
|
Parinya Charoenphol
aka Nong Toom |
Beautiful Boxer
Beautiful Boxer, a film based on famed transsexual
kickboxer Nong Toom, has been a huge success in
its native Thailand and is now set to be released
in the UK.
Beautiful Boxer tells a story so odd it has to be true.
Parinya Charoenphol (also Kiatbusaba)
was born a poor nomad who spent much of his early life in a monastery.
Realising he had a flair for kickboxing, he became a master at
Muay Thai, the most traditional and revered form
of the ancient martial art.
Feared by his opponents for his swooping kicks and devastating
elbow blows, he became one of Thailand's best-known boxers - and
its most controversial.
|
| Beautiful Boxer, the movie |
For
Charoenphol, or Nong Toom as he became known, was a transsexual
who wore make-up in the ring and dreamed of saving enough money
for a sex change operation.
"For me, Nong Toom is like a walking paradox," says Ekachai
Uekrongtham, the Thai-born director of Beautiful Boxer.
"He set out to master something that is totally masculine
in order to become totally feminine."
Nong Toom would eventually realise his dream, having gender reassignment
surgery in 1999 at the age of 17.
Forbidden to return to the ring - Thai women are not allowed to
kickbox professionally - she now lives as an actress and model in
Bangkok.
'Prejudiced'
"My initial reaction towards her was quite negative,"
says the director.
"Thais hold kickboxing in very high regard, and I felt she
had tarnished its image.
"It was not until I met her that I realised I had been very
prejudiced against her, without giving her a chance."
|
| Real-life kickboxer Asanee Suwan plays the lead role in the film |
Real-life kickboxer Asanee Suwan plays the lead
role in the film Nong Toom played a significant role in the scripting
process, though there was never any chance she would play herself
on screen.
Nor, says Uekrongtham, did she have a veto over how she would be
depicted. "I told her from the start the film would not put
her on a pedestal.
"This is fiction, a biopic. I wanted to capture the essence
of who she is, in a way that would contribute to the themes I was
interested in exploring."
One of the hardest aspects of production was finding an actor who
could convincingly portray the contrasting sides of Nong Toom's
persona.
Indeed, the director admits the problem almost proved unassailable.
"I decided very early on I wanted to cast a real kickboxer,"
he says.
"But kickboxers are not usually good actors - they are trained
not to express their feelings in the ring."
Fortunately, Uekrongtham found his ideal candidate in Asanee Suwan,
a real-life kickboxing champion who has fought in almost 200 matches
in Thailand and Denmark.
Suwan spent a year preparing for the role - taking acting, movement
and ballet classes and losing weight in order to look more "feminine".
|
| The film has won awards at film festivals around the world |
He was also required to adhere to a strict skin and body care regime
- including numerous body scrub and hair removal sessions.
"Asanee had not acted before, but I felt he was brave enough
to explore some emotional realms he may not have been comfortable
with," the director says.
For while Nong Toom's story is a compelling and unusual one, there
were wider issues Uekrongtham wanted to address.
"I wanted to do something to do with the ever-changing concepts
of what it means to be a man and what it means to be a woman.
"It was an amazing story to use as a springboard to talk about
those subjects."
|