Tag Archives: ONE

“Dress well and raise gardenias” – how gay guys got by in the early ’60s

“Dress well and raise gardenias” – how gay guys got by in the early ’60s

ONE Mag Vol 12 Issue 4

Magazine cover courtesy of ONE Archives Foundation

In honor of LGBTQ History Month, we’re taking a deep dive look-back at the first gay publication in America—ONE magazine. Launched in Los Angeles in 1953, ONE was published by One, Inc., which grew from The Mattachine Society, the seminal gay-rights group founded by Harry Hay. Its editorial founders were Martin Block, Don Slater, and Dale Jennings. Produced on a shoestring and sold for 25 cents, ONE began to change the course of history with an unapologetic exploration of homosexuality and the largely unexamined societal taboo against it. 

This is the seventh in our series of ONE magazine cover stories.

Volume 12, Issue 4: On Life and Art and the Homosexual

In this lyrical and culturally scorching essay, Bob Waltrip muses on the gay man’s existential condition — which in some ways echoes the general human condition:

I have often heard the cry, “But nobody understands.” Unfortunately, this is entirely true. Dear reader, nobody — absolutely nobody — understands you, and nobody ever will. You can live with another person all your life and he still won’t completely understand you. You can talk to a psychiatrist for twenty years and even he will not entirely understand you. Your parents never understood you, your friends have never understood you, and God himself probably never fathomed your mind. In order for another person to understand you, he has to shuck off his own problems and live your life for you inside your body. This is impossible, so it is impossible for anyone else to really understand. The best thing you can do is try to understand yourself.

Waltrip is also realistic about what a gay man could expect from the majority of his neighbors and acquaintances:

After you understand yourself, accept yourself for what you are and love yourself. But never, never make the horrible mistake of trying to make the heterosexual world accept you as well. It is not yet possible to ask Mrs. Bluelip down the street to accept you as a homosexual. She will accept you on a thousand other terms — if you’re that nice Mr. Jones who raises gardenias and dresses so well. This is what you must work with — dress well, raise gardenias, and be friends with her. After you are very good friends she might come to a realization of your sexual proclivities. But I would never recommend that you come right out and tell her.

… The homosexual wages a continual battle, and wears a disguise that is only discarded during those rare moments when he is alone with another man, making love to him. Only then can he be himself. He is not a fictional character. He is not a strong character. He is an extremely frail and complicated thing called a human being. And he is also my brother. And I love him.

We wish we could show Mr. Waltrip an episode of Queer Eye, in which even the most prim neighbors understand and accept, or take him to a Pride parade where hundreds of thousands of allies march in the streets.

We think he’d be glad to see how much love there is to go around these days.

Thanks to ONE Archives Foundation for making this series possible. ONE Archives Foundation provides access to original source material at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California Libraries—the largest such collection in the world.

www.queerty.com/dress-well-raise-gardenias-gay-guys-got-early-60s-20191029?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

This essay shows the sad reality of gay life in 1962, but offers a solution

This essay shows the sad reality of gay life in 1962, but offers a solution

One Mag Volume 10 Issue 1

Magazine cover courtesy of ONE Archives Foundation

In honor of LGBTQ History Month, we’re taking a deep dive look-back at the first gay publication in America—ONE magazine. Launched in Los Angeles in 1953, ONE was published by One, Inc., which grew from The Mattachine Society, the seminal gay-rights group founded by Harry Hay. Its editorial founders were Martin Block, Don Slater, and Dale Jennings. Produced on a shoestring and sold for 25 cents, ONE began to change the course of history with an unapologetic exploration of homosexuality and the largely unexamined societal taboo against it. 

This is the sixth in our series of ONE magazine cover stories.

Volume 10, Issue 1: Tenth Anniversary Issue

To mark ONE’s tenth anniversary, Betty Purdue (writing under the pseudonym of Geraldine Jackson) hearkened back to the first issue of the magazine, in which she wrote of her “crossing from the heterosexual world into the homosexual one—by choice.” A decade later, Purdue urged her fellow queers to step out of the shadows and into community, not just for their own sake but for the greater good:

In every other minority group I can name, the individuals stand together for common protection. Not so the homosexual minority. We have no internal unity. No sense of belonging to a group from which we both give and receive loyalty. … Instead, like a lost child, the average homosexual seems to look, not to his own group, and certainly never to himself for his protection and security, but always to the heterosexual.

IF ONLY THE HETEROSEXUAL UNDERSTOOD US, he bleats, ALL WOULD BE WELL. But deep within his heart he knows that this is simply not true. Acceptance comes from within, not without.

Purdue went on to argue that gay people were little different than non-gay people, and therefore shouldn’t make a big deal out of it.

We are different, not only from heterosexuals in general, but even from other minority groups in particular. In other minority groups, at least, their right to existence is acknowledged. Not so the homosexual minority. We—so far as the average public is concerned—should not exist at all.

The antidote, she wrote, is something akin to Homosexuals Anonymous—not because gays were “sick” but because of the communal resources and mutual support available in such a setting. In essence, she was arguing for a prototypical LGBTQ Community Center, and for her readers to stop imagining themselves alone and begin to see the bigger picture.

All we can say to that is preach., Ms. Purdue.

Thanks to ONE Archives Foundation for making this series possible. ONE Archives Foundation provides access to original source material at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California Libraries—the largest such collection in the world.

www.queerty.com/essay-shows-sad-reality-gay-life-1962-offers-solution-20191019?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29

Maybe it’s no coincidence the gay rights movement started in a bar

Maybe it’s no coincidence the gay rights movement started in a bar

One Mag Vol 6 Issue 2

Magazine cover courtesy of ONE Archives Foundation

In honor of LGBTQ History Month, we’re taking a deep dive look-back at the first gay publication in America—ONE magazine. Launched in Los Angeles in 1953, ONE was published by One, Inc., which grew from The Mattachine Society, the seminal gay-rights group founded by Harry Hay. Its editorial founders were Martin Block, Don Slater, and Dale Jennings. Produced on a shoestring and sold for 25 cents, ONE began to change the course of history with an unapologetic exploration of homosexuality and the largely unexamined societal taboo against it. 

This is the fifth in our series of ONE magazine cover stories.

Volume 6, Issue 2: The Gay Bar

While ONE addressed hefty issues like obscenity law and psychoanalysis, it just as often provided everyday social commentary on the realities of gay life in the 1950s. In this issue, Robert Gregory ponders the function of the “Gay Bar” in capital letters. Hard to tell how many Gay Bars existed in 1958, but Gregory paints a picture not unfamiliar to many of us:

The Gay Bar, while it by no means offers a total cross-section of the homosexual population of a city or country, nevertheless goes farther, at present, than any other single social institution at collecting together a wide variety of types and temperaments. Anyone who has “made the rounds,” as they say, is readily acquainted with the milieu—the hustlers, the screaming faggots, the queens, the nice ivy-leaguers—sometimes all in easy exchange with one another…

At a time when most major cities have an entire site dedicated exclusively to gay social institutions, it’s hard to imagine the role the gay bar played in the late ’50s. You could hook up there, sure, but the allure was more fundamental than that:

Among homosexuals the feeling of isolation is exceptionally prevalent and often cruel. Empathy, the feeling of spontaneous rapport and understanding with other fellow human beings, is often smothered under personal doubts and misgivings, under mistrust of others, and under insecurity in most personal relations. “What would they think if they knew?” Thus the Gay Bar is exceptionally important to many homosexuals, as the one institution where they can be sure of finding some measure of kinship with others.

Of course, at the same time, there was danger. Gay bars were a target since sex between men was still illegal in every state. Eleven years later the gay liberation movement would be born at a gay bar in New York City.

One is not surprised or dismayed when police swagger in, usually in pairs, glower menacingly at everybody, hurry back to the men’s room to see if anything is going on, glower once more at everybody on their return trip, and swagger out again.

If a cop swaggers into a gay bar now, chances are he’s there to drink, dance and, with any luck, hookup.

How nice finally to be able to enjoy our men in uniform.

Thanks to ONE Archives Foundation for making this series possible. ONE Archives Foundation provides access to original source material at the ONE National Gay & Lesbian Archives at the University of Southern California Libraries—the largest such collection in the world.

www.queerty.com/maybe-no-coincidence-gay-rights-movement-started-bar-20191016?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+queerty2+%28Queerty%29