Difference between revisions of "Rob Frydlewicz: Orange Juice Queen Puts the Squeeze on Gay Rights, June 7, 1977"

From OutHistory
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
[[file: Anitabryant_newsweek.jpg]]
+
[[file: Anitabryant_newsweek.jpg|right|210px]]
 
Eight years had passed since the Stonewall Riot ignited the gay liberation movement but that initial surge of empowerment had turned into a bit of complacency.  Then a former beauty queen from Florida got our attention as she tried to thwart our early progress.
 
Eight years had passed since the Stonewall Riot ignited the gay liberation movement but that initial surge of empowerment had turned into a bit of complacency.  Then a former beauty queen from Florida got our attention as she tried to thwart our early progress.
  
Line 6: Line 6:
  
  
At the time I was 20 and in the very early stages of coming out.  I remember sitting on the front porch of my parents' home in Pittsburgh reading ''Time Magazine'' when I came across an article about the election.  I'll never forget the following passage because of Bryant's explicit description of gay sex:
+
I was 20 years old at the time and in the very early stages of coming out.  I remember sitting on the front porch of my parents' home in Pittsburgh reading ''Time Magazine'' when I came across an article about the election.  I'll never forget the following passage because of Bryant's explicit description of gay sex:
  
 
     Bryant told one interviewer that God does not like homosexuals     
 
     Bryant told one interviewer that God does not like homosexuals     

Revision as of 13:01, 29 June 2011

Anitabryant newsweek.jpg

Eight years had passed since the Stonewall Riot ignited the gay liberation movement but that initial surge of empowerment had turned into a bit of complacency. Then a former beauty queen from Florida got our attention as she tried to thwart our early progress.


Anita Bryant made her name as a singer of easy listening music (Paper Roses was her big hit; she sang the National Anthem at the Super Bowl in 1969) and was the spokesperson for the Florida Orange Growers Association. In 1977 she spearheaded a voter referendum that was successful in repealing a recently enacted law that protected gay residents of Dade County from housing and job discrimination. The contentious election, which took place on June 7, 1977, received national attention because of the passions it sparked on both sides.


I was 20 years old at the time and in the very early stages of coming out. I remember sitting on the front porch of my parents' home in Pittsburgh reading Time Magazine when I came across an article about the election. I'll never forget the following passage because of Bryant's explicit description of gay sex:

    Bryant told one interviewer that God does not like homosexuals    
    because "the male homosexual eats another man's sperm.  Sperm is the
    most concentrated form of blood.  The homosexual is eating life".
   

Although the referendum defeat was a blow to gay rights it was the first time gays actively fought to keep their rights. And the following year, led by Harvey Milk, gays in California successfully fought back the Briggs Initiative, a proposed law that would have banned gay men and lesbians from being teachers in the state.


For more posts like this, Rob also writes a blog called ZeitGAYst.