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Just One Time With Guillermo Diaz. (Please?)

Interview by Steve Pride


Guillermo Diaz

Check It Out

  • Just One Time
  • Boys Life 3
  • Party Girl
  • Stonewall
  • Nowhere
  • I Think I Do
  • 200 Cigarettes


    Also on PopcornQ:

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  • Guillermo Diaz is the boy next door -- an unassuming guy you can imagine hanging out with on a lazy Saturday afternoon. But finding free time in his schedule might be a problem, given that this 29-year-old baby-faced Hispanic hunk is one of the busiest gay actors in the indie film world. Luckily for me, on this particular Saturday afternoon he found time to not only hang out, but sip cappuccino and talk about life.

    "I always wanted to be a veterinarian when I was growing up, but in high school I won a talent contest, and from that point on I was addicted to acting," says Diaz (as I fall headfirst into his dark brown eyes). He goes on to explain that small roles followed in plays and student films, and that in between gigs he worked in a restaurant.

    Diaz's big break came in 1994, when he was cast in Party Girl as Leo, the rookie club DJ whose carefully organized record collection is subjected to Parker Posey's Dewey decimal system makeover.

    "The next year," Diaz explains, "they asked me to do the TV sitcom version of the film. I said I would do it if Parker would, but she didn't want to, so ... I didn't. We were also going to reshoot scenes from the film, and that was too weird. But now, looking back, it was canceled after like two weeks, so I could have made a lot of money and no one would have ever seen it."

    In his next film role Diaz scored wide critical acclaim for his performance as La Miranda, the drag-queen narrator of Stonewall, a film about the real-life 1969 riot at the Stonewall bar in New York.

    "There was literally no preparation at all," confides Diaz. "I went in to read for the part with a five o'clock shadow, thinking I wasn't going to get the role. But I got called back the next day, and the day after that they called again and said I had the part. We only had two weeks, so we didn't rehearse at all. We had a read-through of the script a couple of days before. There were no film tests on how they were going to dress me, so I was really afraid I'd be ugly. I went on set the first day, they put me in make-up, slapped a wig on my head, and that was the first time anybody saw me as La Miranda. It happened so fast. Oh, and guess what? Before I started shooting I broke my hand, so I had to get a removable cast that I could take off during scenes. It was the most grueling shoot ever. Also I wasn't really out then, so doing press afterwards was awkward." He says with a grin, "The film was called Stonewall and I played a drag queen. Like, the question had to come up."

    Since Stonewall, Guillermo Diaz has appeared in 12 other films, including Gregg Araki's nihilistic Nowhere, Brian Sloan's gay romantic comedy I Think I Do, and the starladen 200 Cigarettes.

    One of his latest efforts, just now hitting the big screen is Lane Janger's Just One Time, a feature based on Janger's short film. Diaz costarred in both versions, and in a case of odd timing, the short film Just One Time is being released as a part of Boys Life 3, just as the feature-film version is reaching theaters. Both versions deal with a straight man obsessed with the idea of seeing his fiancee have sex another woman, a wish that produces an unexpected consequence. I was curious about how Diaz got involved with Just One Time, both the long and short of it.

    "Lane Janger wrote the short film with me in mind, so he called me about it and gave me the script. We literally shot it in just three days, about a month after he first showed me the script. After the short was done, he took it to Sundance and people were interested. So he got backing to do it as a feature, wrote the feature-length script, and we did it a few months after that. Slam bam."

    I confess to Diaz that when I met Lane Janger, the writer, director, and star of Just One Time, I had assumed he was as heterosexual as his character in the film.

    "You thought Lane was straight? Oh-my-gawd," exclaims Diaz. "He's so not, but I can see why people would assume that. He's great, though. He was the producer of I Think I Do, and I can't imagine being in his position on Just One Time. He wore so many hats that obviously he was kind of stressed during the shoot, but he still made it a lot of fun. Also, since he was an actor himself, he really knew how to work with the cast."

    At this point I notice a bit of cappuccino foam clinging to Diaz's upper lip, and it is so endearing that I vow to rip down my shrine to Rupert Everett and wallpaper my house with 8x10s of him the second I get home. So what sort of feedback does Guillermo get from his less obsessive fans?

    "Everybody is just really loving. I'm always shocked and surprised that so many people have seen some of the films that I've done. Because when they come out in the theaters they are not blockbusters, and you kind of think they come and go, but they really get an audience. When they come out on video especially. I think video is a great thing for independent films. Party Girl did horrible at the box office and got really bad reviews. But on video it's become almost a cult film. It's actually the film people recognize me from the most. But it's really great to be recognized. The fans are awesome."

    His next film, Shooting Vegetarians with Didi Conn, is just starting to make the festival rounds. According to Guillermo, "It's about this punk-rock vegetarian who kills his father, chops him up, and sells the meat in his butcher shop." Of course this reminds us both that it's getting late and almost time for dinner, so I ask if he has any parting words of wisdom. Diaz flashes a huge smile and says, "Love who you love."

    And so I shall.



     
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