
WE ARE HER (80 MIN)
This program features short films highlighting notable trans women from the past and present who have acted in the struggle for liberation and cut paths for us to follow today. From Reconstruction Era Memphis, to the Tenderloin, to 90’s daytime talk shows, these fierce women will make you proud of our history and inspire you to shape the world for future generations.
Three years before Stonewall, on an unknown date in August 1966, trans sex workers and drag queens in San Francisco's Tenderloin district rioted against police violence at Gene Compton's Cafeteria. There was no news coverage, and the arrest records no longer exist. Decades later, trans historian Susan Stryker unearthed the history of the riot and interviewed the surviving Compton’s Queens.
Compton's ’22 creates an intergenerational conversation between these oral histories and trans artists today, using performance to imagine an interpretive archive that stands in for the absence of historical documentation. The film aims to counter the erasure and deradicalization of our history, and underscore the crucial role of intergenerational knowledge and solidarity in the ongoing struggle for queer liberation.
- Runtime17:30
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited States
- GenreDocumentary, Experimental, LGBTQ, Historical, Performance, Dance
- Content WarningImplied Violence
- AwardsOfficial Selection (NewFest New Voices), The New Yorker Shorts Program 2024
- NoteFull Closed Captioning of dialogue and sound (English only)
- DirectorDrew de Pinto
- ProducerAzza Cohen, Susan Stryker, Victor Silverman
- CastTamara Ching, Felicia Elizondo, Amanda St. Jaymes, Beni Avalos, Mia Díosdado, Manny Mendoza, Tory Teasley, Matthew Zheng
WE ARE HER (80 MIN)
This program features short films highlighting notable trans women from the past and present who have acted in the struggle for liberation and cut paths for us to follow today. From Reconstruction Era Memphis, to the Tenderloin, to 90’s daytime talk shows, these fierce women will make you proud of our history and inspire you to shape the world for future generations.
Three years before Stonewall, on an unknown date in August 1966, trans sex workers and drag queens in San Francisco's Tenderloin district rioted against police violence at Gene Compton's Cafeteria. There was no news coverage, and the arrest records no longer exist. Decades later, trans historian Susan Stryker unearthed the history of the riot and interviewed the surviving Compton’s Queens.
Compton's ’22 creates an intergenerational conversation between these oral histories and trans artists today, using performance to imagine an interpretive archive that stands in for the absence of historical documentation. The film aims to counter the erasure and deradicalization of our history, and underscore the crucial role of intergenerational knowledge and solidarity in the ongoing struggle for queer liberation.
- Runtime17:30
- LanguageEnglish
- CountryUnited States
- GenreDocumentary, Experimental, LGBTQ, Historical, Performance, Dance
- Content WarningImplied Violence
- AwardsOfficial Selection (NewFest New Voices), The New Yorker Shorts Program 2024
- NoteFull Closed Captioning of dialogue and sound (English only)
- DirectorDrew de Pinto
- ProducerAzza Cohen, Susan Stryker, Victor Silverman
- CastTamara Ching, Felicia Elizondo, Amanda St. Jaymes, Beni Avalos, Mia Díosdado, Manny Mendoza, Tory Teasley, Matthew Zheng