Crowley’s play, a chamber portrait of pre-liberation gay America that plays like “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf?” for bitchy queens, was first brought to the screen by William Friedkin in 1970. The story unfolds over the course of a birthday party on a hot New York City night in 1968, when gay behavior had to be closeted and coded. The party is being hosted by Michael (Parsons), a decadent guy who spends and drinks too much, in honor of his friend Harold (Quinto), famous for his rapier wit. Other partygoers include Michael’s neurotic ex Donald (Bomer); Larry (Rannells), an artist living with Hank (Watkins), a school teacher who has just left his wife; the demure librarian Bernard (Michael Benjamin Washington); Emory (De Jesús), a wildly flamboyant interior decorator; and a hustler (Charlie Carver), hired to be Harold’s gift for the night. What begins as an evening of drinks and laughs soon spirals out when Michael’s supposedly straight college roommate, Alan (Brian Hutchison), shows up. Cue resentments, secrets, and lies — all culminating in a particularly vicious telephone game — coming to the surface.
Friedkin’s version is a campy, scary hoot. Mantello’s vision earned plenty of praise during its Broadway run, as well as the Tony Award for Best Revival of the Play. It was, in fact, the show’s first appearance on Broadway, as it originally debuted off-Broadway in 1968. When Mart Crowley accepted the Tony in 2019, he movingly said, “I would like to dedicate this award to the original cast of nine brave men who didn’t listen to their agents when they were told that their careers would be finished if they did this play. And they did it, and here I am.” “The Boys in the Band” releases globally on Netflix September 30. Scott Everett White/NETFLIX ©2020 Scott Everett White/NETFLIX ©2020 Brian Bowen Smith/NETFLIX Scott Everett White/NETFLIX ©2020 Sign Up: Stay on top of the latest breaking film and TV news! Sign up for our Email Newsletters here.