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Editor's Eye Makes 'Queer Eye' a Success >
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Last April, New York City television editor Brad
Holmes took a job that was supposed to last four months while
he waited to start the master's program in environmental policy
at Columbia's School of International Public Affairs in the fall.
He was thrilled about starting school and possibly making environmental
documentaries.
But the temporary job exploded into the national
phenomenon 'Queer Eye for the Straight Guy' which premiered last
July. When Holmes had to write a letter to Columbia asking for
a deferment, he wondered how he would explain he was working on
this show. The administrator for Columbia called and said, 'Of
course you can defer. I love the show.'
Holmes, a Palisades native, is now senior editor
for the Bravo series, and still hasn't decided whether he'll enter
Columbia in the fall. 'I'm still enjoying working on the show,'
he says.
The program features the Fab Five'gay experts
in fashion, grooming, interior design, food and wine and culture'who
help make over a straight guy who needs help in these areas. The
combination of entertainment, humor and useful information has
made the show more successful than anyone anticipated. 'I saw
the pilot and thought it was hilarious, but had no idea how successful
it would be,' Holmes said in an interview by phone from his editing
studio in Soho.
Each episode (airing Tuesdays 10 p.m. on Bravo)
is built around the personality of the straight guy, and the gay
experts incorporate his interests and personality into the makeover.
The hour-long show culminates with an event'such as a party or
romantic dinner'where the straight guy reveals his new look and
tries to incorporate all the information he's learned.
Holmes begins with about 25 to 30 hours of multi-camera
footage for each episode, which is cut down to an hour in length,
a process that takes about five weeks. The five experts are not
actors. 'The idea is to keep the show as organic as possible,'
Holmes said. 'The show feels relaxed, it doesn't feel rehearsed.
It's a big whirlwind when the five superheroes descend on the
straight guy. It's amazing the response. He gets a lot out of
it. A few tears have been known to happen.'
The show has no script, so Holmes' role as film
editor becomes very important. 'You get to create [your own] beginning,
middle and end.'
The process begins with casting the straight
guy, who should be fun and outgoing and have a good story to tell.
Holmes divides the show into five acts. In the first 10 minutes,
the Fab Five burst into the straight guy's apartment, tear it
apart and deconstruct the guy and his lifestyle. In the show's
signature style, each expert is caught in a freeze frame, then
reintroduced with a graphic stating his name and expertise. Finding
the right moment to freeze each expert is a challenge, but it
usually pays off with a punchline'humor is a big part of the Fab
Five's style.
In the second act, the Fab Five take the guy
shopping in the New York City area, where the show is filmed,
and meanwhile redo his house or apartment. Although the actual
filming takes place over four days, it's made to look as if it
all happens in one day.
In the third act, the man sees his new house
and gets lessons. Chef Ted explains how to cook a simple dish,
with the idea that viewers at home can learn from it, too. 'You
can watch it once, go into the kitchen and make it,' Holmes said.
Fashion expert Carson has the man model his new outfits and explains
why they fit him well and were chosen. Grooming expert Kyan shows
him how to use a new skin or hair product.
'By this point, the straight guy is bombarded
with information and completely overwhelmed,' says Holmes, 31,
who admits he has learned quite a bit about style, interior design
and food from watching all the footage.
The Fab Five then leave, and the man is 'left
on his own to fend for himself.' In the fourth act, the man cooks,
gets dressed and prepares for the evening's event. Meanwhile the
Fab Five watch along on video and comment on the inevitable mistakes
and mishaps. In the final act, the big event happens. 'It's very
hands off; what's going to happen, happens,' Holmes says.
Some men are able to apply all the information
better than others. In one of Holmes's favorite episodes, Alan
Cory was introducing his girlfriend's parents to his parents.
'He poured the drinks way too strong, and he used a sweaty rag
to clean a plate. It was hilarious, very organic mishaps that
were really fun.'
Casting was difficult in the first season, Holmes
recalls. 'There was a lot of hesitation for straight guys. Once
the show took off, it wasn't hard.'
Holmes calls the success of the show a 'surreal
experience. The timing of the show and the popularity of the show
really coincide with gay issues in the country. Gay marriage and
gay rights are becoming more mainstream. I've had grandmothers
stop me and tell me they love the show.'
Holmes attended St. Matthew's and Loyola High
School before getting his college degree from the University of
Colorado at Boulder. After college, he moved back to L.A. and
started as a low-level runner for a movie trailer house. He stayed
after work and taught himself how to use the editing machines,
which led to his next job as assistant editor at a documentary
company. He later became an editor working on hour-long shows
for the History Channel, Discovery and A&E.
He moved to New York's West Village in 2000 and
began working on MTV and VH1 music videos, programming and 'Real
World' specials. 'I learned how to do unscripted shows, which
is a very different kind of editing.'
Currently, his editing job requires 12- to 13-hour
days working along with three other editors. As for the stars
of the show, he says 'they're all genuine, caring people and funny.
That's really who they are. There's just a presence about the
five of them that's addictive.'
Holmes has even got his older brother Kevin,
a composer, involved in the show, creating music for many of the
episodes. Kevin, who lives in Silver Lake, talks to Brad on the
phone and the two will discuss the particular episode and Kevin
will come up with music themes to fit.
'We get a dossier for each straight guy'his interests,
his house, what his issues are, so to speak. We look at what his
tastes are, try to figure out what the vibe of the show would
be and make tracks for each guy,' says Kevin, 38.
As for Brad, he says 'I'm drawn towards the reality
format, non-fiction, but I am also very curious about doing features
and scripted dramas.' He's also interested in moving into directing
and has already completed an hour-long documentary on past-life
therapy. Next month he will be directing an episode of 'Queer
Eye,' which he will also be editing, with the goal of eventually
move into directing permanently.
No matter what he decides to do about studying
environmental policy in graduate school, Holmes would like to
someday find a way to combine his interests in the environment
and filmmaking.
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