
Kiki Warren (left) and Sparks Grassley in a scene from CCNY Theatre Professor David Willinger's feature film "Lunatics, Lovers and Actors."
David Willinger鈥檚 鈥淟unatics, Lovers and Actors鈥 Shot on Campus with Many Students in Cast
Dr. David Willinger, stage director, playwright and Professor in the Department of Theatre and Speech at T九色视频 (CCNY), is making his cinematic directorial debut. His first film, 鈥淟unatics, Lovers and Actors,鈥 will make its world premiere Tuesday, June 22, at the New Hope Film Festival in New Hope, PA.
The film was shot on location at CCNY and in adjoining St. Nicholas Park. Many CCNY students have roles in the production.
The film is a socio-political satire about an imaginative drama professor who uses a topical approach to teach William Shakespeare鈥檚 鈥淎 Midsummer Night鈥檚 Dream鈥 by changing the play鈥檚 setting from its original setting in Athens to modern Kuwait. In the original play, a group of young Athenians escape into a forest and through their encounters with the forest鈥檚 fairies chaos ensues resulting in mistaken, lost and converged individual identities. In the film, the fictional professor fills his cast with identified opposites: Muslims, fundamentalist Christians, out gays, and homophobes. Then he brings his diverse cadre of students into the forest, which was shot in St. Nicholas Park, to continue rehearsing.
Once in the forest, mystical forces intervene, and the students are confronted with their own polarized realities; the identities they constructed for themselves and projected onto others. As in Shakespeare鈥檚 original, their long held beliefs about others 鈥 i.e. their prejudices 鈥 begin to dissolve, generating a breakdown of preconceived opposites. Amidst this quagmire, a fundamentalist Christian falls in love with a Muslim, and a homophobe is attracted to a gay man.
鈥淭his is a film about intolerance,鈥 says Professor Willinger. 鈥淲hy does a Muslim look at a Jew and see an enemy? Why do we see an Arab as a terrorist? People fix roles onto themselves and onto others making them opposites. When the students go into the park, a new, truer reality emerges from the mayhem and chaos. You love what you thought you hated.鈥
Born on New York鈥檚 Upper West Side, Professor Willinger has been involved in theater since he was 10-years-old, but he had always wanted to make a movie. The idea for the film originated one afternoon while he was looking out the picture window in the Theatre Office in Compton-Goethals Hall.
鈥淚 saw the students moving, their coming and going, and it was almost choreography,鈥 he said. The idea for the film was also influenced by an incident on campus in the 1990s in which a gay student was viciously attacked by another student because of his sexual orientation.
An alumnus of Lehman College and the CUNY Graduate Center, and a professor at City College for 30 years, Professor Willinger saw the rich diversity of City College as the ideal location for his film. 鈥淚 am here every day of my life in this place that has wonderful cinematic potential. Why would I go anywhere else?鈥 he said.
He also had the great benefit of participation from the energetic, enthusiastic and talented City College student body. Of a cast of 60, half were CCNY students.
Although he filmed at City College and the film depicts intolerance and explosive violence, Professor Willinger observed an irony: 鈥淔or an urban campus in one of the largest, most diverse cities in the world, City College has surprisingly little ethnic, racial, and political conflict on campus. It鈥檚 like a 鈥楪arden of Eden.鈥 A very pleasant place to be.鈥
While he is making his cinematic directing debut, Professor Willinger has prior film experience. He was the co-scenarist and casting director for 鈥淭ake the Bridge,鈥 by Sergio Castilla, which premiered at last year鈥檚 Tribeca Film Festival.
In addition, he has over 60 credits as a playwright and/or director and he is the recipient of Jerome Foundation Awards, NEH Grants, a Fulbright and many others awards.
His play 鈥淎ndrea鈥檚 Got Two Boyfriends鈥 premiered at LaMama ETC, and has been performed at theatres across the country, including the Los Angeles Actors Unit and the Julian Theatre in San Francisco. It won a Drama-Logue Award and was published by 鈥淒ramatists Play Service.鈥 Other successes include his theatrical adaptation of Carson McCullers鈥檚 鈥淭he Heart is a Lonely Hunter,鈥 which was reprised several times at Avalon Theatre and Theater for the New City.
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