Scout's Honor | |
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Directed by | Tom Shepard |
Written by | Meg Moritz |
Produced by | Tom Shepard |
Starring |
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Cinematography |
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Edited by | Jim Klein |
Music by | Miriam Cutler |
Production company | Independent Television Service |
Release date |
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Running time | 57 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Scout's Honor is a 2001 American documentary film directed by Tom Shepard and written by Meg Moritz. Appearing as themselves in the documentary are Steven Cozza, James Dale, Tim Curran, Dave Rice and Scott and Jeanette Cozza. The film examines the Boy Scouts of Americas (BSA) policy against gays in the organization. It focuses on Steve Cozza and Dave Rice who join together to fight against the policy, and also relates the stories of two gay men who were expelled from the organization, and fought back in the courts. The film premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on January 25, 2001, where it won an Audience Award for Best Documentary, and director Tom Shepard won a Freedom of Expression Award. The documentary had additional screenings at several other film festivals where it received multiple awards, and it also received a GLAAD Media Award for Outstanding Documentary. The film aired nationally on the PBS series POV on June 19, 2001.
The film documents the crusade of 12-year-old Steven Cozza and 70-year-old Dave Rice, neither of whom are gay, in their fight against the Boy Scouts of America's discriminatory policy against gays being allowed in the organization. The film also includes two legal challenges to the scout's anti-gay policy by Tim Curran and James Dale, who were both expelled for being gay. During the course of the documentary, it's revealed that Scott Cozza, Steven's dad, is expelled from his position as scoutmaster for speaking out against the scout's anti-gay stance, along with Rice being ousted as well for speaking his mind. Steven eventually quits the scouts and along with Rice, they start their own organization called Scouting for All. At the end of the film, Cozza is 17-years-old and has been invited to be a guest speaker at the Millennium March on Washington.
I have learned there are a lot of ignorant people out there, slowing down the process of change for the betterment of human rights.
In various interviews throughout the years with Cozza, who eventually became a professional road bicycle racer as an adult, said that Robert Espindola, who is gay, was a role model of his growing up, and his commitment for change in the BSA was inspired by Espindola and his dad, a social worker and former AIDS counselor. [1] [2] When he was young, it was his father who acquainted him with various gay issues, and took him to the San Francisco Pride Parade when he was just 3 years old. He disclosed that he had friends who were gay, and weren't allowed in the BSA, but he was allowed, and said "this just isn't fair...so I just decided to take a stand". [1] [2] After achieving the rank of Eagle Scout, he dropped out of the BSA, because his dad had been removed from his position as an assistant scoutmaster for speaking out about the anti-gay policy of the scouts. Cozza said he "didn't feel too welcome after that". [1] [2]
So together with his father and Dave Rice, another scoutmaster who had been ousted from the organization for speaking out in support of Cozza, decided to form their own group and called it Scouting for All (SFA), who accepted members regardless of their sexual orientation. [1] [2] Cozza said that after accepting Shepard's offer to be in the film, and while the documentary was being made, he was still in junior high school, and a lot of his peers would harass him about his fight for the inclusion of gays in the scouts, but when he started getting attention in the media, they changed their attitude and started to respect him. [1] [2] He also revealed that he received death threats during the making of the film, but they only encouraged him to fight that much harder. [1] [2] Cozza also noted his accomplishment of creating the first gay-straight alliance at his school. [1] With all that transpired in regards to his battle against the scouts, he still had kind words for BSA, saying; "scouting taught me to make the world a better place and to treat others as I wanted to be treated". [1] [2] In May 2001, Cozza was featured on the front cover of The Advocate , and gave an interview with the LGBT magazine. [3]
Tom Shepard said he took on the project in 1998 after reading an article in the San Francisco Chronicle about a newly formed organization called SFA, whose primary goal was challenging the anti-gay ban in the BSA. It was in that same article that he read about one of the co-founders of SFA, 12-year-old Cozza from Petaluma, California. Shepard said he went to visit the family to get a better understanding of their motives for getting involved in overturning the ban, especially in light of the fact nobody in the Cozza family was gay. [1] He discovered that Cozza had started this whole thing with a letter to the editor in his local newspaper, and it just naturally continued from there. He found that the Cozza family and SFA were interested in his idea of expanding their press coverage beyond the local media, by producing a documentary that would be nationally broadcast on PBS. Shepard said he spent a lot of time with Cozza before filming even started, and went to all his sporting activities and just hung out with him. [1]
After an agreement was reached with Cozza and his family to appear in the documentary, there was an understanding that the project was going to encompass more than just the one issue of the discriminatory policies of the BSA. The film would also document Cozza growing up on camera and maturing into a young adult. Shepard said that is evidenced by seeing Cozza at 12-years-old in the beginning of the project, and at the end of the film, you see him at 17-years-old at the Millennium March on Washington, where he is an invited guest speaker. [1] [4] He also interviewed Dave Rice, who at 70-years-old supported Cozza and his cause, and helped him establish SFA. Additionally, Shepard featured the legal stories of Tim Curran from Berkeley, California, who was kicked out of the scouts for being gay, and became the first ex-scout to challenge the BSA's ban on gays in 1981, and James Dale, another scout ousted for being gay, who was initially successful in his legal challenge against the BSA, winning a decision in the New Jersey Supreme Court in 1999, but that victory was short-lived when it was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court. [1] [2]
David Zurawik of The Baltimore Sun said the "most impressive accomplishment" of the film is the complete impartiality in the way Shepard portrays the Boy Scouts as an institution. Zurawik went on to note that even though Shepard reveals the inconsistency and sanctimoniousness between what the scouts claim are their stated values and its anti-gay policy, the film "still celebrates the idea of scouting and the incredible role it plays in [boy's and young men's lives] in the United States". [5] Film Threat praised Shepard for his portrayal of "Steven Cozza as just a normal kid who had the good fortune to be raised by a couple of great parents...it's unfathomable that a young man could take on such a sensitive cause, in a truly insensitive age bracket…and be accepted for it". [6] Donald Liebenson of the Chicago Tribune remarked that the film is not an all out tirade against the Boy Scouts, but instead, it explores "the irony that the values Cozza took from scouting are what inspired him to take his stand". [7]
The Bay Area Reporter wrote that it was a "truly moving documentary", and that Shepard "brings a nice balance to the subject, choosing to focus on the personal impact of the anti-gay policy on the lives who are fighting it". [8] Joe Leydon of Variety said Cozza is impressive as an "unaffectedly decent individual who simply wants to do the right thing" and Rice is sympathetic as well. Leydon mentions that an opposing point of view would have been beneficial, but also notes that the BSA refused to be interviewed for the film. [9] Film critic Julie Salamon wrote in The New York Times that Shepard "abruptly moves from story to story and back again", and while it might be filmed that way deliberately for authenticity, "it also makes the narrative seem disjointed". She said the films high points were the interviews with Rice and Cozza. [10]
Festival / Organization | Award | Result | Ref. |
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The Austin Gay and Lesbian International Film Festival | Best Documentary | Won | [11] |
GLAAD Media Award | Outstanding Documentary | Won | [12] |
Miami Gay and Lesbian Film Festival | Best Documentary | Won | [13] |
National Council on Family Relations | Best Documentary | Won | [14] |
New York Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender Film Festival | Best Documentary (Grand Jury Prize) | Won | [15] |
San Francisco International Lesbian and Gay Film Festival | Best Documentary | Won | [13] |
Sidewalk Film Festival | Best Feature | Won | [16] |
Sundance Film Festival | Best Documentary (Audience Award) | Won | [17] |
Sundance Film Festival | Freedom of Expression Award (Tom Shepard) | Won | [18] |
Sundance Film Festival | Best Documentary (Grand Jury Prize) | Nominated | [19] |
Turin International Film Festival | Best Documentary | Won | [13] |
USA Film Festival | Non-Fiction | Won | [13] |
USA Film Festival | Grand Prize | Won | [20] |
The Boy Scouts of America is one of the largest scouting organizations and one of the largest youth organizations in the United States, with over 1 million youth, including 176,000 female participants. The BSA was founded in 1910; about 130 million Americans have participated in its programs, which are served by 477,000 adult volunteers. BSA became a founding member organization of the World Organization of the Scout Movement in 1922.
Boy Scouts of America et al. v. Dale, 530 U.S. 640 (2000), was a landmark decision of the US Supreme Court, decided on June 28, 2000, that held that the constitutional right to freedom of association allowed the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) to exclude a homosexual person from membership in spite of a state law requiring equal treatment of homosexuals in public accommodations. More generally, the court ruled that a private organization such as the BSA may exclude a person from membership when "the presence of that person affects in a significant way the group's ability to advocate public or private viewpoints". In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court ruled that opposition to homosexuality is part of BSA's "expressive message" and that allowing homosexuals as adult leaders would interfere with that message.
Scouting for All was a 501(c)(3) non-profit organization American advocacy organization whose stated purpose was to promote tolerance and diversity within the Boy Scouts of America in the face of its policies requiring members to be heterosexuals who believe in God.
The Boy Scouts of America (BSA), one of the largest private youth organizations in the United States, has policies which prohibit those who are not willing to subscribe to the BSA's Declaration of Religious Principle, which has been interpreted by some as banning atheists, and, until January 2014, prohibited all "known or avowed homosexuals", from membership in its Scouting program. The ban on adults who are "open or avowed homosexuals" from leadership positions was lifted in July 2015.
"Cripple Fight" is the second episode of the fifth season of the animated television series South Park, and the 67th episode of the series overall. Going by production order, it is the 3rd episode instead of the 2nd. It originally aired in the United States on June 27, 2001. In the episode, the boys join a Mountain Scouts troop originally led by Big Gay Al, who is fired due to his homosexuality while Timmy faces competition from another disabled child. The episode is based on the controversy over scoutmaster James Dale and the Supreme Court case Boy Scouts of America v. Dale. It also introduces the character Jimmy Valmer, who would eventually become a series regular.
William Hillcourt, known within the Scouting movement as "Green Bar Bill", was an influential leader in the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) organization from 1927 to 1992. Hillcourt was a prolific writer and teacher in the areas of woodcraft, troop and patrol structure, and training; his written works include three editions of the BSA's official Boy Scout Handbook, with over 12.6 million copies printed, other Scouting-related books and numerous magazine articles. Hillcourt developed and promoted the American adaptation of the Wood Badge adult Scout leader training program.
Curran v. Mount Diablo Council of the Boy Scouts of America, 17 Cal.4th 670, 952 P.2d 218, 72 Cal.Rptr.2d 410 (1998), was a landmark case which upheld the right of a private organization in California to not allow new members on the basis of their sexual orientation. Its companion case was Randall v. Orange County Council, 17 Cal.4th 736, 952 P.2d 261, 72 Cal.Rptr.2d 453 (1998).
Scouts BSA is the flagship program and membership level of the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) for coeducational young people between the ages of typically 11 and 17. It provides youth training in character, citizenship, personal fitness, and leadership, and aims to develop the skills necessary to become successful adults.
Since Scouting began in 1907, it has entered into many elements of popular culture, including movies, TV and books.
The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) was inspired by and modeled on The Boy Scouts Association, established by Robert Baden-Powell in Britain in 1908. In the early 1900s, several youth organizations were active, and many became part of the BSA.
There are various controversies and conflicts that involve the Scouting movement. Scouting has sometimes become entangled in social controversies such as in nationalist resistance movements in India. Scouting was introduced to Africa by British officials as an instrument of colonial authority but became a subversive challenge to the legitimacy of British imperialism as Scouting fostered solidarity amongst African Scouts. There are also controversies and challenges within the Scout Movement itself such as current efforts to turn Scouts Canada into a democratic organization.
Ben H. Love was the eighth Chief Scout Executive of the Boy Scouts of America serving from 1985 to 1993. Love graduated from Peabody High School and Lambuth College. He served in the U.S. Army during the Korean War and attained the rank of sergeant. Love died on July 31, 2010, at his home in Cedar Park, Texas due to lung cancer.
Cradle of Liberty Council, Inc., Boy Scouts of America, v. City of Philadelphia also known as Cradle of Liberty Council v. City of Philadelphia, [2:08-cv-02429RB] is a U.S. Court case involving the Cradle of Liberty Council versus the City of Philadelphia. The case was filed on May 23, 2008, in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. Judge Ronald L. Buckwalter presided over the case. The Boy Scouts were represented by Drinker Biddle & Reath. The case ended with the court ruling in favor of the Boy Scouts of America. The Cradle of Liberty Council Council is also entitled to collect $877,000 of legal costs from the city's unlawful action.
Steven Cozza is a professional road bicycle racer, who last rode for Team NetApp.
Scouts for Equality (SFE) is an American advocacy organization that advocates for equal treatment within the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) for all scouts and scout leaders, regardless of sexual orientation. On July 17, 2012, the BSA reaffirmed a policy, first established in 1991, which prohibited "known or avowed" gay scouts and scout leaders from participating in the organization.
The Boy Scouts of America (BSA) is one of the largest youth organizations in the United States, with 2.3 million youth members and approximately 889,000 adult volunteers in 2017. In 1979 there were over 5 million youths in BSA.
James Dale is an American gay rights activist. He is best known for his role in Boy Scouts of America v. Dale, the landmark US Supreme Court case that challenged the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) policy of excluding gay scouts from being scout leaders.
Trail Life USA is a faith-based Scout-like organization providing youth mentorship and character development to boys in the United States. The organization was founded in 2013 in reaction against the Boy Scouts of America (BSA) changing its membership policy to allow homosexual youth in boy scout packs. As of early 2024, Trail Life has grown to over 60,000 members. All charters of Trail Life USA must pledge to follow its "Statement of Faith"; the organization is Trinitarian Christian. Youths of all or no religious beliefs are allowed to join, but individual Charter Organizations may limit Troop membership to boys of a certain faith or membership in a certain organization.
Leonard Lanzi is a former executive with the Los Padres Council of the Boy Scouts of America known for his high-profile dismissal from the organization because he came out as a gay man. He is the subject of the short documentary film Scout's Oath. Lanzi has been a candidate for public office and a successful venture capitalist. Lanzi is an active Rotarian and is active in the LGBT community.
In the Boy Scouts of America, a Scout leader refers to the trained leaders of a Scout unit. Adult leaders are generally referred to as "Scouters," and the youth leaders are referred to by their position within a unit. In all Scouting units above the Cub Scout pack and units serving adolescent Scouts, leadership of the unit comprises both adult leaders (Scouters) and youth leaders (Scouts). This is a key part of the Aims and Methods of Scouting. In order to learn leadership, the youth must actually serve in leadership roles.
aGLIFF Winners: Scout's Honor, Tom Shepard, Best Documentary
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