Bright Vignettes: How Astoria Got Its Pride
Synopsis
The first film about Astoria’s Queer culture begins outdoors in the playful sensorium of a historical cruising site from the 1800s onward, and ends in a Queer club with a call to action for the most vulnerable, five months before the 2024 presidential election in the U.S. New York City is home to The Stonewall Inn, the site of a protest in June of 1969 that galvanized the LGBTQ+ rights movement in the U.S. In this same city, there are neighborhoods celebrating their first public Pride events into the 2020s. This is the Queer side of one of those neighborhoods.
As anti-LGBTQ+ legislation in the United States reaches unprecedented levels of implementation, Astoria felt the ramifications: burning a Pride flag outside its longest-running Queer bar in 2024; breaking the window of a new Queer bar in 2024; hateful comments on the public Instagram page for Astoria’s Annual Pride event in 2023; as well as ad hominem attacks documented in local news. Starting with the achievements and activity leading up to the neighborhood’s inaugural Pride event in 2023, Bright Vignettes portrays this vibrant, nurturing community of experimental performers, and progressive activists making this neighborhood “…a place to grow old in…and pass down our stories, and our cultures.”
Film Screening & Ticket Information
When & Where to See this Film!
…COMING SOON…
Film Information
From the Director
Director Statement
Bright Vignettes: How Astoria Got Its Pride is the first film about Astoria’s Queer scenes. Between the Children of the Rainbow Curriculum controversy in 1991 (co-led by a Queens public school teacher) and the legalization of same sex marriage in 2015, Astoria evolved from a humble, diverse émigré neighborhood into a gentrifying landscape that pushed out the few Queer bars that popped up from 1980 to today. Two have survived, one is no longer Lesbian-owned but remains a pivotal performance space in the neighborhood. All our local legends have been calling it ‘home’ since the early 1990s.
Yet, as of 2025, NYC’s interactive map of LGBT sites excludes Astoria’s long-running LGBTQ+ bars (30+ years). Our only Latino-owned LGBT bar has won “Best Drag Brunch in New York City” for three years in a row at the GLAM Awards (2023-2025) and is also left out. Our Queer scenes are just not publicly accounted for. In June 2023 Astoria held its inaugural Pride event, a joyous all-day event at Astoria Park which is itself a pre-Stonewall LGBT site in its own right. Not that there’s a plaque. Despite not being taken seriously by Manhattan-led “historical” projects, Astoria has been both home and launching pad for several iconic contestants on RuPaul’s Drag Race. For all these reasons and more I expanded Bright Vignettes from a short film into a feature to contextualize the momentum that has been quietly building up. Bright Vignettes is about Queer people’s history and futures and their ideas for shaping the spaces they exist in, during a very politically intense chapter of American history.
As LGBTQ+ people, our histories often exist between what is marginalized and what is erased. Bright Vignettes is a testament to the places where everyday LGBTQ+ people met and carved out space for themselves and each other at the beginning of the 21st century in Astoria.
Director Biography
Patrícia Silva is a photographer, filmmaker, and writer based in Astoria, Queens. Their award-winning short films have screened in film festivals at the British Film Institute, UK; Anthology Film Archives, USA; IFC Theater, USA; MIT List Visual Arts Center, USA; Tengis Cinema, Mongolia; Cervantes Institute, Brazil; among more. Their photographs have been exhibited in group shows at The Berlin Biennale, Germany; The Center for Fine Art Photography, USA; New Art City in partnership with The British Journal of Photography, UK; and awarded a prize by The Center for Fine Art Photography in 2023. Their on-going photographic archive and primary research of Queer spaces in Queens from 1890-2000 was recently published as its own chapter in the academic book The Physical and the Digital City, Invisible Forces, Data and Manifestations in November 2024, published by Chicago University Press. Bright Vignettes evolved out of that research, and it’s their first feature film. They are a professor of Video Art at St John’s University in Jamaica, Queens, and an instructor at the International Center of Photography.
Credits
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Patricia SilvaDirector
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HassanKey Cast
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Harriet TugsmenKey Cast
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Gigi St. CroixKey Cast
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Anita M. BuffemKey Cast
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Sherry PoppinsKey Cast
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Avant GarbageKey Cast
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Candy SamplesKey Cast
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Angela MansberryKey Cast
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Ronda VuKey Cast
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Alicia LoveKey Cast
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Jomil LunaKey Cast
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Fernando CantrerasKey Cast
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Michael MiguelKey Cast
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NikaelKey Cast
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John ScottKey Cast
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Brian MartinezKey Cast
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Dave DauschKey Cast
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Sarose KleinKey Cast
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Sasha LottKey Cast
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Tiffany CabánKey CastCabán Fever
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Patricia SilvaProducer
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Salvatore ZanelliComposer
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