Next Stop Greenwich Village (1976) Queer Film A-

Four people looking in different directions, indoors.
“Next Stop, Greenwich Village” (1976) is writer-director Paul Mazursky’s semi‑autobiographical comedy-drama about a young Jewish actor who leaves his Brooklyn home in 1953 to chase his dreams in the bohemian world of Greenwich Village. The film beautifully captures both the allure and the disillusionment of artistic life in postwar New York.
At its center is Larry Lapinsky (Lenny Baker), a 22‑year‑old aspiring actor determined to break free from the suffocating embrace of his overbearing mother, Faye (Shelley Winters). Moving into the Village, Larry immerses himself in a vibrant circle of friends: his sensible girlfriend Sarah (Ellen Greene), the troubled Anita (Lois Smith), the neurotic Connie (Dori Brenner), the witty Bernstein (Antonio Fargas), and the charismatic playwright Robert (Christopher Walken). Through their intertwined lives, Mazursky explores themes of love, ambition, identity, and the sobering realities of adulthood.
Together with Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice(1969), this stands as Mazursky’s finest work. An urgency and edge are missing from later films, such as An Unmarried Woman. Lenny Baker delivers a marvelous, lived‑in performance, radiating zest for life. Tragically, Baker’s career was cut short; he died of thyroid cancer at just 37 in 1982, never appearing in another film.
Shelley Winters is at her very best as Faye, offering a quintessential portrayal of a Jewish mother—domineering, guilt-laden, yet deeply human. Ellen Greene, remembered for her dazzling turn in Little Shop of Horrors (1986), is equally impressive as Sarah, grounding the film with warmth and intelligence. Watching her here, one wonders why Greene’s film career wasn’t more expansive.
And then there is Antonio Fargas’ Bernstein. 1976 was truly his year: in Car Wash, he played Lindy, a flamboyant, defiant, and camp character; in Next Stop, Greenwich Village, he embodied Bernstein, an introspective and witty figure who seamlessly integrated into the bohemian ensemble. While Lindy confronted homophobia head‑on, Bernstein represented the “gay best friend” trope with nuance, never reduced to comic relief. Fargas’s subtle performance broadened the range of queer representation on screen at a time when such roles were rare, underscoring his versatility and cultural significance.

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