
Screen Test [ST345]: Virginia Tusi (1965)
Not Rated
![Screen Test [ST345]: Virginia Tusi poster](https://media.themoviedb.org/t/p/w342//jIeXAT4BrlPTWOousqbeCuKgZcL.jpg)
Overview
A young woman identified only as Virginia Tusi, is posed against a light plywood backdrop and wearing dangling, flower-shaped earrings. She looks back at the camera from beneath her long, shiny hair. She speaks to the camera, saying something that looks like ‘beautiful’.
Starring Cast
Bias Dimensions
Overview
A young woman identified only as Virginia Tusi, is posed against a light plywood backdrop and wearing dangling, flower-shaped earrings. She looks back at the camera from beneath her long, shiny hair. She speaks to the camera, saying something that looks like ‘beautiful’.
Starring Cast
Detailed Bias Analysis
Primary
The film is an experimental, silent portrait that lacks narrative, explicit political messaging, or thematic advocacy for any specific ideology, focusing instead on observational presence.
This Andy Warhol 'Screen Test' is a non-narrative, silent portrait of a single individual. Due to its experimental nature, the film does not feature traditional casting or a narrative that could incorporate DEI themes or critique traditional identities. The focus is solely on the subject's presence.
Secondary
Andy Warhol's 'Screen Test [ST55]: Alicia Purchon Clark' is a silent, non-narrative film portrait. It lacks any discernible plot, character arcs, or thematic elements that would allow for an evaluation of LGBTQ+ portrayal. Consequently, there is no depiction of LGBTQ+ characters or themes within the film's scope.
No information regarding the film's plot or characters was provided, therefore an evaluation of its portrayal of transsexual characters and themes cannot be conducted. Based on the lack of input, no identifiable transgender elements are present for assessment.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The film is a direct portrait of Alicia Purchon Clark, a real individual, not an adaptation of a character with a pre-established gender from source material or history. Therefore, no gender swap occurs.
Andy Warhol's "Screen Test" films are original, experimental works featuring individuals directly, not adaptations of pre-existing characters or narratives. There is no prior canonical or historical depiction of a character named Alicia Purchon Clark whose race could have been altered.
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