Tag Archives: gay

Chapter 25: Queer in the South: My Story, Part 2 | My Southern Gothic Life

New post up on my other blog.

Here is an excerpt and a link to the full post:

Let me start the second part of sharing this journey by pointing out that the story has a happy ending. I like to think I ended up a fairly well-adjusted, happily partnered Gay man. But it’s not something that just happened on its own.

Let me also say, I think my journey would have been easier if I had not been stuck in Danville, Virginia during the early years of my coming out and coming to terms with who I really was.

There is a monologue by  Little Edie, in “Grey Gardens” that always makes me think of Danville.  She might have been talking about Long Island and other circumstances, but it always reminds me of Danville:

Honestly, they can get you…for wearing red shoes on a Thursday – and all that sort of thing…They can get you for almost anything – it’s a mean, nasty, Republican town.”

I was also working in banking there and believe me, bankers are the most self-important creatures ever to walk the earth. They had very firm ideas of how one was supposed to conduct themselves both at and out of the office. That was another role I couldn’t play…

But getting back to the Gay thing. I don’t think people realize how tough it apparently still is for gay kids and adults in places like Danville and Mississippi. People think all gay people live in San Francisco or New York or Greensboro or Richmond or Charlottesville. Not in small towns and cities that aren’t as progressive as some of the areas mentioned above.

via Chapter 25: Queer in the South: My Story, Part 2 | My Southern Gothic Life.

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Filed under Danville, Gay, History, My Journey, Politics, Religion, Social Commentary, The South

June 22nd- A Day of Big Entrances and Big Exits

I was just checking the internet because I knew of one important event that happened yesterday.

I actually found many interesting things happened on June 22nd.  It’s kind of a Red Letter Day in Gay History and the Arts…

On June 22nd:

  1. In 1527 Machiavelli died.
  2. In 1906, Billy Wilder was born.
  3. In 1909, producer Mike Todd, one of Elizabeth Taylor’s husbands, was born.  He later died in a famous plane crash.
  4. In 1921, Joseph Papp, founder of the Public Theatre, was born.
  5. In 1921, actor, dancer and Broadway director Gower Champion was also born on this day.
  6. In 1922, Designer Bill Blass was born.
  7. In 1933, Diane Feinstein, former mayor of San Francisco and current US Senator was born.  She was the one who announced Harvey Milk and Frank Mosconni’s assassinations.
  8. In 1936, Kris Kristofferson was born.
  9. In 1941, journalist Ed Bradley was born.
  10. In 1947, Don Henley was born.
  11. In 1948, Todd Rundgren was born.
  12. In 1949, Meryl Streep was born.
  13. In 1953, Cyndi Lauper was born.
  14. In 1961, Jimmy Summerville, of Bronski Beat and the Communards, was born.
  15. In 1964, author Dan Brown was born.
  16. In 1965, David O Selznick, the famous Hollywood producer of “Gone With the Wind” and many other classics died.
  17. In 1966, “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf” opened.
  18. In 1969, Judy Garland died at age 47.
  19. In 1972 “Man of LaMancha” opened on Broadway.
  20. In 1976, “Godspell” opened on Broadway.
  21. In 1977, Jai Rodriguez, actor and “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” regular, was born.
  22. In 1987, Fred Astaire died.
  23. In 2002, Ann Landers died.
  24. In 2008, George Carlin died.

A lot of big entrances and exits on this day.  Kind of makes you think…

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Happy Birthday, Judy Garland

I have to recognize this date and post on it or I might have my credentials revoked…

Judy Garland was born June 10, 1922.  She crammed a lot of living into her far too brief life.  She became not just a Star, but an Icon.

I’ll post  a few videos as a tribute to her today, on what would have been her 88th Birthday.

In the beginning…”Somewhere Over the Rainbow” from “The Wizard of Oz”

“The Trolley Song” from “Meet Me In St Louis”

“Get Happy” from “Summer Stock”

“The Man That Got Away” from “A Star is Born”.

This was probably the greatest performance ever given in a Movie Musical.  This should have won her her Oscar.

And toward the end…One of my favorites.  “I Could Go On Singing”

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Yesterday, Once More

I’ll take us back to the 1960’s one more time…

I just came across a few snapshots in time.  Some  “time capsule” moments on YouTube.

I keep looking back because I keep wondering where the energy for change has gone.

It’s hard to believe how much times have changed…for the better– since the early 1960’s.  But I never realized how depressing the 1960’s–which I always thought of a as a decade of hope and change– could be…It’s remarkable, given the restrictive society at the time, how much hope was alive then.

I wonder if it still is…

There were so many people afraid of change then– just like now.

Today, the Afghanistan war has just surpassed Vietnam as our longest war.  Bush’s personal vendetta/ war or choice in Iraq is still going on.  Ghetto’s still exist.  The Tea Baggers prove racism is still alive .  The old “Silent Majority”, which isn’t either, is still around.  Post-feminism wants to return women to the kitchen and subservience, while the Men of the Religious Right still try to take away their right to control their own bodies.  I’m almost relieved we haven’t come far enough on Gay Rights to start dismantling them…

I think we need to look back to see “the way we were” to see how far we have come.

Then, maybe, we can gain the courage and the energy to keep moving forward.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LH4-tOqLH94

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qOezOJevD6E

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The Long Goodbye

As many of you know, I have been a little preoccupied lately.  We have finally reached the point where my sister and I are needing to transition my mother to Assisted Living due to Alzheimer’s Disease/Vascular Dementia.  Being a lifelong Republican who worshipped Ronald Reagan, she’s probably almost satisfied that she has the same disease that ultimately did him in.

This is a very strange time for me.  I won’t pretend or be dishonest.  My mother is a difficult woman.  We have had our issues, but she is my mother and we will do the right thing to be sure she is as safe and comfortable as possible during these final years.

What I find most disturbing about seeing someone at the end of their life is looking at what they missed.  But I realize I can’t force my values or judgements on her or view her life too much through my own lenses. She is a product of a different era and had her own wishes and desires and probably was as happy as she could be given her expectations.

It’s the lowered expectations that disturb me.

When I watch “Mad Men” and see Don Draper and his family- at least in season one- I see our family, but in a much better neighborhood.  I was always struck by how limited the options were for women in the 1960’s– and that is when she was in her prime.

I am grateful for one thing.  I knew her four years longer than my sister.  I knew her when she was still young and vivacious.  Something happened in the late 1960’s and she became a different woman.  I think it was the fact that she was not equipped to deal with change.

My mother was born in 1932 and lived in Danville, Virginia her entire life.  She was raised to be get a “Mrs Degree” and she did.  She had no education after high school and devoted her 20’s and 30’s to building my father’s career.  When he died in the early 1980’s, she was lost.  She tried religion, she tried following politics, but she never really found herself after she was no longer Mrs. H. B. Michaels.  She had never really built her own identity or developed her own interests, so she had nothing to fall back on.

I also saw her and her friends from the 1960’s when I read “The Help.”   I saw so many women, when I was little, who had no purpose and nothing to do, so they became obsessed with trivialities.   I saw a little of Hilly and a lot of Elizabeth as representing my mother.  If you looked in the medicine chest of every woman in Temple Terrace in the 1960’s you found two new wonder drugs:  Birth Control pills and Valium.  They were on the cusp of freedom and change, but didn’t know how to deal with it.  Many of these women didn’t even get dressed until it was time for their husbands to come home for dinner.  If the husbands didn’t spend too much time at Earl’s Bar and Grill and forget dinner…

My mother could be wonderful at times.  She had my father build a stage in our backyard and organized plays with the neighborhood children.  I think that’s where my love of theatre my have begun.  She loved MGM Musicals and, as a child, I watched them with her.  That was also probably the first thing that screwed up my early perception of life.  It ain’t no MGM Musical, but I’m not sure she ever had that realization.  She wanted things to be simple, clean and beautiful.  She couldn’t deal when it wasn’t.

She did go back to work after my sister was born.  Before I was born, she had been a receptionist at Dan River Mills.  When she went back to work in her early 30’s, someone younger and prettier had that job.  So she went to work at Hilton Hall with hundreds of other women who were smarter than their male bosses.

She was president of every Club she over joined.  If she had had the education, direction and self confidence that would come with the Woman’s Movement, she would have had a different life.  But she didn’t.  She never could cook or run a house, but she knew she was supposed to do so.  I don’t think she ever recovered from not being able to fill the role she thought she was supposed to fill and didn’t realize she should have tried something else.  She went to college, briefly, in her ’50’s, but she didn’t have the self confidence to keep it up.

She became a master at denial.  I don’t know exactly what went wrong around 1969, but I have my suspicions.  The world was changing and she was frightened.  She did not know what to do, so she ignored it and demonized any change.  My father remodeled our house instead of buying her a new house.  She never recovered from that.  She started gaining weight.  She and my father began to behave more like George and Martha in “Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf”, than Ozzie and Harriett.  Anyone within earshot knows this…

But she kept up appearances and dove deeper into denial.  When my father became ill with cancer, I think it was almost a relief to her.  She got to take care of him, deal with doctors and insurance companies and had a purpose for the first time in years.  Like I said, when he died, she was lost.  She didn’t have a self to fall back on.  She was used to being someone’s wife or someone’s mother and had never found herself.  She was not one for a Jill Clayburgh “Unmarried Woman” reinvention.  She didn’t have the skill set.

I think I may, unknowingly, have been saying goodbye since 1969.

Frankly, she never dealt well with me once I told her I was gay.  Her first reaction was that people would talk and what would her friends say.  Then she worried it would ruin my career.  Then she told me I was going to hell, so I did the same to her.  I would not speak to her for more than 6 months.  Then she tried to work it out.  I give her credit for that.  But we were never close again.

I had moved on, but she couldn’t.  I loved the way the world had changed and embraced it.  She was always stuck in Danville, Virginia as it had been in about 1960.  I think that was the last time she was comfortable with the world.

So, it may be a blessing that she is moving to the place where she lives in the past.  She was never comfortable in the present and she feared the future.

And we’ll try to continue to say goodbye with as much grace as we can muster.

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“The Temperamentals”: My Personal Thoughts on the Play and the Gay Journey

I saw the play “The Temperamentals” off Broadway in New York last Thursday night. I’ve needed a little time to digest it before posting and commenting.

The title of the play is drawn from a time when one could not even say “gay” or “homosexual” in public.  There had to be code words and phrases such as:  “Is he temperamental?” ” Is she a friend of Dorothy?” or “Is he musical?” to  ponder someone’s sexuality in public.

As a piece of theatre, it is a great play. It educates while entertaining. I don’t know what more you can ask. The entire cast is brilliant. It is the kind of theatre I most enjoy: It has a story, the characters develop and change, it has a heart and it has a message.

The show deals with the founding of the Mattachine Society in California in the early 1950’s. This was one of the first Gay Rights groups ever founded and the first Gay organization to stand up to the blatant persecution of Gays by the police and the Establishment.

For context, in my mind there are four key periods in Gay History:

  1. The Mattachine Society’s founding and open challenge to the establishment with the Jennings Trial in the early 1950’s.  This was the first time Gay people publicly admitted they were gay and fought back in the Courts.
  2. The Stonewall Riots of 1969 when Gays- and Drag Queens- fought back against Police harassment at the Stonewall Bar in Greenwich Village.
  3. The AIDS epidemic and founding of ACT UP in the 1980’s.  This tragically blew open the closet door, not by choice, but also forced us to fight to be treated, legally and medically, like everyone else.  We would never be invisible again.
  4. The success of “Will and Grace” that mainstreamed Gay Men as the sexless pet’s of straight women, but made them socially visible for the first time to mass culture.  Unfortunately, this also led to “Queer Eye for the Straight Guy” and the infliction of Carson Kressley on America.

“The Temperamentals”, as a play, is important on many levels.  First of all, it delivers a history lesson with compelling characters.  One of my chief concerns for both Gay people and African-Americans is that we/they are forgetting our history and how far we have had to climb.  Fifty years ago, Black people in the South could be murdered for “sassing” a white person and Gay people could be arrested for just touching the shoulder of another person of the same gender.  This is so foreign to the younger generations.  They forget and can’t seem to comprehend this.

Secondly, “The Temperamentals” is just plain good theatre:  A well written and performed play.  Unfortunately, that is becoming increasingly rare also.

People now forget how scary it once was to realize you were Gay and what that meant to your life.  The choices the characters in “The Temperamentals” make vividly illustrate this challenge.  People forget most Gay people once had to make the choice to either marry and “pass” for straight and/or live their lives in the shadows.  They had to give up any chance at a career and financial success if they wanted to be true to themselves and, thus, didn’t fit the societal norms of the era.  For some, this is still the case– look at Alabama, Mississippi and even in some small towns in North Carolina and Virginia.

This theme in the play resonated with me.  I am old enough to remember when one had to make this choice.  This is a choice I had to make.  Thankfully, I live in an era and in a city and work for a Company that made the choice so easy.  I live in a very accepting bubble.  One of the main reasons I consider Danville, VA, my home town, a horrible little town is that it was made very clear to me that I could not be out and successful there.  There was and is not a place for me there.  And I’m very okay with that.  But, people still have to make this choice and not everyone has the options I had.  We forget this…and thank God I had the ability to choose to leave and build a life in a freer climate that my predecessors made possible.

I live the happy, fulfilling life I do because I stand on the shoulders of the brave Gay men and women who preceded me.  Thanks to “The Temperamentals” and the  Mattachine Society fighting back for the first time in the 1950’s and to the other milestones noted above, it is now relatively easy for me to be a happy, out Gay man in Greensboro, NC.

We, as Gay people, still don’t have an easy ride.  Legally, we can still be fired just for being Gay.  We can be denied housing just for being Gay.  We can’t serve openly in the Military if we admit we are Gay.  Our relationships are not legally recognized.  We don’t have legal hospital visitation or inheritance rights–without lots of expensive legal documentation.  We are demonized and used politically by the Religious Right just for asking for equal– not special– rights.

But we have come so far from the days of the “The Temperamentals.”  We have to be thankful for this…

We just have to help our friends remember where we came from…And that we still have a long way yet to go…

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