Poster
Watch

Jeffrey

Jeffrey

  • Status: Released
  • 18-08-1995
  • Runtime: 92 min
  • Score: 6.3
  • Vote count: 66

Jeffrey, a gay man living in New York City with an overwhelming fear of contracting AIDS, concludes that being celibate is the only option to protect himself. As fate would have it, shortly after his declaration of a sex-free existence, he meets the handsome Steve Howard, his dream man -- except for his HIV-positive status. Facing this dilemma, Jeffrey turns to his best friend and an outrageous priest for guidance.

Steven Weber

Jeffrey

Patrick Stewart

Sterling

Michael T. Weiss

Steve Howard

Bryan Batt

Darius

Nathan Lane

Father Dan

Sigourney Weaver

Debra Moorhouse

Olympia Dukakis

Mrs. Marcangelo

Robert Klein

Skip Winkley

Christine Baranski

Ann Marwood Bartle

Kathy Najimy

Acolyte

Debra Monk

Mom

Peter Maloney

Dad

J. Smith-Cameron

Sharon

K. Todd Freeman

Barney's Waiter

Victor Garber

Tim

Ethan Phillips

Dave

Camryn Manheim

Single Woman

Alice Drummond

Grandma Rose

Peter Jacobson

Man #1

David Thornton

Man #3

Irma St. Paule

Mother Teresa

Jeff Ross

Movie Theater Guy

Joe Dain

Movie Theater Guy

Patrick Kerr

Waiter / Actor / Policeman

Peter Bartlett

Casting Director

John Seidman

Boss

Barton Heyman

Elderly Man

Darryl Theirse

Homeboy

Lou Sumrall

Thug #1

Robert Capelli Jr.

Thug #2

Vince Cupone

Thug #3

Nancy Ticotin

Woman in the Window

Gregory Jbara

Angelique

Marylouise Burke

Aunt Phyllis

Sarah Peterson

Nurse

Joe Ponazecki

Uncle Barney

Henry Stram

Cousin Gary

Kevin Nealon

TV Reporter

CinemaSerf

I kept expecting Sir Ian McKellen to pop up here to compliment the entertainingly camp contribution from his best pal Patrick Stewart in this otherwise rather unremarkable story. It’s all about “Jeffrey” (Steven Weber) who is one of those actors-cum-waiters who merrily enjoys the fruits of his New York existence until the arrival of AIDS turn him into a sexually neurotic monk. No more nookie for him, it’s all about his career - and, yep, that just frustrates the poor man. Things aren’t exactly helped by his flamboyant pal “Sterling” (Stewart) who has a much younger and HIV+ boyfriend “Darius” (Bryan Batt) who keeps telling him that he needs to get laid more. Then he bumps into “Steve” (Michael T. Weiss) and they take to each other. Snag? Well it turns out that “Steve” is also positive and so “Jeffrey” is now faced with quite a dilemma. On the plus side, this drama does showcase the extent to which many gay people donned a psychological, if not actually a physical, suit of armour when the AIDS epidemic struck. Terrified of the consequences of their previous license and/or determined never to take risks again - however that “risk” might be defined or apply, practically, to their life and lifestyle. On that front, Weber does OK and at times the whole thing comes across quite touchingly, but sadly there’s too much emphasis on the stereotypes and the writing takes refuge all too often in the realms of that kind of gay comedy that Armistead Maupin might have written on a bad day. It’s all a question of living life to the full or living in fear, but somehow any semblance of sensible and responsible compromise is not on the agenda here and so it all rather falls between a predictable set of tram lines. It has it’s moments, but in the end it’s just so-so.