When Jill Godmilow’s movie Roy Cohn/Jack Smith premiered at the 1994 Toronto International Film Festival, the number of AIDS-related deaths was reaching an all-time high in the United States (over 270,000). In New York City, the epicenter of the AIDS epidemic, many artists and filmmakers were grappling with the disease. While Broadway was hosting the second part of Tony Kushner’s award-winning play Angels in America, downtown New Yorkers were fondly recalling another recent production, Ron Vawter’s one-man show Roy Cohn/Jack Smith, in which the actor, who died of AIDS in April 1994, performed two monologues, first as Cohn, the conservative lawyer, and secondly, as Smith, the flamboyant experimental filmmaker—both of whom died of AIDS-related causes in the late 1980s.

Lucky Them
2013
6.0/10

The Safety of Objects
2002
6.5/10

Call Me Crazy: A Five Film
2013
7.0/10

Iron Jawed Angels
2004
6.8/10

Sky
2016
6.2/10

The Trials of Cate McCall
2013
6.4/10

Holy Lands
2019
6.1/10

Bastard Out of Carolina
1996
7.2/10

A Dry White Season
1989
6.7/10

The Girl in the Book
2015
5.8/10

Strange Weather
2016
5.8/10

TalhotBlond
2012
6.3/10

Return
2011
6.4/10

Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
1999
6.5/10

Starving in Suburbia
2014
6.5/10

My Brother the Devil
2012
6.4/10

Bruised
2021
6.8/10

Thirteen Conversations About One Thing
2001
6.3/10

Normal
2003
6.7/10

I Believe in Unicorns
2015
6.4/10
Poem of the Sea
1958
5.2/10