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News and Events => Arts & Entertainment News => Topic started by: Shana A on March 23, 2012, 10:25:27 AM

Title: The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye - A film as unconventional as its subjects
Post by: Shana A on March 23, 2012, 10:25:27 AM
The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye
A film as unconventional as its subjects

By Wesley Morris
Globe Staff / March 23, 2012

http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2012/03/23/two_lovers_a_third_gender/ (http://www.boston.com/ae/movies/articles/2012/03/23/two_lovers_a_third_gender/)

There are the gender explorations of Eddie Izzard, Barry Humphries, Martin Lawrence, and Tyler Perry. Then there's Neil Megson, whose ideas of gender go far beyond garden-variety drag. He's in his 60s now, and in the early 1970s, Megson began practicing performance art under the nom d'avant garde Genesis P-Orridge. His art collective, COUM Transmissions, took off and he founded the proto-industrial band Throbbing Gristle, then another outfit called Psychic TV.

But I imagine he'd say his masterpiece was the project he started with his younger, late second wife, Jacqueline Breyer, who played in a revamped Psychic TV and took the name Lady Jaye P-Orridge. Together, they pursued corporeal sameness by surgically altering their very different appearances until they appeared to be radically less different. Their goal was the creation of a new, third gender - the pandrogyne, which, according to the narration Megson provides for Marie Losier's documentary, "The Ballad of Genesis and Lady Jaye,'' is a "cry for survival,'' a damnation of our tired old two-gender system. The body, Breyer has said, is a flesh suitcase.