While Ray’s coffee truck is brand spanking new, the sketch of Alex Karpovsky’s face (featured prominently on the side of the truck) has been around since Season 1.
According to production designer Matt Munn, the sketch was created when they first designed Ray’s coffee shop. “We had Alex do a series of ho-hum poses, and then we turned those into a little sketch.” As an on-set joke, the crew made the drawing into a stamp and has been putting it on coffee bags and other props every season. It’s just never made its way into show footage—until now.
The coffee truck finally gave Munn the perfect platform to share the sketch with the world: “I just love the idea that when the coffee truck flips over, what you see from behind is Ray’s ho-hum face"—Eleanor Laurence
MÄDCHEN IN UNIFORM (Leontine Sagan, 1931)
UN CHANT D’AMOUR (Jean Genet, 1950)
FIREWORKS (Kenneth Anger, 1947)
THE BLOOD OF A POET (Jean Cocteau, 1932)Opening night of Queer Cinema Before Stonewall.
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