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Judy Garland as a gay icon

American actress and singer Judy Garland (1922–1969) is widely considered as a gay icon. The Advocate has called Garland "The Elvis of homosexuals".[1] The reasons frequently given for her standing as an icon among gay men are admiration of her ability as a performer, the way her personal struggles seemed to mirror those of gay men in America during the height of her fame, and her value as a camp figure.[2] Garland's role as Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz is particularly known for contributing to this status. In the 1960s, when a reporter asked how she felt about having a large gay following, Garland replied, "I couldn't care less. I sing to people!"[3]

Judy Garland as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz (1939)

Garland as tragic figure edit

The aspects of gay identification with Garland were being discussed in the mainstream as early as 1967. Time magazine, in reviewing Garland's 1967 Palace Theatre engagement, disparagingly noted that a "disproportionate part of her nightly claque seems to be homosexual". It goes on to say that "[t]he boys in the tight trousers"[4] (a phrase Time repeatedly used to describe gay men, as when it described "ecstatic young men in tight trousers pranc[ing] down the aisles to toss bouquets of roses" to another gay icon, Marlene Dietrich)[5] would "roll their eyes, tear at their hair and practically levitate from their seats" during Garland's performances. Time then attempted to explain Garland's appeal to the homosexual, consulting psychiatrists who opined that "the attraction [to Garland] might be made considerably stronger by the fact that she has survived so many problems; homosexuals identify with that kind of hysteria" and that "Judy was beaten up by life, embattled, and ultimately had to become more masculine. She has the power that homosexuals would like to have, and they attempt to attain it by idolizing her."[4]

Writer William Goldman, in a piece for Esquire magazine about the same Palace engagement, again disparages the gay men in attendance, dismissing them as "fags" who "flit by" chattering inanely. He goes on, however, to advance the tragic figure theory as well. After first suggesting that "if [homosexuals] have an enemy, it is age. And Garland is youth, perennially, over the rainbow",[6] he wrote:

Homosexuals tend to identify with suffering. They are a persecuted group and they understand suffering. And so does Garland. She's been through the fire and lived – all the drinking and divorcing, all the pills and all the men, all the poundage come and gone – brothers and sisters, she knows.[6]

Openly gay comedian Bob Smith offers a comic take on the tragic figure theory, imagining an "Elvis king" and a "Judy queen", debating the idols:

Elvis had a drinking problem.
Judy could drink Elvis under the table.
Elvis gained more weight.
Judy lost more weight.
Elvis was addicted to painkillers.
No pill could stop Judy's pain![7]

Garland as camp edit

In discussing Judy Garland's camp appeal, gay film scholar Richard Dyer has defined camp as "a characteristically gay way of handling the values, images and products of the dominant culture through irony, exaggeration, trivialisation, theatricalisation and an ambivalent making fun of and out of the serious and respectable".[8] Garland is camp, he asserts, because she is "imitable, her appearance and gestures copiable in drag acts".[8] He calls her "ordinariness" in her early MGM films camp in their "failed seriousness" and her later style "wonderfully over-the-top".[8]

Friend of Dorothy edit

 
Judy Garland from the trailer for the 1939 film The Wizard of Oz

Other connections between Garland and the LGBT community include the slang term "Friend of Dorothy", which likely derives from Garland's portrayal of Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz and became a code phrase gay men used to identify each other. Dorothy's journey from Kansas to Oz "mirrored many gay men's desires to escape the black-and-white limitations of small-town life ... for big, colorful cities filled with quirky, gender-bending characters who would welcome them."[9]

In the film, Dorothy immediately accepts those who are different, including the Cowardly Lion (in a very camp performance by Bert Lahr). The Lion identifies himself through song as a "sissy" and exhibits stereotypically "gay" (or at least effeminate) mannerisms. The Lion is seen as a coded example of Garland meeting and accepting a gay man without question.[10][11]

In the 2001 documentary Memories of Oz, gay cult film director and social satirist John Waters spoke about seeing The Wizard of Oz as a child:

[I was] the only child in the audience that always wondered why Dorothy ever wanted to go back to Kansas. Why would she want to go back to Kansas, in this dreary black and white farm with an aunt who dressed badly and seemed mean to me, when she could live with magic shoes, winged monkeys and gay lions? I never understood it.[12]

The 2020 comedic short film Digging Up Dorothy features a drag queen's obsession with Judy Garland several decades after her death.[13]

Stonewall riots edit

 
Garland in A Star Is Born (1954)

Some have suggested a connection between the date of Garland's funeral on June 27, 1969, and the Stonewall riots, the flashpoint of the modern gay liberation movement,[14] which started in the early hours of June 28.[15] Some observers of the riots contend that most of those involved "were not the type to moon over Judy Garland records or attend her concerts at Carnegie Hall. They were more preoccupied with where they were going to sleep and where their next meal would come from."[16] However, the same historical documentary states that there were several patrons at the Stonewall bar that night, Garland fans who, according to bar patron Sylvia Rivera had come from the very emotional Garland funeral earlier in the day to drink and mourn. Rivera said that indeed there was a feeling in the air that something would happen that night: "I guess Judy Garland's death just really helped us really hit the fan."[17]

There was certainly an awareness and appreciation of Garland among Stonewall Inn patrons. Because the bar had no liquor license, it was passed off as a bottle club and patrons were required to sign in. Many used pseudonyms and "Judy Garland" was among the most popular.[18] Regardless of the truth of the matter, the Garland/Stonewall connection has persisted and has been fictionalized in Stonewall, Nigel Finch's feature film about the events leading up to the riots. Lead character Bostonia is shown watching Garland's funeral on television and mourning, and later refusing to silence a jukebox playing a Garland song during a police raid, declaring "Judy stays."[19]

Time magazine would summarize decades later:

The uprising was inspirited by a potent cocktail of pent-up rage (raids of gay bars were brutal and routine), overwrought emotions (hours earlier, thousands had wept at the funeral of Judy Garland) and drugs. As a 17-year-old cross-dresser was being led into the paddy wagon and got a shove from a cop, she fought back. [She] hit the cop and was so stoned, she didn't know what she was doing—or didn't care.[20]

Garland's daughter Lorna Luft points to the connection with pride, saying that her mother was a "huge, huge advocate of human rights" and that Garland would have found the rioting appropriate.[21]

Rainbow flag edit

 
Six-color rainbow gay pride flags in a parade on the anniversary of Stonewall

Another connection is the rainbow flag, symbol of the LGBT communities which may have been inspired, in part, by Garland's song "Over the Rainbow".[22] Garland's performance of this song has been described as "the sound of the closet", speaking to gay men whose image "they presented in their own public lives was often at odds with a truer sense of self that mainstream society would not condone".[9]

Family and friends edit

Judy Garland's father and other significant people in her life were also gay.[23] Her father, Frank Gumm, would apparently seduce or at least keep company with very young men or older teens, then move on when told to leave or before his activities could be discovered.[24] Garland's second husband Vincente Minnelli was rumored to be a closeted bisexual,[25][26] and her fourth husband Mark Herron had a long-lasting relationship with fellow actor Henry Brandon, which was only briefly interrupted by his marriage to Garland.[27] She introduced her daughter Liza to her future husband, Australian singer Peter Allen who was also gay. From the beginning of her Hollywood career, Garland liked to visit gay bars with openly gay friends Roger Edens, Charles Walters and George Cukor, to the chagrin of her handlers at MGM.[28]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Walters, Barry (October 13, 1998). An icon for the ages. The Advocate. p. 87.
  2. ^ Dyer, p. 156
  3. ^ Kinser, Jeremy (October 19, 2014). "Here's How Judy Garland Felt About Her Gay Fans And What Might Have Happened If She Hadn't Died In 1969". Queerty. Retrieved May 10, 2019. In a 1965 press conference – in San Francisco, actually – she was asked how she felt about her gay following. She told those gathered, "I couldn't care less. I sing to people!"
  4. ^ a b . Time. 1967-08-18. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  5. ^ . Time. 1967-10-20. Archived from the original on December 15, 2008. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  6. ^ a b Goldman, William (January 1969). "Judy Floats". Esquire.
  7. ^ Smith, p. 68
  8. ^ a b c Dyer, p. 176
  9. ^ a b Frank, Steven (2007-09-25). . AfterElton.com. Archived from the original on 2007-12-10. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  10. ^ Brantley, Ben; The New York Times: Jun 28, 1994. pg. C.15.
  11. ^ Paglia, Camille. Judy Garland As a Force Of Nature; The New York Times: Jun 14, 1998.
  12. ^ Memories of Oz - The Wizard of Oz (3-Disc Collector's Edition DVD) 2005
  13. ^ "'Digging up Dorothy' Short Film released in UK". 28 July 2020.
  14. ^ Bianco 1999, p. 194; Duberman 1993, p. ix.
  15. ^ Bianco 1999, p. 194.
  16. ^ Loughery, p. 316
  17. ^ "Stonewall Riots 40th Anniversary: A Look Back at the Uprising that Launched the Modern Gay Rights Movement," democracynow.org, June 26, 2009. Accessed November 29, 2011
  18. ^ Kaiser, p. 198
  19. ^ Finch, Nigel (1995). Stonewall.
  20. ^ Cloud, John (2003-03-31). . Time. Archived from the original on September 30, 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-26.
  21. ^ Harrity, Christopher (2006-06-09). . The Advocate. Archived from the original on 2008-09-21. Retrieved 2007-12-25.
  22. ^ Gay Almanac, p. 94
  23. ^ Gerald Clarke, Get Happy: The Life of Judy Garland (Random House, 2000; ISBN 0-375-50378-1), p. 14.
  24. ^ Clarke, p. 23.
  25. ^ Clarke, p. 209.
  26. ^ Emanuel Levy, Vincente Minelli: Hollywood's Dark Dreamer. St. Martin's Press, 2009, p. 26. ISBN 0-312-32925-3.
  27. ^ Lynn Kear, James King, Evelyn Brent: The Life and Films of Hollywood's Lady Crook, McFarland, 2009, p.224
  28. ^ Clarke, p. 130-131.

References edit

  • Bianco, David (1999). Gay Essentials: Facts For Your Queer Brain. Los Angeles: Alyson Publications. ISBN 1-55583-508-2.
  • Duberman, Martin (1993). Stonewall. New York: Dutton. ISBN 0-525-93602-5.
  • Dyer, Richard (1986). Heavenly Bodies: Film Stars and Society. British Film Institute. ISBN 0-415-31026-1.
  • Kaiser, Charles (1997). The Gay Metropolis 1940 – 1996. New York, Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-395-65781-4.
  • Loughery, John (1998). The Other Side of Silence: Men's Lives and Gay Identities: A Twentieth Century History. Henry Holt and Company. ISBN 0-8050-3896-5.
  • Miller, Neil (1995). Out of the Past: Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present. Vintage UK. ISBN 0-09-957691-0.
  • The National Museum & Archive of Lesbian and Gay History (1996). The Gay Almanac. New York City, Berkeley Books. ISBN 0-425-15300-2.
  • Smith, Bob (1997). Openly Bob. New York, William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0-688-15120-5.

External links edit

Listen to this article (9 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 20 June 2019 (2019-06-20), and does not reflect subsequent edits.
  • The Judy Room
  • The Judy Garland Birthplace and Museum in Grand Rapids, MN
  • The Judy Garland Club: established 1963; official international Club supported by Judy during her lifetime
  • Judy Garland: By Myself – American Masters special 2009-11-06 at the Wayback Machine

judy, garland, icon, american, actress, singer, judy, garland, 1922, 1969, widely, considered, icon, advocate, called, garland, elvis, homosexuals, reasons, frequently, given, standing, icon, among, admiration, ability, performer, personal, struggles, seemed, . American actress and singer Judy Garland 1922 1969 is widely considered as a gay icon The Advocate has called Garland The Elvis of homosexuals 1 The reasons frequently given for her standing as an icon among gay men are admiration of her ability as a performer the way her personal struggles seemed to mirror those of gay men in America during the height of her fame and her value as a camp figure 2 Garland s role as Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz is particularly known for contributing to this status In the 1960s when a reporter asked how she felt about having a large gay following Garland replied I couldn t care less I sing to people 3 Judy Garland as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz 1939 Contents 1 Garland as tragic figure 2 Garland as camp 3 Friend of Dorothy 4 Stonewall riots 5 Rainbow flag 6 Family and friends 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksGarland as tragic figure editThe aspects of gay identification with Garland were being discussed in the mainstream as early as 1967 Time magazine in reviewing Garland s 1967 Palace Theatre engagement disparagingly noted that a disproportionate part of her nightly claque seems to be homosexual It goes on to say that t he boys in the tight trousers 4 a phrase Time repeatedly used to describe gay men as when it described ecstatic young men in tight trousers pranc ing down the aisles to toss bouquets of roses to another gay icon Marlene Dietrich 5 would roll their eyes tear at their hair and practically levitate from their seats during Garland s performances Time then attempted to explain Garland s appeal to the homosexual consulting psychiatrists who opined that the attraction to Garland might be made considerably stronger by the fact that she has survived so many problems homosexuals identify with that kind of hysteria and that Judy was beaten up by life embattled and ultimately had to become more masculine She has the power that homosexuals would like to have and they attempt to attain it by idolizing her 4 Writer William Goldman in a piece for Esquire magazine about the same Palace engagement again disparages the gay men in attendance dismissing them as fags who flit by chattering inanely He goes on however to advance the tragic figure theory as well After first suggesting that if homosexuals have an enemy it is age And Garland is youth perennially over the rainbow 6 he wrote Homosexuals tend to identify with suffering They are a persecuted group and they understand suffering And so does Garland She s been through the fire and lived all the drinking and divorcing all the pills and all the men all the poundage come and gone brothers and sisters she knows 6 Openly gay comedian Bob Smith offers a comic take on the tragic figure theory imagining an Elvis king and a Judy queen debating the idols Elvis had a drinking problem Judy could drink Elvis under the table Elvis gained more weight Judy lost more weight Elvis was addicted to painkillers No pill could stop Judy s pain 7 Garland as camp editSee also Camp style In discussing Judy Garland s camp appeal gay film scholar Richard Dyer has defined camp as a characteristically gay way of handling the values images and products of the dominant culture through irony exaggeration trivialisation theatricalisation and an ambivalent making fun of and out of the serious and respectable 8 Garland is camp he asserts because she is imitable her appearance and gestures copiable in drag acts 8 He calls her ordinariness in her early MGM films camp in their failed seriousness and her later style wonderfully over the top 8 Friend of Dorothy editMain article Friend of Dorothy nbsp Judy Garland from the trailer for the 1939 film The Wizard of OzOther connections between Garland and the LGBT community include the slang term Friend of Dorothy which likely derives from Garland s portrayal of Dorothy Gale in The Wizard of Oz and became a code phrase gay men used to identify each other Dorothy s journey from Kansas to Oz mirrored many gay men s desires to escape the black and white limitations of small town life for big colorful cities filled with quirky gender bending characters who would welcome them 9 In the film Dorothy immediately accepts those who are different including the Cowardly Lion in a very camp performance by Bert Lahr The Lion identifies himself through song as a sissy and exhibits stereotypically gay or at least effeminate mannerisms The Lion is seen as a coded example of Garland meeting and accepting a gay man without question 10 11 In the 2001 documentary Memories of Oz gay cult film director and social satirist John Waters spoke about seeing The Wizard of Oz as a child I was the only child in the audience that always wondered why Dorothy ever wanted to go back to Kansas Why would she want to go back to Kansas in this dreary black and white farm with an aunt who dressed badly and seemed mean to me when she could live with magic shoes winged monkeys and gay lions I never understood it 12 The 2020 comedic short film Digging Up Dorothy features a drag queen s obsession with Judy Garland several decades after her death 13 Stonewall riots editMain article Stonewall riots nbsp Garland in A Star Is Born 1954 Some have suggested a connection between the date of Garland s funeral on June 27 1969 and the Stonewall riots the flashpoint of the modern gay liberation movement 14 which started in the early hours of June 28 15 Some observers of the riots contend that most of those involved were not the type to moon over Judy Garland records or attend her concerts at Carnegie Hall They were more preoccupied with where they were going to sleep and where their next meal would come from 16 However the same historical documentary states that there were several patrons at the Stonewall bar that night Garland fans who according to bar patron Sylvia Rivera had come from the very emotional Garland funeral earlier in the day to drink and mourn Rivera said that indeed there was a feeling in the air that something would happen that night I guess Judy Garland s death just really helped us really hit the fan 17 There was certainly an awareness and appreciation of Garland among Stonewall Inn patrons Because the bar had no liquor license it was passed off as a bottle club and patrons were required to sign in Many used pseudonyms and Judy Garland was among the most popular 18 Regardless of the truth of the matter the Garland Stonewall connection has persisted and has been fictionalized in Stonewall Nigel Finch s feature film about the events leading up to the riots Lead character Bostonia is shown watching Garland s funeral on television and mourning and later refusing to silence a jukebox playing a Garland song during a police raid declaring Judy stays 19 Time magazine would summarize decades later The uprising was inspirited by a potent cocktail of pent up rage raids of gay bars were brutal and routine overwrought emotions hours earlier thousands had wept at the funeral of Judy Garland and drugs As a 17 year old cross dresser was being led into the paddy wagon and got a shove from a cop she fought back She hit the cop and was so stoned she didn t know what she was doing or didn t care 20 Garland s daughter Lorna Luft points to the connection with pride saying that her mother was a huge huge advocate of human rights and that Garland would have found the rioting appropriate 21 Rainbow flag editMain article Rainbow flag LGBT movement nbsp Six color rainbow gay pride flags in a parade on the anniversary of StonewallAnother connection is the rainbow flag symbol of the LGBT communities which may have been inspired in part by Garland s song Over the Rainbow 22 Garland s performance of this song has been described as the sound of the closet speaking to gay men whose image they presented in their own public lives was often at odds with a truer sense of self that mainstream society would not condone 9 Family and friends editJudy Garland s father and other significant people in her life were also gay 23 Her father Frank Gumm would apparently seduce or at least keep company with very young men or older teens then move on when told to leave or before his activities could be discovered 24 Garland s second husband Vincente Minnelli was rumored to be a closeted bisexual 25 26 and her fourth husband Mark Herron had a long lasting relationship with fellow actor Henry Brandon which was only briefly interrupted by his marriage to Garland 27 She introduced her daughter Liza to her future husband Australian singer Peter Allen who was also gay From the beginning of her Hollywood career Garland liked to visit gay bars with openly gay friends Roger Edens Charles Walters and George Cukor to the chagrin of her handlers at MGM 28 See also edit nbsp LGBT portal nbsp United States portalLGBT history Cher as a gay icon He Man as a gay icon Janet Jackson as a gay icon Madonna as a gay icon New Queer Cinema Queer theoryNotes edit Walters Barry October 13 1998 An icon for the ages The Advocate p 87 Dyer p 156 Kinser Jeremy October 19 2014 Here s How Judy Garland Felt About Her Gay Fans And What Might Have Happened If She Hadn t Died In 1969 Queerty Retrieved May 10 2019 In a 1965 press conference in San Francisco actually she was asked how she felt about her gay following She told those gathered I couldn t care less I sing to people a b Seance at the Palace Time 1967 08 18 Archived from the original on December 15 2008 Retrieved 2007 12 26 Old Gal in Town Time 1967 10 20 Archived from the original on December 15 2008 Retrieved 2007 12 26 a b Goldman William January 1969 Judy Floats Esquire Smith p 68 a b c Dyer p 176 a b Frank Steven 2007 09 25 What does it take to be a gay icon today AfterElton com Archived from the original on 2007 12 10 Retrieved 2007 12 26 Brantley Ben The New York Times Jun 28 1994 pg C 15 Paglia Camille Judy Garland As a Force Of Nature The New York Times Jun 14 1998 Memories of Oz The Wizard of Oz 3 Disc Collector s Edition DVD 2005 Digging up Dorothy Short Film released in UK 28 July 2020 Bianco 1999 p 194 Duberman 1993 p ix Bianco 1999 p 194 Loughery p 316 Stonewall Riots 40th Anniversary A Look Back at the Uprising that Launched the Modern Gay Rights Movement democracynow org June 26 2009 Accessed November 29 2011 Kaiser p 198 Finch Nigel 1995 Stonewall Cloud John 2003 03 31 June 28 1969 Time Archived from the original on September 30 2007 Retrieved 2007 12 26 Harrity Christopher 2006 06 09 Judy s stamp of approval The Advocate Archived from the original on 2008 09 21 Retrieved 2007 12 25 Gay Almanac p 94 Gerald Clarke Get Happy The Life of Judy Garland Random House 2000 ISBN 0 375 50378 1 p 14 Clarke p 23 Clarke p 209 Emanuel Levy Vincente Minelli Hollywood s Dark Dreamer St Martin s Press 2009 p 26 ISBN 0 312 32925 3 Lynn Kear James King Evelyn Brent The Life and Films of Hollywood s Lady Crook McFarland 2009 p 224 Clarke p 130 131 References editBianco David 1999 Gay Essentials Facts For Your Queer Brain Los Angeles Alyson Publications ISBN 1 55583 508 2 Duberman Martin 1993 Stonewall New York Dutton ISBN 0 525 93602 5 Dyer Richard 1986 Heavenly Bodies Film Stars and Society British Film Institute ISBN 0 415 31026 1 Kaiser Charles 1997 The Gay Metropolis 1940 1996 New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 395 65781 4 Loughery John 1998 The Other Side of Silence Men s Lives and Gay Identities A Twentieth Century History Henry Holt and Company ISBN 0 8050 3896 5 Miller Neil 1995 Out of the Past Gay and Lesbian History from 1869 to the Present Vintage UK ISBN 0 09 957691 0 The National Museum amp Archive of Lesbian and Gay History 1996 The Gay Almanac New York City Berkeley Books ISBN 0 425 15300 2 Smith Bob 1997 Openly Bob New York William Morrow and Company ISBN 0 688 15120 5 External links editListen to this article 9 minutes source source nbsp This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 20 June 2019 2019 06 20 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Judy Garland The Judy Room The Judy Garland Birthplace and Museum in Grand Rapids MN The Judy Garland Club established 1963 official international Club supported by Judy during her lifetime Judy Garland By Myself American Masters special Archived 2009 11 06 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judy Garland as a gay icon amp oldid 1210093095, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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