Fireworks Logo

Latest Lesbian Additions...

  • Last ExMas
  • In the Summers
  • Chuck Chuck Baby
  • I Saw the TV Glow
  • Adam Lambert: Out, Loud and Proud
  • How to Blow Up a Pipeline
  • Willem & Frieda
  • 1946: The Mistranslation That Shifted Culture
  • 5 Devils (The)
  • American Horror Story
  • Tom Daley: Illegal to Be Me
  • Passion
  • Big Proud Party Agency (The)
  • Stand Out: An LGBTQ+ Celebration
  • Law of Love (The)
  • Gateways Grind
  • It Runs in the Family
  • First Kill
  • Along Came Wanda
  • They/Them
  • Last Thing Mary Saw (The)
  • Beauty
  • Anaïs in Love
  • Joe Lycett's Big Pride Party
  • Motherland: Fort Salem
  • Please Baby Please
  • Secret Love (A)
  • Anonymous Club
  • Wet Sand
  • Nico
  • Ultraviolette and the Blood-Spitters Gang
  • Camila Comes Out Tonight
  • Invisible: Gay Women in Southern Music
  • Death and Bowling
  • Benedetta
  • Scary of Sixty-First (The)
  • Wheel of Fortune and Fantasy
  • Alone with You
  • Saint Maud
  • And Just Like That...

Growing Up Gay

Country: Ireland, Language: English, 72 mins

  • Director: Aoife Kelleher
  • Producer: John Murray; Anna Rodgers

CGiii Comment

The type of documentary that has to be made every year or so...

...to help the youngsters, to show them that they are not an isolated case.

It was utter Hell before mass communication...


Trailer...

Growing Up Gay - last day of school scene from Anna Rodgers on Vimeo.

The(ir) Blurb...

A two-part documentary series exploring the experiences of lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender young people growing up in Ireland. As recently as 1993, homosexuality was illegal in Ireland. As the first generation born after decriminalisation comes of age, this series seeks to establish how much has changed in Irish society in the intervening years. For young people, whose lives revolve around school and the family, is it any easier to be lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender today than it was seventeen years ago? Filmed over eighteen months, 'Growing Up Gay' follows the lives of six young people and, in the process, captures the challenging and even hostile experiences which lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender young people face in their everyday lives. The series also explores the more universal experiences of growing up - from the ups and downs of life at home and at school, to friendships and falling in love.