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Cross-dressing ball

Gay balls, cross-dressing balls or drag balls, depending on the place, time, and type, were public or private balls, celebrated mainly in the first third of the twentieth century, where cross-dressing and ballroom dancing with same sex partners was allowed. By the 1900s, the balls had become important cultural events for gays and lesbians, even attracting tourists. Their golden age was during the Interwar period, mainly in Berlin and Paris, even though they could be found in many big cities in Europe and the Americas such as Mexico City and New York City.

Precedents edit

 
"Molly" or "macaroni" from the 18th century

By the end of the 17th century, a gay subculture is documented in Europe, with cruising areas, bars, parties and balls, cross-dressers, and slang. Scholars like Randolph Trumbach consider it is the moment when gay subculture appears in Europe. On the contrary, historian Rictor Norton considers unlikely that such a subculture would appear fully formed, and thinks that it was actually the increase in surveillance and police procedures that brought to the surface an underground culture that had not been visible up to that moment.[1]

The archives of the Portuguese Inquisition in Lisbon preserve information of the so-called "danças dos fanchonos" from the beginning of the 17 century.[2] About 1620, the "fachonos", the baroque equivalent of modern drag queens, organized big parties in the Gaia Lisboa, the gay Lisbon. These itinerant celebrations, called "escarramão", or "esparramão", used to include pantomimes with racy scenes, where some of the participants were dressed as women, and other as men.[3] His Majesty's High Court in Mexico City discovered in 1656 a similar case, when Juan Correa, an old man, over 70 years old, confessed that he had been committing the unspeakable vice since his childhood. Correa's house, in the outskirts of the city, had been used as a meeting point to celebrate balls, where many men dressed as women.[4]

Several studies have not found similar phenomena in the judicial cases in Aragon,[5] Catalonia,[6] the Basque Country[7] or Valencia,[8] even though in the Valencian case there are evidences of a subculture and a possible gay ghetto. In Spain, cross-dressing was socially only allowed for carnival, when even those closest to the king could dress as women.[9] On the other hand, in France, during Louis XIV's reign, no ball was complete without cross-dressers.[9]

By the end of the 17th century, there was a completely developed gay subculture in London, with the molly houses used as clubs, where gays met regularly to drink, dance and have fun. These taverns are well known thanks to the Mother Clap's molly house scandal from 1726, when a police raid discovered that her molly house was a gay brothel.[1]

Cross-dressing balls edit

 
Hermann von Teschenberg (1866-1911) dressed as woman. Teschenberg, a cross-dresser, was one of the founders of the Scientific-Humanitarian Committee.

Germany edit

The Empire edit

Berlin's clandestine gay underground can be followed up to the 18th century, in spite of the persecution gays were suffering. In Prussia, Paragraph 143 of the penal code, and later the introduction of Paragraph 175 in the German penal code, with other laws for public scandal, and child protection, made the life of gays extremely difficult. In fact, the activities of Magnus Hirschfeld or the first homosexual movement could not avoid the regular police raids and closing of premises in the 1900s. And not just the premises were being watched by the police, in 1883, the moral police had 4799 "transvestite" and transgender woman under vigilance, even though "permits" could be handed out to cross-dressers in cases considered "medical".[10]

It is thus surprising that, beginning mid 19th century, the Urningsball or Tuntenball came to be, balls of uranians, or queens, tolerated, but watched by the police. By the 1900s, these balls had achieved such a fame in Germany, that people from all around the country, and even foreign tourists, would travel to Berlin to participate.[10] These balls were celebrated in large ballrooms, as the Deutscher Kaiser, in the Lothringer Straße, or the Filarmonía, in the Bernburgstraße, the Dresdner Kasino, in the Dresdner Straße, or the Orpheum, in the Alter Jakobstraße 32.[11]

For example, the Berliner Morgenpost described extensively on October 17, 1899, a gay ball that had taken place in the hotel König von Portugal, where balls were still being celebrated in 1918.[10] The ball season used to begin in October and go until Easter, with a frequency of several balls a week, sometimes two the same day.[11] Hirschfeld, in his book Berlins drittes Geschlecht (1904; "Berlín's Third Sex"), described the balls in following fashion:

The innkeepers of uranian taverns, but certainly not just them, organize large urning balls, especially in the course of the winter, that, in their size and type, are a specialty of Berlin. Outstanding strangers, especially foreigners, who want to see something very special in the youngest European world-cities, are shown by higher officials [to these balls] as one of the most interesting sights. [...] During the high season from October to Easter, these balls are held several times a week, often even several a night. Even though the entrance fee is rarely less than 1.50 marks, these events are usually well visited. Almost always, several secret policemen are present that make sure that nothing disgraceful happens; as far as I am informed, there was never any occasion to intervene. The organizers have the right to admit, if possible, only people who are known to them as homosexual.[note 1]

Some of the balls were especially well known, particularly those shortly after New Year, on which the new, often self-made dresses are presented. When I visited this ball last year with some medical colleagues, there were about 800 people participating. Around 10 o'clock in the evening, the large halls are still almost deserted. The rooms begin to fill only after eleven o'clock. Many visitors dress in formal or street suit, but many are costumed. Some appear densely masked in impenetrable dominoes, they come and go without anyone knowing who they are; others reveal their faces at midnight, some come in fantastical costumes, a large part in evening gowns, some in simple, others in very elaborate toilets. I saw a South American man in a robe from Paris, its price had to be over 2,000 francs.[note 2]

Not few seem so feminine in their appearance and movements, that even connoisseurs find it hard to recognize the man. [...] Real women are only very sparse on these balls, only now and then does a uranist bring his landlady, a friend, or... his wife. In the case of the uranist, one does not proceed so strictly as on the analogous urninde balls, on which "real men" are strictly denied access. Most distasteful and repulsive [sight] on the balls are the not so infrequent gentlemen that, in spite of coming "as women", keep their stately mustaches or even a full-beard. The most beautiful costumes are greeted by a sign of the ceremony master with a thundering fanfare and guided by him through the hall. Between 12 and 1 o'clock the ball usually reaches its peak. At about 2 o'clock, the coffee break — the main source of income for the owner — takes place. In a few minutes, long tables are installed and layed, with several hundred people sitting at them; some humorous songs and dances of the attendant "lady imitators" season the conversation, then the cheerful activity continues until the early morning.[note 3]

— Magnus Hirschfeld, Berlins Drittes Geschlecht (1904), "Kapitel 3"

As a consequence of the Harden–Eulenburg affair, and the subsequent social upheaval, the balls where prohibited; in 1910 they were allowed again, but they never achieved the splendor of this golden age.[11]

The Weimar Republic edit

After the I World War appeared the first mass movements for homosexuals, the Freundschaftsbund, popular associations of gays and lesbians that dedicated an important part of their effort to socialization and diverse activities for their members, like excursions, visits, sports, and balls. For example, the club Kameradschaft ("camaraderie") organized on November 1, 1929, celebrating their anniversary, a Böser-Buben-Ball ("Bad Boys Ball"); the club reached 100 members, and survived until 1933. Kameradschaft tried to offer some support and activities for gays from lower extraction; so their balls were celebrated on weekends, Saturdays or Sundays, and gathered about 70 men, many without a job, who could pay the low entry price.[12]

In 1922 the association Gesellschaftsklub Aleksander e.V. celebrated balls every day, beginning 7 o'clock p.m., with a quality orchestra. In 1927 the Bund für Menschenrecht (BfM) bought the Alexander-Palast, but that same year they changed to the Florida and the Tanz-Palast salon of the Zauberflöte, in the Kommandantenstraße 72, in Berlin. The BfM balls took place from Tuesdays to Sundays; the entry was free, but you had to pay 50 Pfennig for a dance card that allowed you to actually dance.[13] In the 1920s gay balls reached enormous sizes, with premises filling several ballrooms with some thousands of men. And not just in Berlin, several other cities in Germany organized smaller balls for gays.[12]

 
The Eldorado of the Motzstraße, in Berlin, 1932. The sign includes their motto: "Hier ist's Richtig!".

In the 1920s and 30s, there were uncountable bars, cafés, and dance halls in Berlin. The most elegant could be found in West Berlin, near the area formed by the Bülowstraße, the Potsdamer Straße, and the Nollendorfplatz, reaching up to the Kurfürstendamm.[13]

No doubt, the most famous was Eldorado, that really was two, one on the Lutherstraße, and a second one in the Motzstraße.[14] Curt Moreck (Konrad Haemmerling) described it in 1931, in his Führer durch das „lasterhafte“ Berlin ("Guide through the 'dissolute' Berlin"), as "an establishment of transvestites staged for the morbid fascination of the world metropolis." The program at the Eldorado included loud and racy shows by drag queens, addressed mostly to a heterosexual audience, that, now as then, wanted to "satisfy their curiosity, and dared to visit the mysterious and infamous Berlin".[15] Moreck continues, even though he himself was encouraging, and was part of this kind of voyeuristic tourism with his travel guide:

A dance hall of a larger style, with an extremely elegant audience. Tuxedos and tailcoats, and full evening dresses – this is the normality that comes to observe here. The actors are present in large numbers. Bright posters are already luring at the entrance, and paintings, where the perversity mocks itself, decorate the corridor. At the wardrobe begins the swindle. "Here it's right!"[note 4] A mysterious motto, that can mean anything. Everything is staged scenery, and only the worldly innocent believe in its authenticity. Even the real transvestites, who put their anomaly at the service of the business, become comedians here. Between the dances, where even the normal man can afford the naughty pleasure of dancing with an effeminate man in female dress, there are cabaret performances. A tomboy chanteuse sings with her shrill soprano voice ambiguous Parisian chansons. A very girlish revue star proceeds under the spotlight with female graceful pirouettes. He is naked except for the breast plates and a loincloth, and even this nakedness is deceptive, it still makes the spectators question, it still leaves doubts whether man, or woman. One of the most enchanting and elegant women present in the hall is often the dainty Bob, and there are enough men who, in the depths of their hearts, are sorry that he is not a girl, that nature, through an error, has deceived them of a delicate lover.[note 5]

— Curt Moreck (1931)[16]
 
Dance scene (dancing people in Eldorado) (1910), sketch by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner (1880-1938)

Eldorado became one of the nocturnal cultural centers in Europe. The establishment hosted from bank managers to members of parliament, as well as theater actors and movie stars.[17] Amongst them, divas like Marlene Dietrich,[18] often with her husband Rudolf Sieber, and Anita Berber,[18] singers like Claire Waldoff,[19] and writers, like Wolfgang Cordan,[20] Egon Erwin Kisch, or Josef Hora.[21] Magnus Hirschfeld was well known there.[22]

The co-founder and commander of the SA, Ernst Röhm,[23] was also a patron, and Karl Ernst, later a nazi politician and Gruppenführer SA, tried to survive for a time working —depending on the source— as a waiter,[24] an employee,[25] or a rent boy[26] in the Eldorado of the Lutherstraße. The ballroom cum cabaret has been mentioned, directly or indirectly, serving as inspiration, in many literary works, as in Mr Norris Changes Trains (1935) and Goodbye to Berlin (1939) by Christopher Isherwood, or the memories of Erika, and Klaus Mann. The atmosphere has been captured in paintings by Otto Dix, and Ernst Fritsch.[13]

By the end of the 1920s, the German society had taken their image of homosexuals from this kind of establishment: decadent, refined, depraved, degenerate, tightly linked to drugs, wild sex, and prostitution. The Bund für Menschenrecht tried to distance gays of this kind of milieu in 1927, but to no avail. In 1932 the chancellor Franz von Papen started a campaign against the "depraved night of Berlin", and in October of that same year all balls for homosexuals were prohibited.[13]

On January 30, 1933, the nazi party came to power, and on February 23, 1933, the Prussian Interior Minister ordered that all bars "that have abused [their permit] to promote immorality" be closed. He was referring specially to those "that are frequented by those who pay homage to the anti-natural immorality". On March 4, 1933, the Berliner Tagblatt informed about the closing of some establishments the day before. Of the over 100 establishments catering to homosexuals in Berlin very few survived, and those would be used to help watch and control the homosexual population.[27]

France edit

 
Drawing of a carnival ball about 1909, with the commentary "AU BAL DE LA MI-CARÊME". The drawing was done by Hungarian artist Miklós Vadász, and shows a blushing rich man arm in arm with a young woman, herself kissing another man; on the left, what seems two to be men dancing together. The image was published in the number 422 of the anarchist magazine L'Assiette au Beurre, titled Les p'tits jeun' hommes ("The little young men"), dedicated to the decadent aristocrats, and the effeminate kept men.

In France, until the end of the 19th century, gays and lesbians met usually in private homes and literary salons, hidden from the public, with the Opera Ball in Paris one of the few exceptions. The Opera Ball, celebrated yearly for carnival, allowed some small leeway. The first big public ball that allowed cross-dressing was the Bal Bullier in 1880, in the Avenue de l'Observatoire, followed by the Bal Wagram in 1910.[28]

After World War I, Paris became one of the nightlife centers in Europe, with focal points in Montmartre, Pigalle, and Montparnasse, and numerous short-lived bars catering to gays and lesbians, surviving between police raids, ruinous scandals, and the public's insatiable thirst for new thrills. Many establishments were also known for drug trafficking.[29] Journalist Willy described the atmosphere in the bar "The Petite Chaumière", catering to foreigners looking for strong sensations:[29]

The pianist gives a prelude to a shimmy, and as if on cue the professionals who are paid to give the viewers a spectacle immediately latch onto one another. They ondulate more than dance, and thrust their pelvises obscenely, shimmying their bosoms and delicately grasping the legs of their trousers, which they raise above their shiny boots with each step forward, all the while winking at the customers.[note 6] They wear very fine clothing, and some appear to have built up their chests with cotton wadding. Others wear low-cut kimonos, and one of them wears an Oriental costume all in silver lamé.[note 7]

— Willy, Le troisième sexe (1927), p.173-174[29]
 
A sign from the 1920s.

Notice

The Gentlemen are requested to:

1° No dancing with the hat on.

2° No dancing together.

A proper outfit is strictly enforced.

In the 1920s, there were several balls in the Bastille area; these occurred mainly in the Rue de Lappe, where workers, drunken sailors, and colonial soldiers gathered to dance. It was not strictly a homosexual milieu, but men could dance together, and one could find a partner for the night. Daniel Guérin described one of the dens as a place where "[...] workmen, prostitutes, society women, johns, and aunties all danced. In those relaxed and natural days, before the cops took over France, a chevalier could go out in public with a mate of the same sex, without being considered crazy.» On the other hand, Willy presents a completely different aspect of the milieu, "What you see are little delinquents, not too carefully washed but heavily made up, with caps on their heads and sporting brightly colored foulards; these are the guys who, when they fail to make a buck here, will certainly be found hauling coal or other cargo."[29]

The so-called bal de folles, and later bal de invertis, flourished in Paris after the I World War, and even in other French cities as Toulon. In Paris, homosexuals were attracted mainly to the Bal Musette de la Montaigne de Sainte-Geneviève, in the number 46 of the Rue Montaigne de Sainte-Geneviève, where you could find gays and lesbians.[28][29] Later, the big balls for carnival attracted a gay public, as the one celebrated yearly in the Magic-City, in the rue de l'Université, 180, inaugurated in 1920, and active until the prohibition on February 6, 1934.[28]

In time, the "Carnaval interlope" in Magic-City became a big event, visited by prominent vedette from the varietés, like Mistinguett, or Joséphine Baker, that handed over awards to the best drag queens. The Bal Wagram offered the opportunity to cross-dress twice a year; at 1 a.m., the drag queens did the pont aux travestis, a costume competition, doing the catwalk in front of the most selected people of Paris, that came to walk on the wild side for a night.[28]

The drag queens participating came from all walks of life, and ages, and presented a savage satire of the society, its values, and its traditional hierarchies, with images of exaggerated femininity, and masculinity: countesses dressed in crinoline, crazy virgins, oriental dancers, sailors, ruffians, or soldiers; theirs names were correspondingly colorful: Duchess of the Bubble, the Infante Eudoxie, the Mauve Mouse; the Dark One, Sweetie Pie, Fréda, the Englishwoman, Mad Maria, the Muse, the Teapot, the She-wolf, Sappho, Wet Cat, Little Piano, Princess of the Marshes, Marguerite if Burgundy, etc.[29] Charles Étienne, in his novel Notre-Dame-de-Lesbos, describes "Didine" in following fashion:

Stuffed into a yellow brocade dress, wearing a red wig topped by a trembling tiara of paste, the dress low-cut and in the back naked to the waist, revealing the physique of a prize fighter, a man climbed the staircase, twisting adroitly and with meticulous gestures lifting the long train of her skirts.

— Charles Étienne, Notre-Dame-de-Lesbos; translation Tamagne (2006)[29]

Many of the onlookers just went to insult and harass the gay people participating, as Charles Étienne describes in his novel Le Bal des folles:[29]

After the bruising attack outside, here the reception was more restrained, but quite as bitter, inside. All along the balustrade, clusters of people perched, climbed, and packed together to the point of smothering, raised a mocking jeer: two hundred heads with eyes flaming and mouths hurling insults [...] a Greek chorus of poisonous epithets, ridicule, and slurs [...]

— Charles Étienne, Le Bal des folles; translation Tamagne (2006)[29]

England edit

 
Front page of the tabloid The Illustrated Police News on the week of the raid at Temperance Hall, in Hulme, Manchester[30]

There are at least two instances of cross-dressing balls that have been documented in England. The first one was known through a police raid of a ball celebrated in the Temperance Hall, in the Hulme area of Manchester. On September 24, 1880, the Chief Constable of Manchester received anonymous information about an event "of an immoral character" that was about to take place in the Temperance Hall of Hulme. The detective Jerome Caminada was dispatched with police constables to observe the ball and make any necessary arrests.[30][31]

Of the 47 men that congregated, all wore fancy dress costumes, 22 as women; a pair was dressed as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, and another as Romeo and Juliet. The windows of the Temperance Hall had mostly been blacked out and so Detective Caminada and his constables had to observe the ball from a neighbouring rooftop. Caminada reported that the ball had begun at 9.00 pm, that dancing had commenced at around 10.00 pm and that every now and then, a couple disappeared into a side room. Just after 1.00am, mindful that some guests had started to leave, Caminada gained entry to the ball by giving the password "sister" in an effeminate manner to a doorman dressed as a nun. After the door was opened, the police raided the building, and detained all participants.[30][31]

The trial showed that some of the revellers were not from Manchester and were regulars of similar balls that were organized in several cities, as Leeds, or Nottingham. The men were bound over to keep the peace on two sureties of £25 each, a significant sum. Some were unable to pay it and ended up in prison as a result. All the arrested men had their names, addresses and professions published widely. LGBT History Month in the UK commissioned Stephen M Hornby and Ric Brady to write a three-part play about the ball as part of the first OUTing The Past festival in 2015 in Manchester. The play was called "A Very Victorian Scandal" [32] and Dr Jeff Evans acted as the Historical Adviser to the writers.[33]

Dr. Matt Houlbrook, of the University of Liverpool, affirms that in the 1920s and 30s, cross-dressing balls were being held secretly almost every weekend, gathering 50 to 100 men. And this, in spite of it being illegal, and being a big personal risk for those participating: they didn't just risk prison, if found out, they could lose their livelihood, be isolated socially, and finally suffer a nervous breakdown, or try suicide. In 1933 headlines informed about "Lady Austin's Camp Boys" scandal.[34][35]

The affair began when 60 men were detained in a private ball room, in Holland Park Avenue, in London, after cross-dressing police officers had been watching them dancing, made up, dressed as women, and having sex. Twenty-seven men were arrested, and convicted between 3 and 20 months of jail. Even so, many stood up for their behavior, notoriously Lady Austin, who said "There is nothing wrong [in who we are]. You call us nancies and bum boys but before long our cult will be allowed in the country."[34][35]

Spain edit

Mid 19th century, during the reign of Isabella II, appeared the sociedades de baile, "ball societies", mostly groups of young people that tried to rent some premises to organize a ball; but there were also other, more elegant, or pretentious, that rented theaters for their balls. The ball societies exclusively catering to gays appeared shortly after, mainly in Madrid, and Barcelona, as there were no special requirements to create one, and could be established, and broken up very easily. The most important ball society for the "Uranian flock" met at the El Ramillete, in the calle Alvareda, in Madrid, where you could count "over a hundred sodomites with elegant suits, and rich jewelry". In Barcelona, later, during the regency of Maria Christina, the biggest number of gay dancers met at the Liceo Rius.[36][37]

The dancing public was of all types, but mainly transvestites and young men of the working class – workers of trade and commerce, workshop apprentices, and servants – for whom the balls were the highest point of their lives: exploited by their employers, and frightened of being discovered by the society. The balls allowed them to forget their situation for a couple of hours, express themselves with freedom, mingle with their equals, and, with a little luck, meet someone. Other, less fortunate, as was the case for transvestites, effeminate men, and chulitos de barrio, neighborhood thugs, without a job, or rejected by their families, they used the balls to find their first time customers. For carnival, huge balls were celebrated, and the boys spend the whole year preparing their costumes for that important day.[36]

At the beginning of the 20th century, all these balls had already disappeared, and were just a memory of the past, as recounts the author Max Bembo in his book, La mala vida en Barcelona ("The Bad Life in Barcelona"): "I could not find in the homosexualism of Barcelona the appearance it used to have; the parties where the baptism of homosexuals were celebrated; the very scandalous balls; the sardanapalic festivities, the shame of the city". It's very probable that the disappearance of these public balls was due to the application of laws of public indecency, and the consequent withdrawal of the homosexual life into private residencies, and clubs.[37][36]

United States edit

Stag dance edit

 
Cowboy stag dance from about 1910

During the 19th century, in the United States, mainly in the Great West Frontier, there were many towns where women were few and far between. So, for cowboys, miners, loggers, mountain men or railroad workers, it was very difficult to find a woman, and marry. In these groups, men often formed intimate friendships, that sometimes ended in real love stories, that were accepted as a fact of life. It is difficult to know up to what point this was simply due to the lack of women, or if precisely this kind of life attracted those men that preferred the company of other men.[38]

In this environment, and in the military,[note 8] is where the stag dances developed, and where men danced with each other, without it having any special meaning. Beemyn talks about the stag dances celebrated in San Francisco during the gold rush, in 1849, similar to frontier celebrations called Rocky Mountain Rendezvous. Thousands of young men arrived to the city from all continents, converting a small frontier town into an amusement city, where everything was possible. Thanks to the lack of women, and prejudices, men had fun with each other, also dancing. In these balls, the men that took the role of the woman usually wore a handkerchief knotted around their arm, but there were also those that dressed as women.[38]

Drag ball edit

 
A drag ball at a private home in Portland, Oregon in the 1900s

Drag balls in the United States can trace their origins to the debutante balls, quadroon balls, and costume parties at the end of the 19th century. In the beginning, they were simple parties where men dressed as women, and women dressed as men could go, and where two men could dance with each other. The first recorded drag ball was the Hamilton Lodge Ball in 1869.[39][40] There are records of more exclusive balls by the 1880s, where homosexuals – men and women – could be counted in the hundreds, up to 500 same sex couples, that slowly waltzed the night away at the sound of an excellent orchestra.[41][42]

In the 1920s these balls had already become big social events in the gay and lesbian world, where —mainly men— competed for the best costume. Often, they included a "parade of the fairies", to show the costumes, and the participants with the most spectacular gowns received a prize, in the form of money. The judges often were personalities from literature, and the show business. It was mainly in the black communities of New York City, Chicago, Baltimore, and New Orleans where these balls took place, sometimes bringing in white party-goers.[41][42]

In Manhattan, these balls got to have official permits, and police protection, and security, in places like the Webster Hall, and the Madison Square Garden, the Astor Hotel, the Manhattan Casino (later called Rockland Palace), The Harlem Alhambra, and the Savoy Ballroom in the Black Harlem, and the New Star Casino, in the Italian Harlem. The planners of these balls became well known: H. Mann in the 1910s, Kackie Mason in the 1920s, and 30s, Phil Black in the 1930s to 60s, were celebrated in many a novel.[41][42] In 1933 they were described as:

On the floor of the hall, in every conceivable sort of fancy dress, men quaver and palpitate in each other's embrace. Many of the "effeminate" are elaborately coiffured, in the powdered head dresses of the period of Madame Pompadour. They wear billowy, ballooning skirt of that picturesque pre-guillotine era [... O]thers wear the long, tight-fitting gowns which were a recent vogue [... while] still others wear the long, trailing skirts and the constricting corsets of the 1880s—yards of elaborately furbelowed material, frou-frouing behind them, when space permits.

— op. cit. Chauncey (1994)
 
A drag ball from the 1920s, celebrated in the Webster Hall, in Greenwich Village, Lower Manhattan

The most famous drag ball was the Masquerade and Civic Ball —also known as "Faggots Ball" or "Fairies Ball"—, in Upper Manhattan's Harlem. The Masquerade and Civic Ball was celebration held every two years, beginning in 1869, organized by the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows, an afro-American association independent of other American fraternal orders that did not accept black men. The ball was enormously popular, attracting even white public, but that didn't stop critics, and hecklers. And in spite of there being racial tensions, gender restrictions —two men could only dance together if one of them was dressed as a woman—, and class barriers, these balls became some of the few places where black and white people could socialize, and homosexuals might even find some romance.[41]

So, one day a year, the "faggots", mainly the effeminates, didn't have to hide, had a place where they could feel free, leave behind their apprehension, and embrace fun without fear. In a world where homosexuals were harassed, and despised routinely, the possibility to see several thousands of them together celebrating themselves, interacting with their equals, allowed the creation of an extensive network, and an underground of mutual help. The balls were a central piece in the lives of many gays: the gowns were prepared for months before, and whatever happened there, the gossip was discussed for months after.[42]

Mainly the smaller balls were the objective of police raids, that sometimes arrested those participating. To justify the arrests, they used a law from 1846 that prohibited being in disguise in public, even though it had practically only been used since the change of the century to harass transvestites. Drag balls celebrated in private establishments, and homes, even though they were somewhat safer, also were often visited by the police. By the 1930s the tension with the police had extended to the balls with official permit, signaling a change in the social mores that finally had the two last grand balls in the season 1930-31 canceled.[42] The balls entered a definitive decadence after the derogation of the Prohibition in 1933, with the libertine culture of the speakeasies, where cross-dressing was allowed, disappearing with it.[41]

Latin America edit

Dance of the Forty-One edit

 
Drawing of the Dance of the Forty-One Faggots, Mexico, c. 1901

In Mexico, the country's biggest scandal at the turn of the twentieth century was the so-called "Dance of the Forty-One" or "Dance of the Forty-One Faggots".[43][44] It refers to a police raid on November 18, 1901, during the government of Porfirio Díaz, on a private home, situated in the calle de la Paz (nowadays calle Ezequiel Montes), where at that moment a group of 41 men, 22 dressed as men, and 19 as women, were celebrating a ball. The Mexican press mocked cruelly the dancers, even as the government tried to cover up the incident, as many of the participants belonged to the higher echelons of the porfirian society. The list of names was never revealed.[43][44]

On Sunday night, at a house on the fourth block of Calle la Paz, the police burst into a dance attended by 41 unaccompanied men wearing women's clothes. Among those individuals were some of the dandies seen every day on Calle Plateros. They were wearing elegant ladies' dresses, wigs, false breasts, earrings, embroidered slippers, and their faces were painted with highlighted eyes and rosy cheeks. When the news reached the street, all forms of comments were made and the behavior of those individuals was subjected to censure. We refrain from giving our readers further details because they are exceedingly disgusting.[note 9]

— Contemporary press report.[44]

Even though the raid did not have any legal grounds, and was completely arbitrary, the 41 detained men ended up forcefully conscripted into the military:

The derelicts, petty thieves, and effeminates sent to Yucatán are not in the battalions of the Army fighting against the Maya Indians, but have been assigned to public works in the towns retaken from the common enemy of civilization.[note 10]

— El Popular, 25 November 1901[43][45]

The number 41 (or 42, as it was rumored that Ignacio de la Torre, Porfirio Díaz's son-in-law, had escaped) became part of Mexico's popular culture as a way to refer to homosexuals, passive homosexuals for the number 42.[46] The incident and the numbers were spread through press reports, but also through engravings, satires, plays, literature, and paintings; in recent years, they have even appeared on television, in the historical telenovela El vuelo del águila, first broadcast by Televisa in 1994. In 1906 Eduardo A. Castrejón published a book titled Los cuarenta y uno. Novela crítico-social. José Guadalupe Posada's engravings alluding to the affair are famous, and were frequently published alongside satirical verses:[44]

 
Engraving from Guadalupe Posada illustrating the poem to the left

Argentina edit

 
Several men dancing the tango on the banks of the Río de la Plata, 1904.

The Argentine tango, as a dance, was developed by the end of the 20th century among men, and by men that danced with other men in streets and brothels:

The society that begins to dance tango was mainly male, and thus, in public, it was danced by two men only, as the [Catholic] church applied its morals, and did not allow the union of a man and a woman in this type of dance [...] The Pope Pius X banished it, the Kaiser outlawed it to his officers.[note 11]

— Juliana Hernández Berrío: El Tango nació para ser bailado.[47]

At the beginning of the 1910s the tango was discovered by Europeans, and became fashionable in Paris, but as a dance between man and woman, in a more "decent" style, without "cortes y quebradas". Historical postcards of the 1920s and 30s also show women dancing tango. But these postcards come from cabarets in Paris, and have a particularly masculine, and voyeur accent.[48]

According to several testimonies, clandestine cross-dressing balls were very popular among middle and upper class gay men in Buenos Aires in the early-to-mid 20th century.[49]

Rio Carnival edit

In Brazil, homosexuality was legalized in 1830, and kept it legal in the new penal code of 1890. But there were many different laws about public indecency, vagrancy, transvestism, or "libertine" behavior that were used to control, and repress homosexuals.[50] But once a year, during the Carnival, the social mores relaxed, allowing transvestism, and dancing among men —and women—, beginning in the 1930s. The costumes in the Rio Carnival became more and more elaborate, and a jury begun to give prizes to the best; these shows evolved into full balls, where only 10% of the dancers were dressed as drag queens.[51]

Russia edit

There are reports of gay balls (baly zhenonenavistnikov, literally "balls of woman-haters") in Russia before the I World War, specifically in Moscow. These balls, even though they were celebrated in the zhenonenavistnik ("woman-haters") subculture, a hyper-masculine group of homosexuals, also accepted cross-dressers.[52]

 
Members of a clandestine gay group in Petrograd, in 1921

In 2013 a photograph (to the right) was published for the first time: it depicts a group of cross-dressed men from Petrograd that were celebrating a drag party on February 15, 1921, during the first years of the Soviet regime. The photo was taken by the forensic experts of the police that had raided the party being held in a private apartment, after receiving an anonymous tip-off about "antinatural activities" in a house in the Simeon street, number 6. Ninety-eight sailors, soldiers, and civilians were arrested —even though sodomy had been legalized in 1917.[53][52]

They had met to celebrate a "transvestite wedding", many dressed in feminine gowns, "Spanish dresses", and "white wigs", to dance the waltz and the minuet, and socialize with other men. The responsible Justice Commissar justified the raid saying that a public show of homosexual tendencies could endanger "non mature personalities". Even though none of the participants were condemned, the owner of the apartment was accused of running a brothel, according to article 171 of the Soviet penal code, a felony that could be punished with up to three years of prison, and confiscation of all, or some of the property.[53][52]

Lesbian balls edit

 
Two women dancing the waltz (c. 1892) by Toulouse Lautrec

Balls for lesbians were also quite common, even though not so much as male ones. Not only were they less in number, but there is less information about them, a problem common to all lesbian history. On the other hand, in western societies, two women dancing together publicly is still acceptable nowadays, and can be done without any suspicions of lesbianism.

In Mexico, on December 4, 1901, shortly after the raid to the Dance of the Forty-One, there was also a police raid of a lesbian ball in Santa María, but the incident had a much smaller social impact than the male equivalent.[46]

Hirschfeld, in his book Berlins drittes Geschlecht (1904), talks also about lesbian balls:

In a big hall, where the uranians celebrate their balls, every week there is an equivalent evening ball for uranierinnen, most of whom participate in men's clothing. Most homosexual women can be found at the same spot every year on the costume ball a lady from Berlin organizes. The ball is not public, but usually only accessible those that are known to one of the ladies on the committee. One of the participants drafts following portrayal: "On a beautiful winter evening, after 8 p.m., cars and cars drive in front of one of the first hotels in Berlin, where ladies and gentlemen descent in costumes of all countries, and epochs. Here you can see a dashing fraternity student with a prominent dueling scar, there a slim rococo gentleman helps gallantly his lady out of the equipage. More and more people fill the brightly lit rooms; now a fat Capuchin enters, to whom bow gypsies, Pierrots, sailors, clowns, bakers, lansquenets, smart officers, ladies and gents in riding gear, Boers, Japanese, and delicate Geishas. A Carmen with fire in her eyes burns a jockey, a passionately hot Italian befriends intimately a snow man. The in brightest colors [dressed] dazzling, happy multitude offers a unique, attractive tableau. The participating women first strengthen themselves on tables decorated with flowers. The director, in a charming velvet jacket, welcomes the guests in a short, sharp speech. Then, the tables are cleared. The "Danubian waves" sound, and accompany the happy dancing couples, that turn the night away in circles. From the neighboring rooms you can hear clear laughter, the clinking of glasses, and animated singing, but nowhere – wherever you look – are the limits of a fine, elegant fancy-dress ball overstepped. No discordant note tarnishes the general happiness, until the last participants leave the place in the dull crepuscular lights of a cold February morning, where for a few hours they could dream themselves as that what they are inside, amongst those that share their feelings.[note 12]

— Magnus Hirschfeld, Berlins Drittes Geschlecht (1904), "Kapitel 3"

Later in Germany, the "bowling club" Die lustige Neun ("The Funny Nine""), created in Berlin in 1924, continued organizing lesbian balls with 200 to 300 women at least until April 1940. It is unknown if the balls, known thanks to the descriptions in the Gestapo files, continued throughout the war years; fact is, the track is lost.[54]

Later development edit

From the World War II to Stonewall in Europe edit

In Switzerland, even with many difficulties, the homosexual movement kept its structures over the war. The Circle, a gay magazine, organized weekly club evenings in Zürich, that only subscribers could visit. Several elaborate systems were used to secure the anonymity of the participants, and only "Rolf", the editor of the magazine, had the names and addresses of everyone. For spring, summer, and fall big balls were organized, and there was also a big costume ball for carnival. An important effort was done to keep everything decent, respectable, and contained, and Rolf made sure that no man under 20 was present. This secrecy mentality was no longer acceptable to gays by the mid-1960s, and in 1967 the magazine and its organization disappeared.[55]

In France, during the occupation of Paris, all balls were prohibited, a situation that did not change after the allies entered the city.[28] During the war, the only possibility was to meet in the outskirts of Paris, as gays did on the Christmas Eve of 1935, when hundreds of men traveled 50 km in a bus from Paris to celebrate the traditional dinner.[29] After the war, the only possibility was to travel by train to the Bal de la Chervrière, in L'Étang-la-Ville, Yvelines, an establishment owned by a lesbian, "la Colonelle", that had been part of the resistance, and had enough contacts to keep her place open.[28]

The situation improved with the reopening of the Bal de la montaigne de Sainte-Geneviève in 1954, organized by Georges Anys, who would keep it open until the 1960s. Possibly the most important ball was the one celebrated every Sunday evening by the magazine and association Arcadie, the Cespala (Club littéraire et scientifique des pays latins), in the number 9 of the Rue Béranger, reserved exclusively to the members of the club.[28]

There was a short revival of the gay pre-war scene after the war in Germany. The Walterchens Ballhaus organized drag balls already in 1946, and the parties at Prince Sasha's were one of the centers of gay nightlife. In Frankfurt, in 1949 reopened the bar Fellsenkeller; the bar had a police permit that allowed men to dance together. By the beginning of the 1950s this revival had been thoroughly eliminated, and gay subculture had disappeared.[56]

After the war, Amsterdam became something of a gay mecca: the biggest gay dance hall in Europe was DOK (De Odeon Kelder), initially belonging to the COC (Cultuur en Ontspanningscentrum, "Center for Culture and Leisure"), it became independent under the direction of Lou Charité three years after. The COC opened then another dance club, De Shakel ("The Chain Link"). The city was quite accepting of these clubs, and gay men from all around the world traveled there for the opportunity to dance freely with other men.[57]

The struggles of the homophile movement to resist the pressure of society and the authorities, trying to gain respectability, and acceptance by passing, but at the same time tying to accommodate the need to socialize, and vent for gay men, can be illustrated by the Café 't Mandje: a small den in gay-accepting Amsterdam's Red-Light District, where prostitutes, pimps, seamen, gays and lesbians came openly together, allowed the dancing of two men only on the Queen's Birthday, once a year, as it did not have a dancing license.[58]

Another example is the origin of the Balletti Verdi affair ("green ballet"[note 13]): a series of private parties in Castel Mella, organized by two homosexuals for their friends, became a political scandal of enormous proportions in the Province of Brescia in 1960 when it was discovered that minors —between 18 and 21 years old— had participated. Additionally, the fact that there had been some prostitution going on had disastrous consequences for all the participants, most of them innocent, and ended with three suicides, one man fleeing the city, and many losing their jobs. A subsequent witch hunt against gays in Italy covered the whole land.[59][60] As late as 1973, in the last years of Franco's dictatorship, ten men were arrested in Sitges, Spain, for going out dancing in women's clothes. The press published their photos in drag, and made snide comments for days, calling them all kinds of names.[61][62]

Ball culture edit

In the U.S., cross-dressing balls evolved into the ballroom community, or ball culture, that started in the Harlem, and in Washington, D.C., in the 1960s.

[black men in the Harlem took the balls to ...] heights undreamed of by the little gangs of white men parading around in frocks in basement taverns. In a burst of liberated zeal they rented big places like the Elks Lodge on 160 West 129th Street, and they turned up in dresses Madame Pompadour herself might have thought twice about. Word spread around Harlem that a retinue of drag queens was putting together outfits bigger and grander than Rose Parade floats, and the balls began to attract spectators, first by the dozens and then by the hundreds, gay and straight alike. People brought liquor with them, sandwiches, buckets of chicken. As the audiences grew, the queens gave them more and more for their money. Cleopatra on her barge, all in gold lamé, with a half dozen attendants waving white, glittering palm fronds. Faux fashion models in feathered coats lined with mylar, so that when the coat was thrown open and a two-thousand-watt incandescent lamp suddenly lit, the people in the first few rows were blinded for minutes afterward.

— Michael Cunningham[63]

Soon the balls were divided in "houses", or "families", led by a charismatic figure.

Some regular house parties became institutionalized as drag "houses" and "families." The leader, or "mother," often provided not only the opportunity for parties but also instruction and mentoring in the arts of make-up, selecting clothes, lip-synching, portraying a personality, walking, and related skills. Those taught became "drag daughters," who in turn mentored others, creating entire "drag families." Drag houses became the first social support groups in the city’s gay and lesbian community [in Washington, D.C].

— Rainbow History Project[64]

The ballroom community is still active, as has been documented in the film Paris Is Burning (1990). It has had a notable influence, mainly through Madonna's "Vogue" video, where the dancers use the vogue dancing style, developed in the ball culture, imitating the movements of models on the catwalk. Beyoncé has also mentioned she was influenced by the ball culture, "how inspired she's been by the whole drag-house circuit in the States, an unsung part of black American culture where working-class gay men channel ultra-glamour in mocked-up catwalk shows. 'I still have that in me', she says of the 'confidence and the fire you see on stage [...]'".[65][66][67][68]

After Stonewall edit

 
The Imperial Court of New York's annual Night of a Thousand Gowns Coronation Ball in Times Square

After the Stonewall riots, and the appearance of the modern LGBT liberation movement, these extensive cross-dressing balls, as they had been celebrated until then, practically disappeared. There are a few notable exceptions, as the Life Ball in Vienna, celebrated yearly since 1992,[69] or the annual Night of a Thousand Gowns in New York City, organized by the Imperial Court System,[70] but in general they have been substituted by the dance club.

By the mid-1970s, initially in New York City, appeared the discotheque, with the corresponding disco music, and disc jockeys, in close relationship with the gay scene —see for example Studio 54. Discotheques, and their music soon became favorites of gay men, who found in its songs gay anthems, as It's raining men, Y.M.C.A., I'm coming out, or So many men, so little time, in spite of the homophobia of some of the divas singing.[71][72]

The mid-1980s saw the appearance of clubbing subculture, with centers in New York City, Ibiza, London, and Paris; one of its most iconic clubs being the Sound Factory in New York City. These clubs usually offered electronic dance music to big masses of gay men. By the end of the decade, and the beginning of the 1990s, the circuit parties appear: big, outdoors parties, similar to raves, very planned, that can go on for days, and that can draw patrons from a very large territory, even from other countries.[71]

Some circuit parties, like the White Party in Palm Springs, the Black and Blue Party in Montreal, and the Winter Party in Miami, attract gay men in the thousands, and the ten thousands. In Europe, the biggest circuit party is celebrated in Barcelona, with about 70,000 men participating.[73][74]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Own translation from original:

    Von einigen Wirten urnischer Lokale, aber durchaus nicht von diesen allein, werden namentlich im Winterhalbjahr große Urningsbälle veranstaltet, die in ihrer Art und Ausdehnung eine Spezialität von Berlin sind. Hervorragenden Fremden, namentlich Ausländern, die in der jüngsten der europäischen Weltstädte etwas ganz Besonderes zu sehen wünschen, werden sie von höheren Beamten als eine der interessantesten Sehenswürdigkeiten gezeigt. [...] In der Hochsaison von Oktober bis Ostern finden diese Bälle in der Woche mehrmals, oft sogar mehrere an einem Abend statt. Trotzdem das Eintrittsgeld selten weniger als 1,50 Mark beträgt, sind diese Veranstaltungen meist gut besucht. Fast stets sind mehrere Geheimpolizisten zugegen, die achtgeben, daß nichts Ungeziemendes vorkommt; soweit ich unterrichtet bin, lag aber noch nie ein Anlaß vor, einzuschreiten. Die Veranstalter haben Ordre, möglichst nur Personen einzulassen, die ihnen als homosexuell bekannt sind.

  2. ^ Own translation from original:

    Einige der Bälle erfreuen sich eines besonderen Renommées, vor allem der kurz nach Neujahr veranstaltete, auf dem die neuen, vielfach selbst gefertigten Toiletten vorgeführt werden. Als ich diesen Ball im letzten Jahr mit einigen ärztlichen Kollegen besuchte, waren gegen 800 Personen zugegen. Gegen 10 Uhr abends sind die großen Säle noch fast menschenleer. Erst nach 11 Uhr beginnen sich die Räume zu füllen. Viele Besucher sind im Gesellschafts- oder Straßen-Anzug, sehr viele aber auch kostümiert. Einige erscheinen dicht maskiert in undurchdringlichen Dominos, sie kommen und gehen, ohne daß jemand ahnt, wer sie gewesen sind; andere lüften die Larve um Mitternacht, ein Teil kommt in Phantasiegewändern, ein großer Teil in Damenkleidern, manche in einfachen, andere in sehr kostbaren Toiletten. Ich sah einen Südamerikaner in einer Pariser Robe, deren Preis über 2000 Francs betragen sollte.

  3. ^ Own translation from original:

    Nicht wenige wirken in ihrem Aussehen und ihren Bewegungen so weiblich, daß es selbst Kennern schwer fällt, den Mann zu erkennen. [...] Wirkliche Weiber sind auf diesen Bällen nur ganz spärlich vorhanden, nur dann und wann bringt ein Uranier seine Wirtin, eine Freundin oder – seine Ehefrau mit. Man verfährt im allgemeinen bei den Urningen nicht so streng wie auf den analogen Urnindenbällen, auf denen jedem »echten Mann« strengstens der Zutritt versagt ist. Am geschmacklosesten und abstoßendsten wirken auf den Bällen der Homosexuellen die ebenfalls nicht vereinzelten Herren, die trotz eines stattlichen Schnurrbartes oder gar Vollbartes »als Weib« kommen. Die schönsten Kostüme werden auf ein Zeichen des Einberufers mit donnerndem Tusch empfangen und von diesem selbst durch den Saal geleitet. Zwischen 12 und 1 Uhr erreicht der Besuch gewöhnlich seinen Höhepunkt. Gegen 2 Uhr findet die Kaffeepause – die Haupteinnahmequelle des Saalinhabers – statt. In wenigen Minuten sind lange Tafeln aufgeschlagen und gedeckt, an denen mehrere hundert Personen Platz nehmen; einige humoristische Gesangsvorträge und Tänze anwesender »Damenimitatoren« würzen die Unterhaltung, dann setzt sich das fröhliche Treiben bis zum frühen Morgen fort.

  4. ^ The original German, Hier ist's richtig!, can be translated in several ways; richtig can be translated as "right", "correct", "good", "adequate", "real", or "authentic". As can be seen in the text that follows, the meaning was not clear in German either.
  5. ^ Own translation from original:

    Ein Tanzsaal größeren Stils mit einem äußerst eleganten Publikum. Smokings und Fräcke und große Abendroben – so präsentiert sich die Normalität, die zum Schauen hierher kommt. Die Akteurs sind in großer Zahl vorhanden. Grelle Plakate locken schon am Eingang, und Malereien, in denen die Perversität ihrer selbst spottet, schmücken den Gang. An der Garderobe setzt der Nepp ein. ‚Hier ist’s richtig!‘ heißt es auf den Affichen. Eine geheimnisvolle Devise, unter der man sich allerhand vorstellen kann. Alles ist Kulisse, und nur der ganz Weltfremde glaubt an ihre Echtheit. Selbst die echten Transvestiten, die ihre Abart in den Dienst des Geschäftes stellen, werden hier Komödianten. Zwischen den Tänzen, bei denen auch der Normale sich den pikanten Genuss leisten kann, mit einem effeminierten Manne in Frauenkleidern zu tanzen, gibt es Brettldarbietungen. Eine männliche Chanteuse singt mit ihrem schrillen Sopran zweideutige Pariser Chansons. Ein ganz mädchenhafter Revuestar tanzt unter dem Scheinwerferlicht weiblich graziöse Pirouetten. Er ist nackt bis auf die Brustschilde und einen Schamgurt, und selbst diese Nacktheit ist noch täuschend, sie macht den Zuschauern noch Kopfzerbrechen, sie läßt noch Zweifel, ob Mann ob Frau. Eine der entzückendsten und elegantesten Frauen, die im ganzen Saale anwesend sind, ist oft der zierliche Bob, und es gibt Männer genug, die in der Tiefe ihres Herzens bedauern, daß er kein Mädchen ist, daß die Natur sie durch einen Irrtum um eine deliziöse Geliebte betrogen hat.

  6. ^ The author is describing the usual way to dance the "shimmy", a new dance style that scandalized the society at the time.
  7. ^ Translation by Florence Tamaigne (2006) from the original:

    Par quelques accords fêlés, le pianiste prélude à un shimmy. Les professionnels de l'endroit, payés pour donner le spectacle à la galerie, s'enlacent aussitôt. Ils ondulent plutôt qu'ils ne dansent. Ils se choquent le ventre d'un mouvement obscène, à chaque temps d'arrêt, impriment à leur buste de courts frémissements, et pincent délicatement entre leurs doigts la jambe du pantalon, qu'ils relèvent sur la bottine vernie à chaque pas en avant, en lançant de œillades à la clientèle. Ils sont habillés avec un grand raffinement. Certains semblent s'être rembourrés la poitrine avec l'ouate. D'autres exhibent des kimonos largement décolletés. L'un d'eux porte un costume oriental tout lamé d'argent.

  8. ^ In military circles it was not uncommon to organize balls where men would dance with each other, as women could not be part of the military, and very often were not available. There are several short films documenting the fact, as Jacks 'the Dasant', from 1922, that shows a ball celebrated on HMS Hood, with Brazilian, U.S., French, and Japanese sailors participating; Interned Sailors, from about 1914–1918, is a short film of unknown origin, depicting a group of sailors looking, while two play the accordion, and other dance together; or male soldiers dancing together during WWI, that shows a group of sailors dancing on a ship.
  9. ^ Own translation from original text:

    La noche del domingo fue sorprendido por la policía, en una casa accesoria de la 4a. calle de la Paz, un baile que 41 hombres solos verificaban vestidos de mujer. Entre algunos de esos individuos fueron reconocidos los pollos que diariamente se ven pasar por Plateros. Estos vestían elegantísimos trajes de señoras, llevaban pelucas, pechos postizos, aretes, choclos bordados y en las caras tenían pintadas grandes ojeras y chapas de color. Al saberse la noticia en los boulevares, se han dado toda clase de comentarios y se censura la conducta de dichos individuos. No damos a nuestros lectores más detalles por ser en sumo grado asquerosos.

  10. ^ Translation by Sifuentes-Jáuregui from original text:

    Los vagos, rateros y afeminados que han sido enviados a Yucatán, no han sido consignados a los batallones del Ejército que operan en la campaña contra los indígenas mayas, sino a las obras públicas en las poblaciones conquistadas al enemigo común de la civilización

  11. ^ Own translation from original:

    La sociedad en la cual se comienza a bailar tango era mayoritariamente masculina, por la tanto, a la luz pública se bailaba entre parejas de hombres únicamente, ya que la iglesia aplicaba su moralismo y no permitía la unión de un hombre y una mujer en esta clase de baile. [...] El Papa Pío X lo proscribió, el Káiser lo prohibió a sus oficiales.

  12. ^ Own translation from original text:

    In einem der großen Säle, in welchem die Urninge ihre Bälle veranstalten, findet auch fast jede Woche ein analoger Ballabend für Uranierinnen statt, von denen sich ein großer Teil in Herrenkostüm einfindet. Die meisten homosexuellen Frauen auf einem Fleck kann man alljährlich auf einem von einer Berliner Dame arrangierten Kostümfest sehen. Das Fest ist nicht öffentlich, sondern gewöhnlich nur denjenigen zugänglich, die einer der Komiteedamen bekannt sind. Eine Teilnehmerin entwirft mir folgende anschauliche Schilderung: »An einem schönen Winterabend fahren von 8 Uhr ab vor einem der ersten Berliner Hotels Wagen auf Wagen vor, denen Damen und Herren in Kostümen aller Länder und Zeiten entsteigen. Hier sieht man einen flotten Couleurstudenten mit mächtigen Renommierschmissen ankommen, dort hilft ein schlanker Rokokoherr seiner Dame galant aus der Equipage. Immer dichter füllen sich die strahlend erleuchteten weiten Räume; jetzt tritt ein dicker Kapuziner ein, vor dem sich ehrfurchtsvoll Zigeuner, Pierrots, Matrosen, Clowns, Bäcker, Landsknechte, schmucke Offiziere, Herren und Damen im Reitanzug, Buren, Japaner und zierliche Geishas neigen. Eine glutäugige Carmen setzt einen Jockey in Brand, ein feuriger Italiener schließt mit einem Schneemann innige Freundschaft. Die in buntesten Farben schillernde fröhliche Schar bietet ein höchst eigenartiges anziehendes Bild. Zuerst stärken sich die Festteilnehmerinnen an blumengeschmückten Tafeln. Die Leiterin in flotter Samtjoppe heißt in kurzer kerniger Rede die Gäste willkommen. Dann werden die Tische fortgeräumt. Die »Donauwellen« erklingen, und begleitet von fröhlichen Tanzweisen, schwingen sich die Paare die Nacht hindurch im Kreise. Aus den Nebensälen hört man helles Lachen, Klingen der Gläser und munteres Singen, nirgends aber – wohin man sieht – werden die Grenzen eines Kostümfestes vornehmer Art überschritten. Kein Mißton trübt die allgemeine Freude, bis die letzten Teilnehmerinnen beim matten Dämmerlicht des kalten Februarmorgens den Ort verlassen, an dem sie sich unter Mitempfindenden wenige Stunden als das träumen durften, was sie innerlich sind.«

  13. ^ "baletti" means literally ballet, and is the name given at the time to sexual scandals involving minors, from similar heterosexual cases; verde means "green", and it was considered the color of gays; it was the color of the carnation that Oscar Wilde wore on his lapel.

References edit

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External links edit

  •   Media related to Drag ball at Wikimedia Commons

cross, dressing, ball, balls, cross, dressing, balls, drag, balls, depending, place, time, type, were, public, private, balls, celebrated, mainly, first, third, twentieth, century, where, cross, dressing, ballroom, dancing, with, same, partners, allowed, 1900s. Gay balls cross dressing balls or drag balls depending on the place time and type were public or private balls celebrated mainly in the first third of the twentieth century where cross dressing and ballroom dancing with same sex partners was allowed By the 1900s the balls had become important cultural events for gays and lesbians even attracting tourists Their golden age was during the Interwar period mainly in Berlin and Paris even though they could be found in many big cities in Europe and the Americas such as Mexico City and New York City Contents 1 Precedents 2 Cross dressing balls 2 1 Germany 2 1 1 The Empire 2 1 2 The Weimar Republic 2 2 France 2 3 England 2 4 Spain 2 5 United States 2 5 1 Stag dance 2 5 2 Drag ball 2 6 Latin America 2 6 1 Dance of the Forty One 2 6 2 Argentina 2 6 3 Rio Carnival 2 7 Russia 2 8 Lesbian balls 3 Later development 3 1 From the World War II to Stonewall in Europe 3 2 Ball culture 3 3 After Stonewall 4 Notes 5 References 6 External linksPrecedents edit nbsp Molly or macaroni from the 18th century By the end of the 17th century a gay subculture is documented in Europe with cruising areas bars parties and balls cross dressers and slang Scholars like Randolph Trumbach consider it is the moment when gay subculture appears in Europe On the contrary historian Rictor Norton considers unlikely that such a subculture would appear fully formed and thinks that it was actually the increase in surveillance and police procedures that brought to the surface an underground culture that had not been visible up to that moment 1 The archives of the Portuguese Inquisition in Lisbon preserve information of the so called dancas dos fanchonos from the beginning of the 17 century 2 About 1620 the fachonos the baroque equivalent of modern drag queens organized big parties in the Gaia Lisboa the gay Lisbon These itinerant celebrations called escarramao or esparramao used to include pantomimes with racy scenes where some of the participants were dressed as women and other as men 3 His Majesty s High Court in Mexico City discovered in 1656 a similar case when Juan Correa an old man over 70 years old confessed that he had been committing the unspeakable vice since his childhood Correa s house in the outskirts of the city had been used as a meeting point to celebrate balls where many men dressed as women 4 Several studies have not found similar phenomena in the judicial cases in Aragon 5 Catalonia 6 the Basque Country 7 or Valencia 8 even though in the Valencian case there are evidences of a subculture and a possible gay ghetto In Spain cross dressing was socially only allowed for carnival when even those closest to the king could dress as women 9 On the other hand in France during Louis XIV s reign no ball was complete without cross dressers 9 By the end of the 17th century there was a completely developed gay subculture in London with the molly houses used as clubs where gays met regularly to drink dance and have fun These taverns are well known thanks to the Mother Clap s molly house scandal from 1726 when a police raid discovered that her molly house was a gay brothel 1 Cross dressing balls edit nbsp Hermann von Teschenberg 1866 1911 dressed as woman Teschenberg a cross dresser was one of the founders of the Scientific Humanitarian Committee Germany edit The Empire edit Berlin s clandestine gay underground can be followed up to the 18th century in spite of the persecution gays were suffering In Prussia Paragraph 143 of the penal code and later the introduction of Paragraph 175 in the German penal code with other laws for public scandal and child protection made the life of gays extremely difficult In fact the activities of Magnus Hirschfeld or the first homosexual movement could not avoid the regular police raids and closing of premises in the 1900s And not just the premises were being watched by the police in 1883 the moral police had 4799 transvestite and transgender woman under vigilance even though permits could be handed out to cross dressers in cases considered medical 10 It is thus surprising that beginning mid 19th century the Urningsball or Tuntenball came to be balls of uranians or queens tolerated but watched by the police By the 1900s these balls had achieved such a fame in Germany that people from all around the country and even foreign tourists would travel to Berlin to participate 10 These balls were celebrated in large ballrooms as the Deutscher Kaiser in the Lothringer Strasse or the Filarmonia in the Bernburgstrasse the Dresdner Kasino in the Dresdner Strasse or the Orpheum in the Alter Jakobstrasse 32 11 For example the Berliner Morgenpost described extensively on October 17 1899 a gay ball that had taken place in the hotel Konig von Portugal where balls were still being celebrated in 1918 10 The ball season used to begin in October and go until Easter with a frequency of several balls a week sometimes two the same day 11 Hirschfeld in his book Berlins drittes Geschlecht 1904 Berlin s Third Sex described the balls in following fashion The innkeepers of uranian taverns but certainly not just them organize large urning balls especially in the course of the winter that in their size and type are a specialty of Berlin Outstanding strangers especially foreigners who want to see something very special in the youngest European world cities are shown by higher officials to these balls as one of the most interesting sights During the high season from October to Easter these balls are held several times a week often even several a night Even though the entrance fee is rarely less than 1 50 marks these events are usually well visited Almost always several secret policemen are present that make sure that nothing disgraceful happens as far as I am informed there was never any occasion to intervene The organizers have the right to admit if possible only people who are known to them as homosexual note 1 Some of the balls were especially well known particularly those shortly after New Year on which the new often self made dresses are presented When I visited this ball last year with some medical colleagues there were about 800 people participating Around 10 o clock in the evening the large halls are still almost deserted The rooms begin to fill only after eleven o clock Many visitors dress in formal or street suit but many are costumed Some appear densely masked in impenetrable dominoes they come and go without anyone knowing who they are others reveal their faces at midnight some come in fantastical costumes a large part in evening gowns some in simple others in very elaborate toilets I saw a South American man in a robe from Paris its price had to be over 2 000 francs note 2 Not few seem so feminine in their appearance and movements that even connoisseurs find it hard to recognize the man Real women are only very sparse on these balls only now and then does a uranist bring his landlady a friend or his wife In the case of the uranist one does not proceed so strictly as on the analogous urninde balls on which real men are strictly denied access Most distasteful and repulsive sight on the balls are the not so infrequent gentlemen that in spite of coming as women keep their stately mustaches or even a full beard The most beautiful costumes are greeted by a sign of the ceremony master with a thundering fanfare and guided by him through the hall Between 12 and 1 o clock the ball usually reaches its peak At about 2 o clock the coffee break the main source of income for the owner takes place In a few minutes long tables are installed and layed with several hundred people sitting at them some humorous songs and dances of the attendant lady imitators season the conversation then the cheerful activity continues until the early morning note 3 Magnus Hirschfeld Berlins Drittes Geschlecht 1904 Kapitel 3 As a consequence of the Harden Eulenburg affair and the subsequent social upheaval the balls where prohibited in 1910 they were allowed again but they never achieved the splendor of this golden age 11 The Weimar Republic edit After the I World War appeared the first mass movements for homosexuals the Freundschaftsbund popular associations of gays and lesbians that dedicated an important part of their effort to socialization and diverse activities for their members like excursions visits sports and balls For example the club Kameradschaft camaraderie organized on November 1 1929 celebrating their anniversary a Boser Buben Ball Bad Boys Ball the club reached 100 members and survived until 1933 Kameradschaft tried to offer some support and activities for gays from lower extraction so their balls were celebrated on weekends Saturdays or Sundays and gathered about 70 men many without a job who could pay the low entry price 12 In 1922 the association Gesellschaftsklub Aleksander e V celebrated balls every day beginning 7 o clock p m with a quality orchestra In 1927 the Bund fur Menschenrecht BfM bought the Alexander Palast but that same year they changed to the Florida and the Tanz Palast salon of the Zauberflote in the Kommandantenstrasse 72 in Berlin The BfM balls took place from Tuesdays to Sundays the entry was free but you had to pay 50 Pfennig for a dance card that allowed you to actually dance 13 In the 1920s gay balls reached enormous sizes with premises filling several ballrooms with some thousands of men And not just in Berlin several other cities in Germany organized smaller balls for gays 12 nbsp The Eldorado of the Motzstrasse in Berlin 1932 The sign includes their motto Hier ist s Richtig In the 1920s and 30s there were uncountable bars cafes and dance halls in Berlin The most elegant could be found in West Berlin near the area formed by the Bulowstrasse the Potsdamer Strasse and the Nollendorfplatz reaching up to the Kurfurstendamm 13 No doubt the most famous was Eldorado that really was two one on the Lutherstrasse and a second one in the Motzstrasse 14 Curt Moreck Konrad Haemmerling described it in 1931 in his Fuhrer durch das lasterhafte Berlin Guide through the dissolute Berlin as an establishment of transvestites staged for the morbid fascination of the world metropolis The program at the Eldorado included loud and racy shows by drag queens addressed mostly to a heterosexual audience that now as then wanted to satisfy their curiosity and dared to visit the mysterious and infamous Berlin 15 Moreck continues even though he himself was encouraging and was part of this kind of voyeuristic tourism with his travel guide A dance hall of a larger style with an extremely elegant audience Tuxedos and tailcoats and full evening dresses this is the normality that comes to observe here The actors are present in large numbers Bright posters are already luring at the entrance and paintings where the perversity mocks itself decorate the corridor At the wardrobe begins the swindle Here it s right note 4 A mysterious motto that can mean anything Everything is staged scenery and only the worldly innocent believe in its authenticity Even the real transvestites who put their anomaly at the service of the business become comedians here Between the dances where even the normal man can afford the naughty pleasure of dancing with an effeminate man in female dress there are cabaret performances A tomboy chanteuse sings with her shrill soprano voice ambiguous Parisian chansons A very girlish revue star proceeds under the spotlight with female graceful pirouettes He is naked except for the breast plates and a loincloth and even this nakedness is deceptive it still makes the spectators question it still leaves doubts whether man or woman One of the most enchanting and elegant women present in the hall is often the dainty Bob and there are enough men who in the depths of their hearts are sorry that he is not a girl that nature through an error has deceived them of a delicate lover note 5 Curt Moreck 1931 16 nbsp Dance scene dancing people in Eldorado 1910 sketch by Ernst Ludwig Kirchner 1880 1938 Eldorado became one of the nocturnal cultural centers in Europe The establishment hosted from bank managers to members of parliament as well as theater actors and movie stars 17 Amongst them divas like Marlene Dietrich 18 often with her husband Rudolf Sieber and Anita Berber 18 singers like Claire Waldoff 19 and writers like Wolfgang Cordan 20 Egon Erwin Kisch or Josef Hora 21 Magnus Hirschfeld was well known there 22 The co founder and commander of the SA Ernst Rohm 23 was also a patron and Karl Ernst later a nazi politician and Gruppenfuhrer SA tried to survive for a time working depending on the source as a waiter 24 an employee 25 or a rent boy 26 in the Eldorado of the Lutherstrasse The ballroom cum cabaret has been mentioned directly or indirectly serving as inspiration in many literary works as in Mr Norris Changes Trains 1935 and Goodbye to Berlin 1939 by Christopher Isherwood or the memories of Erika and Klaus Mann The atmosphere has been captured in paintings by Otto Dix and Ernst Fritsch 13 By the end of the 1920s the German society had taken their image of homosexuals from this kind of establishment decadent refined depraved degenerate tightly linked to drugs wild sex and prostitution The Bund fur Menschenrecht tried to distance gays of this kind of milieu in 1927 but to no avail In 1932 the chancellor Franz von Papen started a campaign against the depraved night of Berlin and in October of that same year all balls for homosexuals were prohibited 13 On January 30 1933 the nazi party came to power and on February 23 1933 the Prussian Interior Minister ordered that all bars that have abused their permit to promote immorality be closed He was referring specially to those that are frequented by those who pay homage to the anti natural immorality On March 4 1933 the Berliner Tagblatt informed about the closing of some establishments the day before Of the over 100 establishments catering to homosexuals in Berlin very few survived and those would be used to help watch and control the homosexual population 27 France edit nbsp Drawing of a carnival ball about 1909 with the commentary AU BAL DE LA MI CAREME The drawing was done by Hungarian artist Miklos Vadasz and shows a blushing rich man arm in arm with a young woman herself kissing another man on the left what seems two to be men dancing together The image was published in the number 422 of the anarchist magazine L Assiette au Beurre titled Les p tits jeun hommes The little young men dedicated to the decadent aristocrats and the effeminate kept men In France until the end of the 19th century gays and lesbians met usually in private homes and literary salons hidden from the public with the Opera Ball in Paris one of the few exceptions The Opera Ball celebrated yearly for carnival allowed some small leeway The first big public ball that allowed cross dressing was the Bal Bullier in 1880 in the Avenue de l Observatoire followed by the Bal Wagram in 1910 28 After World War I Paris became one of the nightlife centers in Europe with focal points in Montmartre Pigalle and Montparnasse and numerous short lived bars catering to gays and lesbians surviving between police raids ruinous scandals and the public s insatiable thirst for new thrills Many establishments were also known for drug trafficking 29 Journalist Willy described the atmosphere in the bar The Petite Chaumiere catering to foreigners looking for strong sensations 29 The pianist gives a prelude to a shimmy and as if on cue the professionals who are paid to give the viewers a spectacle immediately latch onto one another They ondulate more than dance and thrust their pelvises obscenely shimmying their bosoms and delicately grasping the legs of their trousers which they raise above their shiny boots with each step forward all the while winking at the customers note 6 They wear very fine clothing and some appear to have built up their chests with cotton wadding Others wear low cut kimonos and one of them wears an Oriental costume all in silver lame note 7 Willy Le troisieme sexe 1927 p 173 174 29 nbsp A sign from the 1920s NoticeThe Gentlemen are requested to 1 No dancing with the hat on 2 No dancing together A proper outfit is strictly enforced In the 1920s there were several balls in the Bastille area these occurred mainly in the Rue de Lappe where workers drunken sailors and colonial soldiers gathered to dance It was not strictly a homosexual milieu but men could dance together and one could find a partner for the night Daniel Guerin described one of the dens as a place where workmen prostitutes society women johns and aunties all danced In those relaxed and natural days before the cops took over France a chevalier could go out in public with a mate of the same sex without being considered crazy On the other hand Willy presents a completely different aspect of the milieu What you see are little delinquents not too carefully washed but heavily made up with caps on their heads and sporting brightly colored foulards these are the guys who when they fail to make a buck here will certainly be found hauling coal or other cargo 29 The so called bal de folles and later bal de invertis flourished in Paris after the I World War and even in other French cities as Toulon In Paris homosexuals were attracted mainly to the Bal Musette de la Montaigne de Sainte Genevieve in the number 46 of the Rue Montaigne de Sainte Genevieve where you could find gays and lesbians 28 29 Later the big balls for carnival attracted a gay public as the one celebrated yearly in the Magic City in the rue de l Universite 180 inaugurated in 1920 and active until the prohibition on February 6 1934 28 In time the Carnaval interlope in Magic City became a big event visited by prominent vedette from the varietes like Mistinguett or Josephine Baker that handed over awards to the best drag queens The Bal Wagram offered the opportunity to cross dress twice a year at 1 a m the drag queens did the pont aux travestis a costume competition doing the catwalk in front of the most selected people of Paris that came to walk on the wild side for a night 28 The drag queens participating came from all walks of life and ages and presented a savage satire of the society its values and its traditional hierarchies with images of exaggerated femininity and masculinity countesses dressed in crinoline crazy virgins oriental dancers sailors ruffians or soldiers theirs names were correspondingly colorful Duchess of the Bubble the Infante Eudoxie the Mauve Mouse the Dark One Sweetie Pie Freda the Englishwoman Mad Maria the Muse the Teapot the She wolf Sappho Wet Cat Little Piano Princess of the Marshes Marguerite if Burgundy etc 29 Charles Etienne in his novel Notre Dame de Lesbos describes Didine in following fashion Stuffed into a yellow brocade dress wearing a red wig topped by a trembling tiara of paste the dress low cut and in the back naked to the waist revealing the physique of a prize fighter a man climbed the staircase twisting adroitly and with meticulous gestures lifting the long train of her skirts Charles Etienne Notre Dame de Lesbos translation Tamagne 2006 29 Many of the onlookers just went to insult and harass the gay people participating as Charles Etienne describes in his novel Le Bal des folles 29 After the bruising attack outside here the reception was more restrained but quite as bitter inside All along the balustrade clusters of people perched climbed and packed together to the point of smothering raised a mocking jeer two hundred heads with eyes flaming and mouths hurling insults a Greek chorus of poisonous epithets ridicule and slurs Charles Etienne Le Bal des folles translation Tamagne 2006 29 England edit nbsp Front page of the tabloid The Illustrated Police News on the week of the raid at Temperance Hall in Hulme Manchester 30 There are at least two instances of cross dressing balls that have been documented in England The first one was known through a police raid of a ball celebrated in the Temperance Hall in the Hulme area of Manchester On September 24 1880 the Chief Constable of Manchester received anonymous information about an event of an immoral character that was about to take place in the Temperance Hall of Hulme The detective Jerome Caminada was dispatched with police constables to observe the ball and make any necessary arrests 30 31 Of the 47 men that congregated all wore fancy dress costumes 22 as women a pair was dressed as Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn and another as Romeo and Juliet The windows of the Temperance Hall had mostly been blacked out and so Detective Caminada and his constables had to observe the ball from a neighbouring rooftop Caminada reported that the ball had begun at 9 00 pm that dancing had commenced at around 10 00 pm and that every now and then a couple disappeared into a side room Just after 1 00am mindful that some guests had started to leave Caminada gained entry to the ball by giving the password sister in an effeminate manner to a doorman dressed as a nun After the door was opened the police raided the building and detained all participants 30 31 The trial showed that some of the revellers were not from Manchester and were regulars of similar balls that were organized in several cities as Leeds or Nottingham The men were bound over to keep the peace on two sureties of 25 each a significant sum Some were unable to pay it and ended up in prison as a result All the arrested men had their names addresses and professions published widely LGBT History Month in the UK commissioned Stephen M Hornby and Ric Brady to write a three part play about the ball as part of the first OUTing The Past festival in 2015 in Manchester The play was called A Very Victorian Scandal 32 and Dr Jeff Evans acted as the Historical Adviser to the writers 33 Dr Matt Houlbrook of the University of Liverpool affirms that in the 1920s and 30s cross dressing balls were being held secretly almost every weekend gathering 50 to 100 men And this in spite of it being illegal and being a big personal risk for those participating they didn t just risk prison if found out they could lose their livelihood be isolated socially and finally suffer a nervous breakdown or try suicide In 1933 headlines informed about Lady Austin s Camp Boys scandal 34 35 The affair began when 60 men were detained in a private ball room in Holland Park Avenue in London after cross dressing police officers had been watching them dancing made up dressed as women and having sex Twenty seven men were arrested and convicted between 3 and 20 months of jail Even so many stood up for their behavior notoriously Lady Austin who said There is nothing wrong in who we are You call us nancies and bum boys but before long our cult will be allowed in the country 34 35 Spain edit Mid 19th century during the reign of Isabella II appeared the sociedades de baile ball societies mostly groups of young people that tried to rent some premises to organize a ball but there were also other more elegant or pretentious that rented theaters for their balls The ball societies exclusively catering to gays appeared shortly after mainly in Madrid and Barcelona as there were no special requirements to create one and could be established and broken up very easily The most important ball society for the Uranian flock met at the El Ramillete in the calle Alvareda in Madrid where you could count over a hundred sodomites with elegant suits and rich jewelry In Barcelona later during the regency of Maria Christina the biggest number of gay dancers met at the Liceo Rius 36 37 The dancing public was of all types but mainly transvestites and young men of the working class workers of trade and commerce workshop apprentices and servants for whom the balls were the highest point of their lives exploited by their employers and frightened of being discovered by the society The balls allowed them to forget their situation for a couple of hours express themselves with freedom mingle with their equals and with a little luck meet someone Other less fortunate as was the case for transvestites effeminate men and chulitos de barrio neighborhood thugs without a job or rejected by their families they used the balls to find their first time customers For carnival huge balls were celebrated and the boys spend the whole year preparing their costumes for that important day 36 At the beginning of the 20th century all these balls had already disappeared and were just a memory of the past as recounts the author Max Bembo in his book La mala vida en Barcelona The Bad Life in Barcelona I could not find in the homosexualism of Barcelona the appearance it used to have the parties where the baptism of homosexuals were celebrated the very scandalous balls the sardanapalic festivities the shame of the city It s very probable that the disappearance of these public balls was due to the application of laws of public indecency and the consequent withdrawal of the homosexual life into private residencies and clubs 37 36 United States edit Stag dance edit nbsp Cowboy stag dance from about 1910 During the 19th century in the United States mainly in the Great West Frontier there were many towns where women were few and far between So for cowboys miners loggers mountain men or railroad workers it was very difficult to find a woman and marry In these groups men often formed intimate friendships that sometimes ended in real love stories that were accepted as a fact of life It is difficult to know up to what point this was simply due to the lack of women or if precisely this kind of life attracted those men that preferred the company of other men 38 In this environment and in the military note 8 is where the stag dances developed and where men danced with each other without it having any special meaning Beemyn talks about the stag dances celebrated in San Francisco during the gold rush in 1849 similar to frontier celebrations called Rocky Mountain Rendezvous Thousands of young men arrived to the city from all continents converting a small frontier town into an amusement city where everything was possible Thanks to the lack of women and prejudices men had fun with each other also dancing In these balls the men that took the role of the woman usually wore a handkerchief knotted around their arm but there were also those that dressed as women 38 Drag ball edit Further information Pansy Craze nbsp A drag ball at a private home in Portland Oregon in the 1900s Drag balls in the United States can trace their origins to the debutante balls quadroon balls and costume parties at the end of the 19th century In the beginning they were simple parties where men dressed as women and women dressed as men could go and where two men could dance with each other The first recorded drag ball was the Hamilton Lodge Ball in 1869 39 40 There are records of more exclusive balls by the 1880s where homosexuals men and women could be counted in the hundreds up to 500 same sex couples that slowly waltzed the night away at the sound of an excellent orchestra 41 42 In the 1920s these balls had already become big social events in the gay and lesbian world where mainly men competed for the best costume Often they included a parade of the fairies to show the costumes and the participants with the most spectacular gowns received a prize in the form of money The judges often were personalities from literature and the show business It was mainly in the black communities of New York City Chicago Baltimore and New Orleans where these balls took place sometimes bringing in white party goers 41 42 In Manhattan these balls got to have official permits and police protection and security in places like the Webster Hall and the Madison Square Garden the Astor Hotel the Manhattan Casino later called Rockland Palace The Harlem Alhambra and the Savoy Ballroom in the Black Harlem and the New Star Casino in the Italian Harlem The planners of these balls became well known H Mann in the 1910s Kackie Mason in the 1920s and 30s Phil Black in the 1930s to 60s were celebrated in many a novel 41 42 In 1933 they were described as On the floor of the hall in every conceivable sort of fancy dress men quaver and palpitate in each other s embrace Many of the effeminate are elaborately coiffured in the powdered head dresses of the period of Madame Pompadour They wear billowy ballooning skirt of that picturesque pre guillotine era O thers wear the long tight fitting gowns which were a recent vogue while still others wear the long trailing skirts and the constricting corsets of the 1880s yards of elaborately furbelowed material frou frouing behind them when space permits op cit Chauncey 1994 nbsp A drag ball from the 1920s celebrated in the Webster Hall in Greenwich Village Lower Manhattan The most famous drag ball was the Masquerade and Civic Ball also known as Faggots Ball or Fairies Ball in Upper Manhattan s Harlem The Masquerade and Civic Ball was celebration held every two years beginning in 1869 organized by the Grand United Order of Odd Fellows an afro American association independent of other American fraternal orders that did not accept black men The ball was enormously popular attracting even white public but that didn t stop critics and hecklers And in spite of there being racial tensions gender restrictions two men could only dance together if one of them was dressed as a woman and class barriers these balls became some of the few places where black and white people could socialize and homosexuals might even find some romance 41 So one day a year the faggots mainly the effeminates didn t have to hide had a place where they could feel free leave behind their apprehension and embrace fun without fear In a world where homosexuals were harassed and despised routinely the possibility to see several thousands of them together celebrating themselves interacting with their equals allowed the creation of an extensive network and an underground of mutual help The balls were a central piece in the lives of many gays the gowns were prepared for months before and whatever happened there the gossip was discussed for months after 42 Mainly the smaller balls were the objective of police raids that sometimes arrested those participating To justify the arrests they used a law from 1846 that prohibited being in disguise in public even though it had practically only been used since the change of the century to harass transvestites Drag balls celebrated in private establishments and homes even though they were somewhat safer also were often visited by the police By the 1930s the tension with the police had extended to the balls with official permit signaling a change in the social mores that finally had the two last grand balls in the season 1930 31 canceled 42 The balls entered a definitive decadence after the derogation of the Prohibition in 1933 with the libertine culture of the speakeasies where cross dressing was allowed disappearing with it 41 Latin America edit Dance of the Forty One edit nbsp Drawing of the Dance of the Forty One Faggots Mexico c 1901 In Mexico the country s biggest scandal at the turn of the twentieth century was the so called Dance of the Forty One or Dance of the Forty One Faggots 43 44 It refers to a police raid on November 18 1901 during the government of Porfirio Diaz on a private home situated in the calle de la Paz nowadays calle Ezequiel Montes where at that moment a group of 41 men 22 dressed as men and 19 as women were celebrating a ball The Mexican press mocked cruelly the dancers even as the government tried to cover up the incident as many of the participants belonged to the higher echelons of the porfirian society The list of names was never revealed 43 44 On Sunday night at a house on the fourth block of Calle la Paz the police burst into a dance attended by 41 unaccompanied men wearing women s clothes Among those individuals were some of the dandies seen every day on Calle Plateros They were wearing elegant ladies dresses wigs false breasts earrings embroidered slippers and their faces were painted with highlighted eyes and rosy cheeks When the news reached the street all forms of comments were made and the behavior of those individuals was subjected to censure We refrain from giving our readers further details because they are exceedingly disgusting note 9 Contemporary press report 44 Even though the raid did not have any legal grounds and was completely arbitrary the 41 detained men ended up forcefully conscripted into the military The derelicts petty thieves and effeminates sent to Yucatan are not in the battalions of the Army fighting against the Maya Indians but have been assigned to public works in the towns retaken from the common enemy of civilization note 10 El Popular 25 November 1901 43 45 The number 41 or 42 as it was rumored that Ignacio de la Torre Porfirio Diaz s son in law had escaped became part of Mexico s popular culture as a way to refer to homosexuals passive homosexuals for the number 42 46 The incident and the numbers were spread through press reports but also through engravings satires plays literature and paintings in recent years they have even appeared on television in the historical telenovela El vuelo del aguila first broadcast by Televisa in 1994 In 1906 Eduardo A Castrejon published a book titled Los cuarenta y uno Novela critico social Jose Guadalupe Posada s engravings alluding to the affair are famous and were frequently published alongside satirical verses 44 nbsp Engraving from Guadalupe Posada illustrating the poem to the left Aqui estan los maricones muy chulos y coquetones Hace aun muy pocos dias Que en la calle de la Paz Los gendarmes atisbaron Un gran baile singular Cuarenta y un lagartijos Disfrazados la mitad De simpaticas muchachas Bailaban como el que mas La otra mitad con su traje Es decir de masculinos Gozaban al estrechar A los famosos jotitos Vestidos de raso y seda Al ultimo figurin Con pelucas bien peinadas Y moviendose con chic Here are the Faggots very Pretty and Coquettish It has only been a few days that on La Paz street the police came upon a grand and peculiar dance Forty one lizards half of whom were disguised as cute girls were dancing with much gusto The others with their suits that is masculine attire enjoyed hugging the famous little faggots Dressed in taffeta and silk in the latest style with well coiffed wigs and moving with chic anonymous translation by Sifuentes Jauregui 2002 45 Argentina edit See also Queer Tango nbsp Several men dancing the tango on the banks of the Rio de la Plata 1904 The Argentine tango as a dance was developed by the end of the 20th century among men and by men that danced with other men in streets and brothels The society that begins to dance tango was mainly male and thus in public it was danced by two men only as the Catholic church applied its morals and did not allow the union of a man and a woman in this type of dance The Pope Pius X banished it the Kaiser outlawed it to his officers note 11 Juliana Hernandez Berrio El Tango nacio para ser bailado 47 At the beginning of the 1910s the tango was discovered by Europeans and became fashionable in Paris but as a dance between man and woman in a more decent style without cortes y quebradas Historical postcards of the 1920s and 30s also show women dancing tango But these postcards come from cabarets in Paris and have a particularly masculine and voyeur accent 48 According to several testimonies clandestine cross dressing balls were very popular among middle and upper class gay men in Buenos Aires in the early to mid 20th century 49 Rio Carnival edit In Brazil homosexuality was legalized in 1830 and kept it legal in the new penal code of 1890 But there were many different laws about public indecency vagrancy transvestism or libertine behavior that were used to control and repress homosexuals 50 But once a year during the Carnival the social mores relaxed allowing transvestism and dancing among men and women beginning in the 1930s The costumes in the Rio Carnival became more and more elaborate and a jury begun to give prizes to the best these shows evolved into full balls where only 10 of the dancers were dressed as drag queens 51 Russia edit There are reports of gay balls baly zhenonenavistnikov literally balls of woman haters in Russia before the I World War specifically in Moscow These balls even though they were celebrated in the zhenonenavistnik woman haters subculture a hyper masculine group of homosexuals also accepted cross dressers 52 nbsp Members of a clandestine gay group in Petrograd in 1921 In 2013 a photograph to the right was published for the first time it depicts a group of cross dressed men from Petrograd that were celebrating a drag party on February 15 1921 during the first years of the Soviet regime The photo was taken by the forensic experts of the police that had raided the party being held in a private apartment after receiving an anonymous tip off about antinatural activities in a house in the Simeon street number 6 Ninety eight sailors soldiers and civilians were arrested even though sodomy had been legalized in 1917 53 52 They had met to celebrate a transvestite wedding many dressed in feminine gowns Spanish dresses and white wigs to dance the waltz and the minuet and socialize with other men The responsible Justice Commissar justified the raid saying that a public show of homosexual tendencies could endanger non mature personalities Even though none of the participants were condemned the owner of the apartment was accused of running a brothel according to article 171 of the Soviet penal code a felony that could be punished with up to three years of prison and confiscation of all or some of the property 53 52 Lesbian balls edit nbsp Two women dancing the waltz c 1892 by Toulouse Lautrec Balls for lesbians were also quite common even though not so much as male ones Not only were they less in number but there is less information about them a problem common to all lesbian history On the other hand in western societies two women dancing together publicly is still acceptable nowadays and can be done without any suspicions of lesbianism In Mexico on December 4 1901 shortly after the raid to the Dance of the Forty One there was also a police raid of a lesbian ball in Santa Maria but the incident had a much smaller social impact than the male equivalent 46 Hirschfeld in his book Berlins drittes Geschlecht 1904 talks also about lesbian balls In a big hall where the uranians celebrate their balls every week there is an equivalent evening ball for uranierinnen most of whom participate in men s clothing Most homosexual women can be found at the same spot every year on the costume ball a lady from Berlin organizes The ball is not public but usually only accessible those that are known to one of the ladies on the committee One of the participants drafts following portrayal On a beautiful winter evening after 8 p m cars and cars drive in front of one of the first hotels in Berlin where ladies and gentlemen descent in costumes of all countries and epochs Here you can see a dashing fraternity student with a prominent dueling scar there a slim rococo gentleman helps gallantly his lady out of the equipage More and more people fill the brightly lit rooms now a fat Capuchin enters to whom bow gypsies Pierrots sailors clowns bakers lansquenets smart officers ladies and gents in riding gear Boers Japanese and delicate Geishas A Carmen with fire in her eyes burns a jockey a passionately hot Italian befriends intimately a snow man The in brightest colors dressed dazzling happy multitude offers a unique attractive tableau The participating women first strengthen themselves on tables decorated with flowers The director in a charming velvet jacket welcomes the guests in a short sharp speech Then the tables are cleared The Danubian waves sound and accompany the happy dancing couples that turn the night away in circles From the neighboring rooms you can hear clear laughter the clinking of glasses and animated singing but nowhere wherever you look are the limits of a fine elegant fancy dress ball overstepped No discordant note tarnishes the general happiness until the last participants leave the place in the dull crepuscular lights of a cold February morning where for a few hours they could dream themselves as that what they are inside amongst those that share their feelings note 12 Magnus Hirschfeld Berlins Drittes Geschlecht 1904 Kapitel 3 Later in Germany the bowling club Die lustige Neun The Funny Nine created in Berlin in 1924 continued organizing lesbian balls with 200 to 300 women at least until April 1940 It is unknown if the balls known thanks to the descriptions in the Gestapo files continued throughout the war years fact is the track is lost 54 Later development editFrom the World War II to Stonewall in Europe edit In Switzerland even with many difficulties the homosexual movement kept its structures over the war The Circle a gay magazine organized weekly club evenings in Zurich that only subscribers could visit Several elaborate systems were used to secure the anonymity of the participants and only Rolf the editor of the magazine had the names and addresses of everyone For spring summer and fall big balls were organized and there was also a big costume ball for carnival An important effort was done to keep everything decent respectable and contained and Rolf made sure that no man under 20 was present This secrecy mentality was no longer acceptable to gays by the mid 1960s and in 1967 the magazine and its organization disappeared 55 In France during the occupation of Paris all balls were prohibited a situation that did not change after the allies entered the city 28 During the war the only possibility was to meet in the outskirts of Paris as gays did on the Christmas Eve of 1935 when hundreds of men traveled 50 km in a bus from Paris to celebrate the traditional dinner 29 After the war the only possibility was to travel by train to the Bal de la Chervriere in L Etang la Ville Yvelines an establishment owned by a lesbian la Colonelle that had been part of the resistance and had enough contacts to keep her place open 28 The situation improved with the reopening of the Bal de la montaigne de Sainte Genevieve in 1954 organized by Georges Anys who would keep it open until the 1960s Possibly the most important ball was the one celebrated every Sunday evening by the magazine and association Arcadie the Cespala Club litteraire et scientifique des pays latins in the number 9 of the Rue Beranger reserved exclusively to the members of the club 28 There was a short revival of the gay pre war scene after the war in Germany The Walterchens Ballhaus organized drag balls already in 1946 and the parties at Prince Sasha s were one of the centers of gay nightlife In Frankfurt in 1949 reopened the bar Fellsenkeller the bar had a police permit that allowed men to dance together By the beginning of the 1950s this revival had been thoroughly eliminated and gay subculture had disappeared 56 After the war Amsterdam became something of a gay mecca the biggest gay dance hall in Europe was DOK De Odeon Kelder initially belonging to the COC Cultuur en Ontspanningscentrum Center for Culture and Leisure it became independent under the direction of Lou Charite three years after The COC opened then another dance club De Shakel The Chain Link The city was quite accepting of these clubs and gay men from all around the world traveled there for the opportunity to dance freely with other men 57 The struggles of the homophile movement to resist the pressure of society and the authorities trying to gain respectability and acceptance by passing but at the same time tying to accommodate the need to socialize and vent for gay men can be illustrated by the Cafe t Mandje a small den in gay accepting Amsterdam s Red Light District where prostitutes pimps seamen gays and lesbians came openly together allowed the dancing of two men only on the Queen s Birthday once a year as it did not have a dancing license 58 Another example is the origin of the Balletti Verdi affair green ballet note 13 a series of private parties in Castel Mella organized by two homosexuals for their friends became a political scandal of enormous proportions in the Province of Brescia in 1960 when it was discovered that minors between 18 and 21 years old had participated Additionally the fact that there had been some prostitution going on had disastrous consequences for all the participants most of them innocent and ended with three suicides one man fleeing the city and many losing their jobs A subsequent witch hunt against gays in Italy covered the whole land 59 60 As late as 1973 in the last years of Franco s dictatorship ten men were arrested in Sitges Spain for going out dancing in women s clothes The press published their photos in drag and made snide comments for days calling them all kinds of names 61 62 Ball culture edit In the U S cross dressing balls evolved into the ballroom community or ball culture that started in the Harlem and in Washington D C in the 1960s black men in the Harlem took the balls to heights undreamed of by the little gangs of white men parading around in frocks in basement taverns In a burst of liberated zeal they rented big places like the Elks Lodge on 160 West 129th Street and they turned up in dresses Madame Pompadour herself might have thought twice about Word spread around Harlem that a retinue of drag queens was putting together outfits bigger and grander than Rose Parade floats and the balls began to attract spectators first by the dozens and then by the hundreds gay and straight alike People brought liquor with them sandwiches buckets of chicken As the audiences grew the queens gave them more and more for their money Cleopatra on her barge all in gold lame with a half dozen attendants waving white glittering palm fronds Faux fashion models in feathered coats lined with mylar so that when the coat was thrown open and a two thousand watt incandescent lamp suddenly lit the people in the first few rows were blinded for minutes afterward Michael Cunningham 63 Soon the balls were divided in houses or families led by a charismatic figure Some regular house parties became institutionalized as drag houses and families The leader or mother often provided not only the opportunity for parties but also instruction and mentoring in the arts of make up selecting clothes lip synching portraying a personality walking and related skills Those taught became drag daughters who in turn mentored others creating entire drag families Drag houses became the first social support groups in the city s gay and lesbian community in Washington D C Rainbow History Project 64 The ballroom community is still active as has been documented in the film Paris Is Burning 1990 It has had a notable influence mainly through Madonna s Vogue video where the dancers use the vogue dancing style developed in the ball culture imitating the movements of models on the catwalk Beyonce has also mentioned she was influenced by the ball culture how inspired she s been by the whole drag house circuit in the States an unsung part of black American culture where working class gay men channel ultra glamour in mocked up catwalk shows I still have that in me she says of the confidence and the fire you see on stage 65 66 67 68 After Stonewall edit nbsp The Imperial Court of New York s annual Night of a Thousand Gowns Coronation Ball in Times Square After the Stonewall riots and the appearance of the modern LGBT liberation movement these extensive cross dressing balls as they had been celebrated until then practically disappeared There are a few notable exceptions as the Life Ball in Vienna celebrated yearly since 1992 69 or the annual Night of a Thousand Gowns in New York City organized by the Imperial Court System 70 but in general they have been substituted by the dance club By the mid 1970s initially in New York City appeared the discotheque with the corresponding disco music and disc jockeys in close relationship with the gay scene see for example Studio 54 Discotheques and their music soon became favorites of gay men who found in its songs gay anthems as It s raining men Y M C A I m coming out or So many men so little time in spite of the homophobia of some of the divas singing 71 72 The mid 1980s saw the appearance of clubbing subculture with centers in New York City Ibiza London and Paris one of its most iconic clubs being the Sound Factory in New York City These clubs usually offered electronic dance music to big masses of gay men By the end of the decade and the beginning of the 1990s the circuit parties appear big outdoors parties similar to raves very planned that can go on for days and that can draw patrons from a very large territory even from other countries 71 Some circuit parties like the White Party in Palm Springs the Black and Blue Party in Montreal and the Winter Party in Miami attract gay men in the thousands and the ten thousands In Europe the biggest circuit party is celebrated in Barcelona with about 70 000 men participating 73 74 Notes edit Own translation from original Von einigen Wirten urnischer Lokale aber durchaus nicht von diesen allein werden namentlich im Winterhalbjahr grosse Urningsballe veranstaltet die in ihrer Art und Ausdehnung eine Spezialitat von Berlin sind Hervorragenden Fremden namentlich Auslandern die in der jungsten der europaischen Weltstadte etwas ganz Besonderes zu sehen wunschen werden sie von hoheren Beamten als eine der interessantesten Sehenswurdigkeiten gezeigt In der Hochsaison von Oktober bis Ostern finden diese Balle in der Woche mehrmals oft sogar mehrere an einem Abend statt Trotzdem das Eintrittsgeld selten weniger als 1 50 Mark betragt sind diese Veranstaltungen meist gut besucht Fast stets sind mehrere Geheimpolizisten zugegen die achtgeben dass nichts Ungeziemendes vorkommt soweit ich unterrichtet bin lag aber noch nie ein Anlass vor einzuschreiten Die Veranstalter haben Ordre moglichst nur Personen einzulassen die ihnen als homosexuell bekannt sind Own translation from original Einige der Balle erfreuen sich eines besonderen Renommees vor allem der kurz nach Neujahr veranstaltete auf dem die neuen vielfach selbst gefertigten Toiletten vorgefuhrt werden Als ich diesen Ball im letzten Jahr mit einigen arztlichen Kollegen besuchte waren gegen 800 Personen zugegen Gegen 10 Uhr abends sind die grossen Sale noch fast menschenleer Erst nach 11 Uhr beginnen sich die Raume zu fullen Viele Besucher sind im Gesellschafts oder Strassen Anzug sehr viele aber auch kostumiert Einige erscheinen dicht maskiert in undurchdringlichen Dominos sie kommen und gehen ohne dass jemand ahnt wer sie gewesen sind andere luften die Larve um Mitternacht ein Teil kommt in Phantasiegewandern ein grosser Teil in Damenkleidern manche in einfachen andere in sehr kostbaren Toiletten Ich sah einen Sudamerikaner in einer Pariser Robe deren Preis uber 2000 Francs betragen sollte Own translation from original Nicht wenige wirken in ihrem Aussehen und ihren Bewegungen so weiblich dass es selbst Kennern schwer fallt den Mann zu erkennen Wirkliche Weiber sind auf diesen Ballen nur ganz sparlich vorhanden nur dann und wann bringt ein Uranier seine Wirtin eine Freundin oder seine Ehefrau mit Man verfahrt im allgemeinen bei den Urningen nicht so streng wie auf den analogen Urnindenballen auf denen jedem echten Mann strengstens der Zutritt versagt ist Am geschmacklosesten und abstossendsten wirken auf den Ballen der Homosexuellen die ebenfalls nicht vereinzelten Herren die trotz eines stattlichen Schnurrbartes oder gar Vollbartes als Weib kommen Die schonsten Kostume werden auf ein Zeichen des Einberufers mit donnerndem Tusch empfangen und von diesem selbst durch den Saal geleitet Zwischen 12 und 1 Uhr erreicht der Besuch gewohnlich seinen Hohepunkt Gegen 2 Uhr findet die Kaffeepause die Haupteinnahmequelle des Saalinhabers statt In wenigen Minuten sind lange Tafeln aufgeschlagen und gedeckt an denen mehrere hundert Personen Platz nehmen einige humoristische Gesangsvortrage und Tanze anwesender Damenimitatoren wurzen die Unterhaltung dann setzt sich das frohliche Treiben bis zum fruhen Morgen fort The original German Hier ist s richtig can be translated in several ways richtig can be translated as right correct good adequate real or authentic As can be seen in the text that follows the meaning was not clear in German either Own translation from original Ein Tanzsaal grosseren Stils mit einem ausserst eleganten Publikum Smokings und Fracke und grosse Abendroben so prasentiert sich die Normalitat die zum Schauen hierher kommt Die Akteurs sind in grosser Zahl vorhanden Grelle Plakate locken schon am Eingang und Malereien in denen die Perversitat ihrer selbst spottet schmucken den Gang An der Garderobe setzt der Nepp ein Hier ist s richtig heisst es auf den Affichen Eine geheimnisvolle Devise unter der man sich allerhand vorstellen kann Alles ist Kulisse und nur der ganz Weltfremde glaubt an ihre Echtheit Selbst die echten Transvestiten die ihre Abart in den Dienst des Geschaftes stellen werden hier Komodianten Zwischen den Tanzen bei denen auch der Normale sich den pikanten Genuss leisten kann mit einem effeminierten Manne in Frauenkleidern zu tanzen gibt es Brettldarbietungen Eine mannliche Chanteuse singt mit ihrem schrillen Sopran zweideutige Pariser Chansons Ein ganz madchenhafter Revuestar tanzt unter dem Scheinwerferlicht weiblich graziose Pirouetten Er ist nackt bis auf die Brustschilde und einen Schamgurt und selbst diese Nacktheit ist noch tauschend sie macht den Zuschauern noch Kopfzerbrechen sie lasst noch Zweifel ob Mann ob Frau Eine der entzuckendsten und elegantesten Frauen die im ganzen Saale anwesend sind ist oft der zierliche Bob und es gibt Manner genug die in der Tiefe ihres Herzens bedauern dass er kein Madchen ist dass die Natur sie durch einen Irrtum um eine deliziose Geliebte betrogen hat The author is describing the usual way to dance the shimmy a new dance style that scandalized the society at the time Translation by Florence Tamaigne 2006 from the original Par quelques accords feles le pianiste prelude a un shimmy Les professionnels de l endroit payes pour donner le spectacle a la galerie s enlacent aussitot Ils ondulent plutot qu ils ne dansent Ils se choquent le ventre d un mouvement obscene a chaque temps d arret impriment a leur buste de courts fremissements et pincent delicatement entre leurs doigts la jambe du pantalon qu ils relevent sur la bottine vernie a chaque pas en avant en lancant de œillades a la clientele Ils sont habilles avec un grand raffinement Certains semblent s etre rembourres la poitrine avec l ouate D autres exhibent des kimonos largement decolletes L un d eux porte un costume oriental tout lame d argent In military circles it was not uncommon to organize balls where men would dance with each other as women could not be part of the military and very often were not available There are several short films documenting the fact as Jacks the Dasant from 1922 that shows a ball celebrated on HMS Hood with Brazilian U S French and Japanese sailors participating Interned Sailors from about 1914 1918 is a short film of unknown origin depicting a group of sailors looking while two play the accordion and other dance together or male soldiers dancing together during WWI that shows a group of sailors dancing on a ship Own translation from original text La noche del domingo fue sorprendido por la policia en una casa accesoria de la 4a calle de la Paz un baile que 41 hombres solos verificaban vestidos de mujer Entre algunos de esos individuos fueron reconocidos los pollos que diariamente se ven pasar por Plateros Estos vestian elegantisimos trajes de senoras llevaban pelucas pechos postizos aretes choclos bordados y en las caras tenian pintadas grandes ojeras y chapas de color Al saberse la noticia en los boulevares se han dado toda clase de comentarios y se censura la conducta de dichos individuos No damos a nuestros lectores mas detalles por ser en sumo grado asquerosos Translation by Sifuentes Jauregui from original text Los vagos rateros y afeminados que han sido enviados a Yucatan no han sido consignados a los batallones del Ejercito que operan en la campana contra los indigenas mayas sino a las obras publicas en las poblaciones conquistadas al enemigo comun de la civilizacion Own translation from original La sociedad en la cual se comienza a bailar tango era mayoritariamente masculina por la tanto a la luz publica se bailaba entre parejas de hombres unicamente ya que la iglesia aplicaba su moralismo y no permitia la union de un hombre y una mujer en esta clase de baile El Papa Pio X lo proscribio el Kaiser lo prohibio a sus oficiales Own translation from original text In einem der grossen Sale in welchem die Urninge ihre Balle veranstalten findet auch fast jede Woche ein analoger Ballabend fur Uranierinnen statt von denen sich ein grosser Teil in Herrenkostum einfindet Die meisten homosexuellen Frauen auf einem Fleck kann man alljahrlich auf einem von einer Berliner Dame arrangierten Kostumfest sehen Das Fest ist nicht offentlich sondern gewohnlich nur denjenigen zuganglich die einer der Komiteedamen bekannt sind Eine Teilnehmerin entwirft mir folgende anschauliche Schilderung An einem schonen Winterabend fahren von 8 Uhr ab vor einem der ersten Berliner Hotels Wagen auf Wagen vor denen Damen und Herren in Kostumen aller Lander und Zeiten entsteigen Hier sieht man einen flotten Couleurstudenten mit machtigen Renommierschmissen ankommen dort hilft ein schlanker Rokokoherr seiner Dame galant aus der Equipage Immer dichter fullen sich die strahlend erleuchteten weiten Raume jetzt tritt ein dicker Kapuziner ein vor dem sich ehrfurchtsvoll Zigeuner Pierrots Matrosen Clowns Backer Landsknechte schmucke Offiziere Herren und Damen im Reitanzug Buren Japaner und zierliche Geishas neigen Eine glutaugige Carmen setzt einen Jockey in Brand ein feuriger Italiener schliesst mit einem Schneemann innige Freundschaft Die in buntesten Farben schillernde frohliche Schar bietet ein hochst eigenartiges anziehendes Bild Zuerst starken sich die Festteilnehmerinnen an blumengeschmuckten Tafeln Die Leiterin in flotter Samtjoppe heisst in kurzer kerniger Rede die Gaste willkommen Dann werden die Tische fortgeraumt Die Donauwellen erklingen und begleitet von frohlichen Tanzweisen schwingen sich die Paare die Nacht hindurch im Kreise Aus den Nebensalen hort man helles Lachen Klingen der Glaser und munteres Singen nirgends aber wohin man sieht werden die Grenzen eines Kostumfestes vornehmer Art uberschritten Kein Misston trubt die allgemeine Freude bis die letzten Teilnehmerinnen beim matten Dammerlicht des kalten Februarmorgens den Ort verlassen an dem sie sich unter Mitempfindenden wenige Stunden als das traumen durften was sie innerlich sind baletti means literally ballet and is the name given at the time to sexual scandals involving minors from similar heterosexual cases verde means green and it was considered the color of gays it was the color of the carnation that Oscar Wilde wore on his lapel References edit a b Norton Rictor 2008 06 15 The Gay Subculture in Early Eighteenth Century London Rick Norton s Web Page Retrieved 2013 10 12 Rapp Linda 2010 05 18 Portugal glbtq An Encyclopedia of Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender and Queer Culture Archived from the original on 2014 11 29 Retrieved 2013 10 12 Torrao Filho Almilcar 2000 Tribades galantes fanchonos militantes in Portuguese GLS pp 140 ISBN 85 86755 24 9 Garza Federico 2002 Quemando Mariposas Sodomia e Imperio en Andalucia y Mexico siglos XVI XVII in Spanish Laertes pp 189 192 ISBN 84 7584 480 4 Fernandez Andre 2003 Au nom du sexe inquisition et repression sexuelle en Aragon 1560 1700 in French Paris L Harmattan ISBN 2747545261 Riera i Sans Jaume 2014 Sodomites catalans Historia i vida segles XIII XVIII in Catalan Barcelona Base ISBN 978 84 15711 85 8 Alvarez Urcelay Milagros 2012 Causando gran escandalo e murmuracion Sexualidad transgresora y su castigo en Gipuzkoa durante los siglos XVI XVII y XVIII in Spanish Bilbao Universidad del Pais Vasco Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea Argitalpen Zerbitzua Servicio Editorial ISBN 978 84 9860 734 5 Carrasco Rafael 1985 Inquisicion y represion sexual en Valencia historia de los sodomitas 1565 1785 in Spanish Barcelona Laertes ISBN 8475840485 a b Godard Didier 2002 Le gout de monsieur l homosexualite masculine au XVIIe siecle in French Montblanc H amp O pp 195 196 ISBN 2845470428 a b c Sternweiler Andreas 1997 Sternweiler Andreas Hannesen Hans Gerhard eds Goodbye to Berlin 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung in German Berlin Verlag Rosa Winkel pp 70 74 ISBN 3 86149 062 5 a b c Theis Wolfgang Sternweiler Andreas 1984 Berlin Museum ed Eldorado Homosexuelle Frauen und Manner in Berlin 1850 1950 Geschichte Alltag und Kultur in German Berlin Frohlich und Kaufmann pp 60 61 ISBN 3 88725 068 0 a b Sternweiler Andreas 1997 Sternweiler Andreas Hannesen Hans Gerhard eds Goodbye to Berlin 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung in German Berlin Verlag Rosa Winkel pp 95 104 ISBN 3 86149 062 5 a b c d Theis Wolfgang Sternweiler Andreas 1984 Berlin Museum ed Eldorado Homosexuelle Frauen und Manner in Berlin 1850 1950 Geschichte Alltag und Kultur in German Berlin Frohlich und Kaufmann pp 65 73 ISBN 3 88725 068 0 Sternweiler Andreas 1997 Sternweiler Andreas Hannesen Hans Gerhardhea eds Goodbye to Berlin 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung in German Berlin Verlag Rosa Winkel pp 126 128 ISBN 3 86149 062 5 Raber Ralf Jorg 2003 Invertito Jahrbuch fur die Geschichte der Homosexualitaten 5 Jahrgang in German MannerschwarmSkript Verlag pp 50 52 ISBN 3 935596 25 1 Moreck Curt 1931 Fuhrer durch das lasterhafte Berlin in German Leipzig Verlag Moderne Stadtfuhrer Nicolaische Verlagsbuchhandlung pp 180 f ISBN 3 87584 583 8 Sachse Peter 1927 Berliner Journal in German a b Lutgens Annelie 1991 Nur ein Paar Augen sein Jeanne Mammen eine Kunstlerin in ihrer Zeit in German Berlin p 67 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Bret David 1996 Marlene My Friend An Intimate Biography Robson p 21 ISBN 0 86051 844 2 Cordan Wolfgang 2003 Die Matte Autobiografische Aufzeichnungen Herausgegeben und mit einem Nachwort versehen von Manfred Herzer in German Hamburg MannerschwarmSkript Kisch Egon Erwin 1998 Briefe an Jarmila in German Das Neue Berlin p 63 ISBN 3 360 00856 1 Haeberle E J 1984 Gruyter Walter de ed Einfuhrung in den Jubilaums Nachdruck von Magnus Hirschfeld Die Homosexualitat des Mannes und des Weibes 1914 in German Berlin New York p V XXXI Archived from the original on 2009 01 07 Retrieved 2017 06 15 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Delmer Sefton 1962 10 31 Ein Photo von Stalins Ohrlappchen Auszuge aus dem Buch Die Deutschen und ich von Sefton Delmer Der Spiegel in German p 46 Retrieved 2014 08 04 extracts from the book Gruyter Walter Die Deutschen und ich Allardt Helmut 1979 Politik vor und hinter den Kulissen Erfahrungen eines Diplomaten zwischen Ost und West in German Dusseldorf Econ p 24 ISBN 3 430 11027 0 Gisevius Hans Bernd 1946 Bis zum Bittern Ende in German Fretz amp Wasmuth p 180 Andreas Sternweiler ed 1998 Liebe Forschung Lehre Der Kunsthistoriker Christian Adolf Isermeyer Lebensgeschichten Berlin ISBN 3 86149 082 X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link citing from Ein schwuler Emigrant 7 Grau Gunter 1993 Homosexualitat in der NS Zeit in German Frankfurt am Main Fischer Taschenbuchverlag pp 54 56 f ISBN 3 596 11254 0 a b c d e f g Eribon Didier ed 2003 Bals Dictionnaire des cultures gays et lesbiennes in French Paris Larousse pp 55 56 ISBN 2035051649 a b c d e f g h i j Tamagne Florence 2006 A history of homosexuality in Europe Volume I amp II Berlin London Paris 1919 1939 New York Algora Publishing pp 50 53 ISBN 0 87586 355 8 a b c Buckley Angela 2014 06 24 Detective Caminada and the cross dressing ball The Virtual Victorian Retrieved 2015 06 07 a b LGBT History Source Guide Launch Manchester s Drag Ball Mon 22 August Archives 2011 08 17 Retrieved 2015 06 07 Our Hidden Histories Fyne Times 2019 02 08 Retrieved 2019 09 22 Barlow Nigel 2015 02 02 A very Victorian Scandal The Hulme Fancy Dress Ball Raid About Manchester Retrieved 2019 09 22 a b Branigan Tania 2004 07 03 Pride and prejudice in the gay 1920s The Guardian Retrieved 2015 06 07 a b Transpontine 2008 05 27 A London Drag Ball 1930s History is made at night Retrieved 2015 06 07 a b c Fuentes Pablo 1999 Navarro Francesc ed homo tod la historia El cambio finisecular in Spanish Barcelona Baupres p 15 ISBN 84 345 6842 X a b Vazquez Garcia Francisco Cleminson Richard 2011 Los Invisibles una historia de la homosexualidad masculina en Espana 1850 1939 in Spanish Granada Comares p 263 ISBN 978 84 9836 783 6 a b Beemyn Brett Genny 2007 Aldrich Robert ed Gleich und anders in German Hamburg Murmann pp 158 159 ISBN 978 3 938017 81 4 Stabbe Oliver 2016 03 30 Queens and queers The rise of drag ball culture in the 1920s National Museum of American History Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 2022 10 27 Fleeson Lucinda June 27 2007 The Gay 30s Chicago Magazine Retrieved 2022 10 27 a b c d e Weems Mickey 2011 12 08 Drag Ball Qualia Folk Archived from the original on 2014 08 19 Retrieved 2014 08 02 a b c d e Chauncey George 1994 Gay New York Gender urban culture and the making of the gay male world 1890 1940 Nueva York Basic Books pp 291 299 ISBN 0 465 02621 4 a b c Monsivais Carlos November 2001 La Gran Redada in Spanish Enkidu Archived from the original on 2013 04 05 Retrieved 2007 12 16 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link a b c d Hernandez Cabrera Miguel 2002 Los cuarenta y uno cien anos despues in Spanish Isla ternura Archived from the original on 2013 04 30 Retrieved 2007 12 16 a b Sifuentes Jauregui Ben 2002 Transvestism Masculinity and Latin American Literature Genders Share Flesh Springer pp 32 34 ISBN 9780230107281 Retrieved 15 June 2017 a b Murray Stephen O Mexico glbtq Archived from the original on 2015 07 01 Retrieved 2007 11 07 Hernandez Berrio Juliana El Tango nacio para ser bailado Medellin Cultura in Spanish Archived from the original on 2014 08 01 Retrieved 2014 07 31 Marinas J Alberto Ellas bailan solas www Esto es in Spanish Archived from the original on 2010 06 18 Retrieved 2014 07 31 Demaria Gonzalo February 6 2020 Caceria paperback Coleccion Andanzas in Spanish 1st ed Buenos Aires Editorial Planeta p 12 ISBN 978 950 49 6968 6 Green James N Brazil glbtq Archived from the original on 2014 10 26 Retrieved 2015 08 09 Green James N Rio de Janeiro glbtq Archived from the original on 2014 10 26 Retrieved 2015 08 09 a b c Healey Dan October 2013 Sapper Manfred Weichsel Volker eds Beredtes Schweigen Zur Geschichte der Homosexualitat in Russland Osteuropa Spektralanalyse Homosexualitat und Ihre Feinde in German 11 14 ISBN 978 3 8305 3180 7 ISSN 0030 6428 Archived from the original on 2016 08 22 Retrieved 2014 08 01 a b Petrograd 1921 god policejskij rejd na gej klub OUTLOUD in Russian 2013 09 19 Retrieved 2014 08 01 Dobler Jens 2003 Boxhammer Ingeborg Leidinger Christiane eds Lesbische Berliner Subkultur im Nationalsozialismus Online Projekt Lesbengeschichte in German Archived from the original on 2012 01 13 Retrieved 2009 05 09 Steinle Karl Heinz 1997 Der Kreis Entwicklungshilfe aus der Schweiz In Sternweiler Andreas Hannesen Hans Gerhardt eds Goodbye Berlin 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung in German 1st ed Berlin Verlag Rosa Winkel pp 241 242 ISBN 3 86149 062 5 Stienle Karl Heinz 1997 Homophiles Deutschland West und Ost In Sternweiler Andreas Hannesen Hans Gerhardt eds Goodbye Berlin 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung in German 1st ed Berlin Verlag Rosa Winkel pp 195 196 200 ISBN 3 86149 062 5 Hekma Gert 1997 Amsterdam Die schwule Hauptstadt der Nachkriegszeit In Sternweiler Andreas Hannesen Hans Gerhardt eds Goodbye Berlin 100 Jahre Schwulenbewegung in German 1st ed Berlin Verlag Rosa Winkel p 210 ISBN 3 86149 062 5 Cafe t Mandje was sinds 1927 het cafe van de legendarische Bet van Beeren 12 februari 1902 16 juli 1967 Cafe t Mandje webpage 4 August 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2017 But Bet would not allow kissing in the bar There were vice laws to consider and the liquor license could be at stake The bar did not have a dance license There was a custom made billiard table in the middle of it no room for dancing Only on the Queen s birthday in those days on April 30th almost anything was permitted even dancing in a bar without a proper license So the billiard table was disassembled for a day and at Bet van Beeren s Cafe t Mandje men danced with men and women with women Bolognini Stefano March 2001 I Balletti verdi storia di uno scandalo Stefano Bolognini s Web Page in Italian Archived from the original on 2008 05 08 Retrieved 2014 07 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Scalise Daniele 2001 05 16 Balletti verdi uno scandalo omosessuale L Espresso in Italian Archived from the original on 2008 05 08 Retrieved 2014 07 31 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Omeda Fernando 2004 El latigo y la pluma Homosexuales en la Espana de Franco Madrid Oberon pp 223 225 ISBN 84 96052 68 0 Arnalte Arturo 2003 Redada de violetas Represion de los homosexuales durante el franquismo Madrid La esfera de los libros pp 262 265 ISBN 84 9734 150 3 Cunningham Michael The Slap of Love Open City Retrieved 2014 08 05 The Rainbow History Project Drag in DC Rainbow History Project 2000 2007 Archived from the original on 2014 06 14 Retrieved 2007 10 20 Beyonce Knowles Queen B The Independent 2006 09 03 Archived from the original on 2007 10 01 Bailey Marlon M 2010 Global Circuits of Blackness University of Illinois Press Bailey Marlon M 2011 Gender Racial Realness Theorizing the Gender System in Ballroom Culture Vol 37 pp 365 386 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Rowan Diana Long Dennis D Johnson Darrin April 2013 Identity and Self Presentation in the House Ball Culture A Primer for Social Workers Vol 25 pp 178 196 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a work ignored help Muller Nina 2014 02 22 Alles pailletti am Tuntenball Kleine Zeitung in German Archived from the original on 2014 11 02 Retrieved 2014 07 31 Wong Curtis M 2015 04 19 The Imperial Court s Night Of A Thousand Gowns Brings Style And Sass To New York For A Great Gay Cause HuffPost Retrieved 25 June 2017 a b Thevenin P 2003 Eribon Didier ed Dictionnaire des cultures gays et lesbiennes in French Larousse pp 154 155 ISBN 2 03 505164 9 Mira Alberto 2002 Para entendernos Diccionario de cultura homosexual gay y lesbica in Spanish Barcelona la tempestad pp 239 240 ISBN 84 7948 959 6 Baquero Camilo S 2013 08 19 El 80 de los 70 000 asistentes al Circuit han sido extranjeros El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 2014 02 16 Baquero Camilo S 2013 08 08 El lado gay de la marca Barcelona El Pais in Spanish Retrieved 2014 02 16 External links edit nbsp Media related to Drag ball at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cross dressing ball amp oldid 1218853175, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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