approached by Ariztical Entertainment to create low budget gay romances and he agreed. For the first film, Eating Out, Brocka reached out to American Idol contestant Jim Verraros, who had never previously acted, as a co-star. It went on to win several awards, including 2004 Best Feature at the San Francisco International Lesbian & Gay Film Festival. Eating Out has spawned four sequels: 2006's Eating Out 2: Sloppy Seconds and 2009's Eating Out All You Can Eat, neither of which included Brocka's direct involvement, and Eating Out: Drama Camp and Eating Out: The Open Weekend, both from 2011, which Brocka directed and co-wrote, also serving as producer for the former.
Boy Culture, Brocka's 2006 feature-length release, has won more than a dozen awards at film festivals around the world, including Best Writing at the 2006 Outfest and Best Feature Film at Festival del Mar in Spain.
The Logo cable network later picked up Rick & Steve as an animated series, which aired from 2007 to 2009. Brocka also performed some of the show's voices.
References
- ^ Directors | TLA Gay Archived December 16, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Hollywood Shuffle", The Advocate, Here, p. 65, July 22, 2003, retrieved January 26, 2010
External links
- 1972 births
- American film directors
- American animated film directors
- American people of Filipino descent
- American television directors
- Animators from California
- California Institute of the Arts alumni
- Guamanian male actors
- Guamanian people of Filipino descent
- LGBT film directors
- LGBT television directors
- LGBT American people of Asian descent
- Living people
- University of Washington College of Arts and Sciences alumni
- LGBT people from Guam
- People from Parkland, Washington