In the news this week is the story of young ballet dancer,
Jeppe Hansen. Hansen was on a scholarship with the Royal Winnipeg Ballet
School, when he was told there was no longer a place for him, it having been
discovered that he had appeared in gay porn movies, under the name Jett Black. Quite
how the Royal Winnipeg Ballet officials discovered this has not been revealed,
but the company has stated it has policies and procedures in place, that state
that any dancer who wishes to partake in ‘side projects’ must gain approval
from the school director. I do wonder, though, if the school would have been
quite so intransigent if it had been discovered that Hansen was working as a
waiter or even dancing in a fringe production of a musical somewhere,
There can be little doubt that it is the nature of Hansen’s
‘side project’ itself that is the problem, not the fact that Hansen, like many
students, was doing something extra-curricular to fund his education. The
problem appears to be sex, not only sex, but public sex, though we should
remember that Hansen was doing nothing illegal. He was just appearing in a
movie and getting paid for it. One has to ask if they would have had the same
problem, if he’d got a role in a war movie which required him to kill and maim
people. No doubt he’d have been given a warning and allowed to continue his
studies.
On the other hand it is a little disingenuous of Hansen to refer
to the porn he did as art, a statement that only serves to cloud the issue. Though
he may have a point, I’d hardly call any of the porn I did art, and, anyway, the
whole question of what constitutes pornography, and what erotic art, is
probably food for a whole other article. Hansen banging on about his artistic
freedom being breached hardly helps, I feel. The issue seems to me much
simpler.
I certainly doubt the Royal Winnipeg Ballet School’s
officials wrestled for one moment with definitions of art and pornography. They
were just “shocked” and “appalled” that one of their students was having sex on
film. But this is where I have a problem with the officials. My reaction to the
news was, predictably no doubt, so fucking what? I would imagine he made a lot
more money for a few hours’ being filmed having sex than he would have done
working as a waiter, and probably had a lot more fun doing it too. Seems to me
he was just being inventive. He was given an opportunity and took it.
Am I so completely out of touch with how normal people would
react? Not as much as you might think, judging from most of the comments left
by readers of the news article in gaystarnews,
who all seemed to think the Ballet School over reacted.
As far as I can see, the problems society, and the
mainstream media, have with porn are the same ones they have with sex; problems
derived from outmoded religious views and the deep seated shame those views
create.
Some of you may remember that, a few years ago, The News of
the World revealed that Max Mosley enjoyed indulging in a bit of SM sex. Mosley,
quite properly considering that what he got up to in his private life was
nobody’s business but his own took out a privacy case against the News of the
World, which he won, though, by this time, his reputation was in tatters
anyway. The law agreed that The News of the World had breached his privacy by
revealing his sexual peccadilloes, but it hardly changed people’s attitudes to
what he was getting up to. Again, when the story first broke, my attitude was,
so what? Why is this even a news story? Is it just that most people’s sex lives
are so boring, they can only get vicarious pleasure out of reading about other
people’s, and then, of course, condemning them?
On the subject of porn, internet figures suggest that most
of us are looking at it, but very few would admit to it. We know that most of the
people who have at some time looked at internet porn are men, (8 out of 10,
compared to only a third of women), but it’s fair to assume that most of them
don’t tell their wives or girlfriends. So, although watching porn is common,
it’s still not considered acceptable behaviour, whereas watching movies in
which people get blown to bits is. Taking the above figure as the norm, that
would suggest that, out of the current 503 male MPs in the House of Commons, we
can assume that at least 400 of them have, at one time or another, watched
internet porn. These same MPs will publicly voice their concerns about the easy
availability of internet porn and talk about ways of stopping it. Ah, how we
love dual standards.
Returning to the original question as to whether doing porn
can come back and bite you in the bum, then, I am sad to say, that in our
present society, the answer is probably yes. In our gay world, doing porn might
be becoming more and more acceptable, and indeed more and more gay men are
enjoying sex on camera, many being happy to do it just for the thrill, rather
than the money, but they really should be careful about who gets to watch it. I
suspect many of them would lose their day jobs if their bosses ever found
out. Yes it seems totally wrong to me
and I can’t help asking why doing porn can possibly be seen to be a problem for
a budding ballet dancer. Are people really not going to go and watch him dance
if they know he’s had sex on camera? I suspect the reverse would be true. Oh
well, clearly society hasn’t caught up with me yet. So a bit of advice. Unless,
like me, you can largely opt out of society, admit to all you have done and
refuse to be ashamed, it’s probably best that, for now, you give up the idea of
doing that porn movie. Either that or wear a mask.
So, what do you think of Sean Paul Lockhart (Brent Corrigan) getting closer to a mainstream acting career? He's decent as an actor, but how can he beat his porn past, do you think? Should he even bother, or just use the notoriety, shame-based as it may be?
ReplyDeleteI really hope he makes a go of it as an actor. that he has done porn in the past, as far as I am concerned, should make absolutely no difference. With films like Shortbus and I Want Your Love, we now seem to be entering a time when actors can be asked to have sex on film. These are not simulated sex scenes. These are the real thing. I think it's very liberating. I'd do it. But then I also trained as actor before doing porn. And, of course, I don't happen to think there is any shame in doing porn. It's just the hypocrites who watch it that think that.
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