A. Nora Long, producing associate
Tonight is our final post-show forum and then only a few more performances till we close on Saturday. Rehearsals for Avenue Q are underway, and we will dive into that a little more next week at our freshly-launched, all-new Lyric Stage Boston Blog.
The run of this show has been full of a range of experiences: standing ovations, walk-outs, tears, laughter, anger, confusion, thank you notes and hate mail (well, maybe not hate mail, but angry-mail). We have had quiet discussions in the lobby, and bold poses in our photo booth. The range and intensity of these responses is, in a word, striking.
I think The Temperamentals is a beautiful and moving play, about a rag-tag group of gents who made an impact on American History that deserves to be recognized. But, I also think, if everyone felt the same way about this play (and every other) we wouldn't really need to make anything ever again. We would just keep doing the same production for infinity, because we all thought it was brilliant, and how can you improve genius? And, that, friends, would get a mite old.
Our audience is not a monolith, nor would I want them to be. I think by evoking an emotional response from so many different people, no matter the joy or venom, means we are on to something. Theatre, like all art - but especially theatre - works best when it matters to us. When it gets us riled up, it means the transitory 2 hours traffic lives on in us.
Join us tonight for the show at 730PM or for the Forum at 9:30PM or the reception afterwards at Club Cafe. And, join us next week at our new destination for more year-round blogging!
Thursday, April 26, 2012
Tuesday, April 24, 2012
Harry Hay's America
Julie-Anne Whitney, Assistant Box Office Manager
In 1950, Harry Hay co-founded The Mattachine Society, the first national gay rights organization in America. Their goal was to "eliminate discrimination, derision, prejudice and bigotry,"[1] against homosexuals and to assimilate them into mainstream society. At the time Harry and his friends formed the group there were hardly even whispers of the controversial topics that are so often openly discussed today. I bet Harry would be happy to know there are now more than 75 national LGBT rights organizations[2]--a reality The Mattachine Society could have only dreamed about.
Here is a snapshot of Harry Hay’s America: In 1952 the American Psychiatric Association called homosexuality a “sociopathic personality disturbance”[3]. One year later President Eisenhower signed Executive Order 10450, banning homosexuals from working for the federal government as they were deemed “security risks.” In 1955 the Unified School District produced Boys Beware which described homosexuality as a “sickness that was not visible like smallpox but no less dangerous and contagious.” These horribly distorted views spread like wildfire through America’s schools, on television, in the news, and did much to strengthen the country’s gay phobia for decades to come.
In many ways the America Harry Hay knew is strikingly similar to the America we know today. Gays and Lesbians still cannot get married (Ok so, we can get married in a whopping 6 states[4]. Whoopty-do). In 30 of our 50 states it is legal for businesses to refuse to hire, and even fire LGBT people based on their sexual orientation[5]. I am sure Harry--were he still alive--could tell us all about the racial segregation and discrimination of the 50‘s and 60’s, but I wonder if he would be surprised to hear that now LGBT people can be refused service in restaurants and businesses[6]. Many members of our community are also subject to extreme harassment and/or physical assault. In fact, less than two weeks ago two Kentucky men were arrested for assaulting and kidnapping a gay man[7]--a headline we have repeatedly seen for the past four decades, with 25 LGBT-related hate crimes in the past 2 years alone[8].
It is not just these blatantly discriminatory acts that keep us gridlocked in the fight for equality, but also the seemingly deliberate exclusion from main-stream entertainment which has the potential to greatly alter public perception of the LGBT community. The lack of more frequent, fully-developed, and well-rounded representations of LGBT people in television and film (two of our most effective means of idea transference), makes us seem less important, less an integral part of the America we all live in. According to the 16th Annual “Where We Are on TV” report[9] released by GLAAD in September 2011, LGBT characters “account for only 2.9 percent of scripted series regulars” on major broadcast networks, with only “29 LGBT characters on mainstream cable” networks in the past year. The movie industry isn’t any better. In the past three years, there have been a mere 13 US films[10] that featured LGBT characters and/or their romantic relationships.
So, why am I telling you all this? Because, quite simply, it is important. Harry Hay knew that these issues had to be talked about in order for them to be changed and 62 years later the conversation has not ended. I’m telling you this because sometimes we need to be reminded of where we started in order to see how far we have come, and to understand how very far we have still to go.
Here is a snapshot of Harry Hay’s America: Equal rights and opportunities (both at home and in public life) for all regardless of orientation. A society that is less tolerant of “discrimination, derision, prejudice and bigotry.” A country whose citizens are judged not by who they love but by “the content of their character.”[11] We’re getting there, Harry. We are getting there.
_____________________________
[1] “Milestones in the American Gay Rights Movement.” (www.pbs.org)
[2] “List of LGBT Rights Organizations.” (www.wikipedia.org)
[3] “Milestones in the American Gay Rights Movement.” www.pbs.org
[4] Same-Sex marriage is not recognized by the United States federal government, but such marriages are recognized by the following six states: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, New York, Iowa, Vermont as well as our nation’s capitol, Washington D.C. The states of Washington and Maryland have recently passed laws to begin granting same-sex marriage licenses, but each may be delayed or derailed by November 2012 voter referenda. Source: www.wikipedia.org
[5] See “Employment Non-Discrimination Act.” (www.aclu.org)
[6] In January, 2012 there was a bill being considered in the NH House of Representatives that would allow people to refuse to serve gays in privately owned establishments. (www.wmur.com)
[7] David Jason Jenkins and Anthony Ray Jenkins became the first people to be charged with a LGBT-related indictment brought by the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which was signed into law on October 28, 2009 by President Barack Obama. This is the first federal legislation to provide inclusive protections for the LGBT community. (www.advocate.com and www.barackobama.com)
[8] “History of Violence against LGBT people in the United States.” (www.wikipedia.org)
[9] “Where We Are on TV Report: 2011-2012 Season” (www.glaad.org)
[10] A Single Man (2009), Bloomington (2011), Chloe (2009), Elena Undone (2010), I Love You Philip Morris (2009), Make the Yuletide Gay (2009), Pariah (2011), Prayers for Bobby (2009), Scott Pilgrim vs. The World (2010), The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011), The Kids are All RIght (2010), The War Boys (2009), Valentine’s Day (2010). (www.wikipedia.org)
[11] Passage from Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech” delivered on August 28, 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
In 1950, Harry Hay co-founded The Mattachine Society, the first national gay rights organization in America. Their goal was to "eliminate discrimination, derision, prejudice and bigotry,"[1] against homosexuals and to assimilate them into mainstream society. At the time Harry and his friends formed the group there were hardly even whispers of the controversial topics that are so often openly discussed today. I bet Harry would be happy to know there are now more than 75 national LGBT rights organizations[2]--a reality The Mattachine Society could have only dreamed about.
Here is a snapshot of Harry Hay’s America: In 1952 the American Psychiatric Association called homosexuality a “sociopathic personality disturbance”[3]. One year later President Eisenhower signed Executive Order 10450, banning homosexuals from working for the federal government as they were deemed “security risks.” In 1955 the Unified School District produced Boys Beware which described homosexuality as a “sickness that was not visible like smallpox but no less dangerous and contagious.” These horribly distorted views spread like wildfire through America’s schools, on television, in the news, and did much to strengthen the country’s gay phobia for decades to come.
In many ways the America Harry Hay knew is strikingly similar to the America we know today. Gays and Lesbians still cannot get married (Ok so, we can get married in a whopping 6 states[4]. Whoopty-do). In 30 of our 50 states it is legal for businesses to refuse to hire, and even fire LGBT people based on their sexual orientation[5]. I am sure Harry--were he still alive--could tell us all about the racial segregation and discrimination of the 50‘s and 60’s, but I wonder if he would be surprised to hear that now LGBT people can be refused service in restaurants and businesses[6]. Many members of our community are also subject to extreme harassment and/or physical assault. In fact, less than two weeks ago two Kentucky men were arrested for assaulting and kidnapping a gay man[7]--a headline we have repeatedly seen for the past four decades, with 25 LGBT-related hate crimes in the past 2 years alone[8].
It is not just these blatantly discriminatory acts that keep us gridlocked in the fight for equality, but also the seemingly deliberate exclusion from main-stream entertainment which has the potential to greatly alter public perception of the LGBT community. The lack of more frequent, fully-developed, and well-rounded representations of LGBT people in television and film (two of our most effective means of idea transference), makes us seem less important, less an integral part of the America we all live in. According to the 16th Annual “Where We Are on TV” report[9] released by GLAAD in September 2011, LGBT characters “account for only 2.9 percent of scripted series regulars” on major broadcast networks, with only “29 LGBT characters on mainstream cable” networks in the past year. The movie industry isn’t any better. In the past three years, there have been a mere 13 US films[10] that featured LGBT characters and/or their romantic relationships.
So, why am I telling you all this? Because, quite simply, it is important. Harry Hay knew that these issues had to be talked about in order for them to be changed and 62 years later the conversation has not ended. I’m telling you this because sometimes we need to be reminded of where we started in order to see how far we have come, and to understand how very far we have still to go.
Here is a snapshot of Harry Hay’s America: Equal rights and opportunities (both at home and in public life) for all regardless of orientation. A society that is less tolerant of “discrimination, derision, prejudice and bigotry.” A country whose citizens are judged not by who they love but by “the content of their character.”[11] We’re getting there, Harry. We are getting there.
_____________________________
[1] “Milestones in the American Gay Rights Movement.” (www.pbs.org)
[2] “List of LGBT Rights Organizations.” (www.wikipedia.org)
[3] “Milestones in the American Gay Rights Movement.” www.pbs.org
[4] Same-Sex marriage is not recognized by the United States federal government, but such marriages are recognized by the following six states: Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Connecticut, New York, Iowa, Vermont as well as our nation’s capitol, Washington D.C. The states of Washington and Maryland have recently passed laws to begin granting same-sex marriage licenses, but each may be delayed or derailed by November 2012 voter referenda. Source: www.wikipedia.org
[5] See “Employment Non-Discrimination Act.” (www.aclu.org)
[6] In January, 2012 there was a bill being considered in the NH House of Representatives that would allow people to refuse to serve gays in privately owned establishments. (www.wmur.com)
[7] David Jason Jenkins and Anthony Ray Jenkins became the first people to be charged with a LGBT-related indictment brought by the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which was signed into law on October 28, 2009 by President Barack Obama. This is the first federal legislation to provide inclusive protections for the LGBT community. (www.advocate.com and www.barackobama.com)
[8] “History of Violence against LGBT people in the United States.” (www.wikipedia.org)
[9] “Where We Are on TV Report: 2011-2012 Season” (www.glaad.org)
[10] A Single Man (2009), Bloomington (2011), Chloe (2009), Elena Undone (2010), I Love You Philip Morris (2009), Make the Yuletide Gay (2009), Pariah (2011), Prayers for Bobby (2009), Scott Pilgrim vs. The World (2010), The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo (2011), The Kids are All RIght (2010), The War Boys (2009), Valentine’s Day (2010). (www.wikipedia.org)
[11] Passage from Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream Speech” delivered on August 28, 1963 from the steps of the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
Friday, April 20, 2012
To Blog or Not To Blog
A. Nora Long, producing associate
Dear readers, As we near the end of our Temperamentals blog, we here at the theatre can't help but notice the HUGE viewing stats this little guy has gotten. It has lead some of us to think that maybe we will keep this little experiment going beyond this show and into a year round e-conversation about all the happenings at the Lyric.
So, I ask you - are you interested? What kind of things do you want to read about? Because you, dear readers, have the opportunity to also be writers yourself. Please feel free to take advantage of the comment section to tell us your thoughts, ask us your questions, or just give us some ideas for future posts.
The internet is not a one-way series of tubes, after all, and you all have our number.
On Tuesday look for our last Temperamentals guest blogger as the show closes next Saturday night. Come out and see us sometime (and by sometime we mean during our remaining performances).
Dear readers, As we near the end of our Temperamentals blog, we here at the theatre can't help but notice the HUGE viewing stats this little guy has gotten. It has lead some of us to think that maybe we will keep this little experiment going beyond this show and into a year round e-conversation about all the happenings at the Lyric.
So, I ask you - are you interested? What kind of things do you want to read about? Because you, dear readers, have the opportunity to also be writers yourself. Please feel free to take advantage of the comment section to tell us your thoughts, ask us your questions, or just give us some ideas for future posts.
The internet is not a one-way series of tubes, after all, and you all have our number.
On Tuesday look for our last Temperamentals guest blogger as the show closes next Saturday night. Come out and see us sometime (and by sometime we mean during our remaining performances).
Wednesday, April 18, 2012
Harry, Judy, and Me
By Stephen Nonack, The History Project
Having just
concluded Stuart Timmons’ biography of Harry Hay, The Trouble with Harry: Founder of the Modern Gay Movement (a
source for The Temperamentals), I am
struck by my distance from the place and time when the Mattachine Society was
founded, and my failure to connect on a personal level with Harry Hay. Hay, who grew up in privileged circumstances
in Los Angeles, sought from an early age to discover why he felt attracted to
other boys. At the public library he
managed to speed read through a restricted copy of Edward Carpenter’s The
Intermediate Sex, published in 1906, which offers a uniquely positive view of
same-sex relationships and, most importantly, gave the boy a word not found in
dictionaries of the period – homosexual.
It was a revelation and launched Hay in a life-long quest to understand
the nature of gay identity. His first
“adult” gay sexual encounter occurred at age 14, when he seduced a 30 year old
sailor (Hay was tall for his age, but the sailor freaked out when the age
difference was revealed). He made no apologies for who he was and as a student
at Stanford, publicly came out of the closet (before there was anything to
come out of the closet for), creating a scandal. That was daring – especially since there were
no role models in history (except for Carpenter and Walt Whitman, perhaps) and few
in his life, for inspiration.
During the
1930s he fell under the sway of Marxist-Leninist thought and the dream of an
egalitarian society and organized for the Communist Party USA, though the Party
forbade homosexuality and he was compelled to keep his identity a secret. He was living a contradictory, conflicted
life, having affairs with men (like handsome actor and CP agitator Will Geer
[later “Grandpa Walton”]) yet, in 1938, he met and married Anita Platky, a Communist
Party member, with whom he led an ostensibly hetero-normative life for the
ensuing decade. Hay’s involvement with the leftist mass movement, called
People’s Songs, was based on a revival of folk songs, and inspired the idea of
the Mattachine Society, an all-male secret society that performed stylized
dances in costumes and masks and spread a social justice message to the
oppressed in medieval Europe. Harry Hay
met dancer Rudi Gernreich at Lester Horton’s Dance Theatre in L.A. in 1950; Hay
was there to watch his eldest daughter practice. They were attracted to each other
immediately, and gay friends of Hay’s lent them their homes so that they could
conduct their affair.
Hay and
Gernreich were co-founders of the Mattachine Society, which grew as new members
were drawn to an organization that had a mission to provide brotherhood and
support, education and study around homosexual identity, resistance to
repression (and police harassment and entrapment), the ultimate goal being full
civil rights. Hay was armed with the
Kinsey Report, published in 1948, which quantified homosexuality in America,
and the organizing tactics (and devotion to secrecy) derived from his
affiliation with the Communist Party USA.
Rules for structuring the discussion groups that were the magnets for
attracting new members were quite specific, and topics were suggested (“Is
there a homosexual culture?” “What causes swishing?”). Ultimately, internal tension over real or
imagined Communist sympathizers in the Society as well as Harry Hay’s
domineering role in it led to his split in 1953 from the organization that he
had inspired and led (referred to as the First Mattachine Society). His leadership was a failure,
essentially. Rudi moved to New York to
pursue a career in fashion, and the movement continued with others at the
helm. So, what was Hay’s lasting
impact? That’s hard for me to say. [Some believe that Hay’s more lasting
influence was in his organizing the Radical Faerie network, and his theorizing
on the subject of “gay spirit.”] This
reads like so much ancient history. At
the time of my own coming to awareness of my sexuality I never heard or read
anything about Mattachine or Harry Hay.
Though the subjects of Martin Duberman’s account of the Stonewall
rebellion were born before the end of World War II and so are not, technically,
Baby Boomers like me, their stories are much closer to my own. That moment in 1969, beginning the night
after Judy Garland’s funeral, came on the heels of the Civil Rights, Women’s
Lib, and anti-war movements, and was spearheaded by people I can
recognize. The event still resonates for
me and perhaps for most gay people of my generation.
Of course, I
worry that the message and memory of Stonewall will be lost to succeeding
generations of LGBTQ Americans. The NewYork Times last week carried a review of the new play about Judy Garland’s last
days, End of the Rainbow. The
reviewer, Robert Leleux, a gay man in his 30s, took a friend to the
performance; a Judy Garland devotee, he afterwards asked his friend whether he
considered her a gay idol. “Not to me,
she isn’t. I mean, I know she used to be
important to gay guys, but I don’t see what she has to do with being gay
anymore, except she did sort of remind me of Whitney and Lindsay and
Britney. You know, train wrecks.” Leleux laments that “because of the holocaust
that was the AIDS epidemic and its annihilation of the previous generation of
gay men, the faith of our fathers risks extinction. Today, Judyism, like Yiddish, is little more
than a vague cultural memory.” Oh
dear. But did you enjoy the
performance? Judyism, like Communism,
like the First Mattachine, appears to be dead.
Thank
goodness for The History Project, which documents and preserves a documentary
record of LGBTQ lives and history, including people like Boston gay activist
Prescott Townsend, a near contemporary of Harry Hay’s. But perhaps the best and most immediate way
to connect with our gay icons is through art.
A few years ago, gay singer/songwriter Rufus Wainwright, recreated Judy
Garland’s legendary 1963 Carnegie Hall concert, bringing the legend to a modern
audience. So thank the Lyric Stage for
bringing the story of Harry Hay and Rudi Gernreich to Boston audiences in TheTemperamentals, a work of art that performs history and hopefully transcends
generations.
Thursday, April 12, 2012
The Matters that Matter
A. Nora Long, producing associate
During the time period of The Temperamentals, to be anything outside of an "Ozzie and Harriet" definition of normal could devastatingly impact your ability to get a job, buy a home, run for office. It mattered, and not because it is important to recognize and value our differences. Race, gender, sexual orientation, country of origin, political affiliation could mean the difference between a prosperous livelihood or invisibility. Just down the street, The Huntington Theatre Company is running a beautiful play that deals with the collision of race and class against the American Dream during the 1950s and today in our fair city, when an upwardly mobile African-American family pays a struggling Irish-American family to "ghost buy" a house in an all white neighborhood.
With a looming presidential election, I find myself often embroiled in endlessly fascinating conversations about the personal traits different people demand in a leader. Every day the media tells us about some charming quirk or embarrassing past deed that assaults our individual checklists when we discover our ideal is human after all. One of my Facebook friends was outraged the way President Obama stood in front of the flag. Another giggled at Newt Gingrich's check bouncing, while another can't stand Mitt Romney for leaving his dog on the roof of a car. However they (or you) feel about these incidents - none of them are about their proposed policies if (re)elected. But, they matter - deeply - passionately - to a good many of us. How many times have you heard "oh, I like him/her" when discussing a candidate? How many times have you said it? I know I say it all the time - when, in truth, I have never met any of these people, let alone had a meaningful conversation or game of bocce with them. I don't really know them, and yet I've decided I like them (or loathe them) because of how I think that meaningful game of bocce would be.
So, I beg the question of you, dear readers, what matters to you when shopping for President? Does the personal outweigh the political or are you just interested in the facts? Are you somewhere in the middle?
During the time period of The Temperamentals, to be anything outside of an "Ozzie and Harriet" definition of normal could devastatingly impact your ability to get a job, buy a home, run for office. It mattered, and not because it is important to recognize and value our differences. Race, gender, sexual orientation, country of origin, political affiliation could mean the difference between a prosperous livelihood or invisibility. Just down the street, The Huntington Theatre Company is running a beautiful play that deals with the collision of race and class against the American Dream during the 1950s and today in our fair city, when an upwardly mobile African-American family pays a struggling Irish-American family to "ghost buy" a house in an all white neighborhood.
With a looming presidential election, I find myself often embroiled in endlessly fascinating conversations about the personal traits different people demand in a leader. Every day the media tells us about some charming quirk or embarrassing past deed that assaults our individual checklists when we discover our ideal is human after all. One of my Facebook friends was outraged the way President Obama stood in front of the flag. Another giggled at Newt Gingrich's check bouncing, while another can't stand Mitt Romney for leaving his dog on the roof of a car. However they (or you) feel about these incidents - none of them are about their proposed policies if (re)elected. But, they matter - deeply - passionately - to a good many of us. How many times have you heard "oh, I like him/her" when discussing a candidate? How many times have you said it? I know I say it all the time - when, in truth, I have never met any of these people, let alone had a meaningful conversation or game of bocce with them. I don't really know them, and yet I've decided I like them (or loathe them) because of how I think that meaningful game of bocce would be.
So, I beg the question of you, dear readers, what matters to you when shopping for President? Does the personal outweigh the political or are you just interested in the facts? Are you somewhere in the middle?
Tuesday, April 10, 2012
THE MORE THINGS CHANGE...
By Victor L. Shopov, actor
Working on the Lyric's production of The Temperamentals has been quite
the educational experience, not just in terms of the history lesson it has
provided, but as a reinforcement of a famous French proverb of which I have
always been fond: plus ça change,
plus c'est la même chose.
Like other, similar battles throughout history, the gay rights movement in the United States, the roots of which are explored in this production, is one defined by the collision of two starkly different groups of people: those who would deny people their rights, and those who would fight to protect those rights.
Six decades later, not much has changed.
Politics play a central role throughout the production, with references to the rising Red Scare, Henry Wallace and the Progressive Party, and the country's inaction during the onset of the Holocaust. The common thread, as with most things, is the human element - what people are and are not willing to do based upon what is politically convenient or what is socially acceptable.
The 1950's is often seen as a golden age in the United States - a post-war emergence of American supremacy coinciding with political and cultural consensus and conformity. Unfortunately, such conformity meant that challenging the status quo was simply not "acceptable." Racism, bigotry, ignorance, and the scapegoating of minorities were commonplace, and went unchallenged for far too long. While I would like to think we have reached a point of enlightenment where such traits are less prevalent, one need only cast a quick glance at the current presidential race to see that, in fact, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
The quest for elected office has always been marked by the unfortunate implementation of the politics of division - setting one group against another in a twisted cost/benefit analysis resulting in the most efficient net gain of votes. A cursory search of public comments by certain presidential candidates yields a plethora of remarks that can only be described as ignorant, inflammatory, and divisive.
In other words, they have achieved their desired result.
For all of the progress that has been made in recent years, we still live in a country where a civil institution is permitted to be discriminatory, where sheltering bullies under the guise of "religious freedom" is deemed more important than protecting their victims, and where an entire segment of the population is openly derided by unabashed politicians, lacking any semblance of remorse, for no reason other than to earn votes from those holding a very narrow, prejudicial view of the world.
And yet, while the battle itself remains the same, the battlefield has largely changed. Harry Hay and the Mattachine Society were forced to work largely in secret for fear of reprisal. Today, the campaign for equal rights is fought in the open. That transition alone is progress.
It is said that the tides of history ebb and flow, and while forward progress is occasionally marked by backward steps, ultimately, change does come. Perceptions shift, hearts and minds are changed, and the slow march of progress goes on.
Some things will forever stay the same. But, with determination and perseverance, what is right will ultimately prevail and endure, and those who fought to make it so - Harry Hay, Rudi Gernreich, Dale Jennings, Bob Hull, Chuck Rowland, and countless others, will not soon be forgotten.
Our Temperamentals: l to r, Steve Kidd, Will McGarrahan, Nael Nacer, Shelley Bolman, Victor L. Shopov. Photo Mark S. Howard |
Like other, similar battles throughout history, the gay rights movement in the United States, the roots of which are explored in this production, is one defined by the collision of two starkly different groups of people: those who would deny people their rights, and those who would fight to protect those rights.
Six decades later, not much has changed.
Politics play a central role throughout the production, with references to the rising Red Scare, Henry Wallace and the Progressive Party, and the country's inaction during the onset of the Holocaust. The common thread, as with most things, is the human element - what people are and are not willing to do based upon what is politically convenient or what is socially acceptable.
The 1950's is often seen as a golden age in the United States - a post-war emergence of American supremacy coinciding with political and cultural consensus and conformity. Unfortunately, such conformity meant that challenging the status quo was simply not "acceptable." Racism, bigotry, ignorance, and the scapegoating of minorities were commonplace, and went unchallenged for far too long. While I would like to think we have reached a point of enlightenment where such traits are less prevalent, one need only cast a quick glance at the current presidential race to see that, in fact, the more things change, the more they stay the same.
The quest for elected office has always been marked by the unfortunate implementation of the politics of division - setting one group against another in a twisted cost/benefit analysis resulting in the most efficient net gain of votes. A cursory search of public comments by certain presidential candidates yields a plethora of remarks that can only be described as ignorant, inflammatory, and divisive.
In other words, they have achieved their desired result.
For all of the progress that has been made in recent years, we still live in a country where a civil institution is permitted to be discriminatory, where sheltering bullies under the guise of "religious freedom" is deemed more important than protecting their victims, and where an entire segment of the population is openly derided by unabashed politicians, lacking any semblance of remorse, for no reason other than to earn votes from those holding a very narrow, prejudicial view of the world.
And yet, while the battle itself remains the same, the battlefield has largely changed. Harry Hay and the Mattachine Society were forced to work largely in secret for fear of reprisal. Today, the campaign for equal rights is fought in the open. That transition alone is progress.
It is said that the tides of history ebb and flow, and while forward progress is occasionally marked by backward steps, ultimately, change does come. Perceptions shift, hearts and minds are changed, and the slow march of progress goes on.
Some things will forever stay the same. But, with determination and perseverance, what is right will ultimately prevail and endure, and those who fought to make it so - Harry Hay, Rudi Gernreich, Dale Jennings, Bob Hull, Chuck Rowland, and countless others, will not soon be forgotten.
Labels:
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equal rights,
gay rights,
Harry Hay,
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The Temperamentals,
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Victor L. Shopov
Thursday, April 5, 2012
Reflections on the Burning Library
Neal
Kane, chair, The History Project
Preparing for The History Project’s
presentation in conjunction with the Lyric Stage’s April 12 performance of The Temperamentals has enabled the
members of our group to revisit some of the original research we compiled for
our 1998 book Improper Bostonians. While
helping to assemble the information for the mini-exhibit created by THP for the
Lyric’s lobby, I thought of Edmund White’s essay collection The Burning Library, whose title refers
to the idea that when someone dies, a library burns.
What was life like for lesbians and
gay men in Boston during the years chronicled in The Temperamentals? This is a question we will seek to address in
our presentation – one that is difficult to answer for a number of reasons. Key
among them is the fact that while American society had never been hospitable
toward men and women who identified as homosexual prior to 1950, the atmosphere
of paranoia and suspicion that characterized the Cold War era compelled gay
people to adopt an even greater degree of secrecy. As a result, thousands of
gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender individuals had to live with the
reality that the substance of their experiences as loving and sexual beings
would never find validation in the historical record. They were
compelled to burn – metaphorically, and sometimes literally – the
libraries of their lives.
Lost to history
The History Project’s work to
restore gay New Englanders to their rightful place in the historical narrative
of the 1950s and 1960s has often been a somber exercise. In attempting to
document gay life during the Cold War, archivists and researchers are confronted,
for the most part, with a melancholic silence. During that time, gay people had
every incentive not to preserve the
substance of their lives in letters, photographs, and public records – the
building blocks that constitute the very foundation of historical research. A
snapshot or love letter could serve as grounds for termination, disinheritance,
or blackmail. We will never know the number and volume of records destroyed by
gay New Englanders and their families in the name of “privacy” and “discretion”
during that period. When those individuals died, the library of their lives
perished with them – and no one was there to preserve it.
As a result, the efforts of The
History Project to reconstitute that period of New England’s LGBT history have
been limited to preserving the sparse remnants of historical information that
survived the period before Stonewall: a few oral histories, a handful of
publications, and a meager store of photographs.
Drag king and queen, late 1950's, Boston |
The members of THP are motivated,
in large part, by a commitment to honor those brave LGBT individuals whose
stories were lost to history. Having amassed one of the largest LGBT archival
collections in the country, which spans both the pre-Stonewall and post-Stonewall
eras, we lovingly preserve those documents for posterity and share them with
researchers and the public. Our archives chronicle the rich tapestry of gay
lives in Boston and beyond – how we have lived, loved, struggled,
protested, and triumphed. As an independent archives, we are able to save
records that would otherwise be destroyed, and create opportunities for the
public to experience how the history they contain can be brought to life.
Programs such as our series From the
Archives give individuals the opportunity to learn more about the social
and historical significance of our collections. Collaborations with other
organizations such as the Lyric help us educate community members – both
gay and straight – about the contributions of LGBT individuals to the
historical narrative.
Scott Erickson discussed the button collection he donated to The History Project as part of our From the Archives series |
Our dream is to acquire a space
that will serve as a permanent home for our archives and a center for scholarly
research and public exhibitions related to New England’s LGBT history. As we
pursue that dream, we continue to process thousands of documents annually,
thanks to the tireless efforts of volunteers who spend their nights and
weekends transforming chaotic boxes of paper into carefully preserved and fully
indexed collections. Their work is informed by pride, patience, and a shared
goal: ensuring that the achievements of LGBT individuals assume and maintain
their rightful place in history for generations to come.
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