1994 was a huge year for cinema. Pulp Fiction, Forrest Gump, Speed, The Lion King… And also a small, off-beat Australian road-trip comedy, The Adventures of Priscilla, Queen of the Desert.
Camp as a row of tents, it centred on two gay men, one transsexual woman, and a big, shiny, silver 1976 Hino RC320 bus on a journey across the unimaginable vastness of the Australian outback, numerous quirky stops along the way.
For me, it seeded an obsession with a place called Coober Pedy. It was there, somewhere north of Adelaide, that Terence Stamp – driest of the filmʼs three drag queens – uttered the filmʼs crudest word bombs as his character, Bernadette, arm-wrestled a butch bigot named Shirley and then drank her under the table, too.
The townʼs mystique…
