Gays
on television today is nothing new.
And
we can thank Ellen DeGeneres’s watershed moment in April
1997, when she came out on her sitcom “Ellen.”
Today’s
openly lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer (LGBTQ)
television personalities are Neil Patrick Harris, Jane Lynch,
Rachel Maddow, and Rosie O’Donnell, to name a few. These
personalities have helped pave the way in terms of our acceptance
in society and in terms of our civil rights issues.
In
Matthew Gilbert’s Boston Globe article last month,
“In With the Out Crowd,” he points out there is a growing
indifference in now seeing openly LGBTQ actors, talking
heads, and media personalities. In the article, Neil Patrick
Harris stated, “I must say the indifference that most people
expressed was the greatest reaction of all - and a reflection
of a nicely evolving culture.”
But
as this culture evolves, sadly, there are only two openly
LGBTQ African Americans media personalities I can think
of - CNN’s Don Lemon, and comedian Wanda Sykes.
This
paucity of black public LGBTQ figures not only maintains
the lie that we don’t exist, but it has also allowed the
African American community to retreat into a closet, producing
black homophobic horror flicks.
Being
a couch potato, last month during the Halloween weekend,
I watched two – “Cover” and “Blind Faith.’’
By
the mid-2000s a sex scare hit the African American heterosexual
women’s population when information emerged about some of
our brothers who were living life “on the down low” - or
“on the DL.” Many films, television shows, books, public
discussions and churches criminalized black men “on the
down low” for their “oversexed homo drive” killing straight
sisters. “Cover” is a recycled quasi-Hitchcockian psychological
drama exposing how being gay puts a strain on the entire
family. “Cover” opens with Valerie Mass (Aujanue Ellis)
being questioned on murder charges for killing a popular
R&B singer who we later find out is DL, HIV-positive,
and has inflected his wife with the virus.
When
asked why he tackled this topic, Bill Duke, producer and
director of the film told Blackfilm.com that “AIDS is a very, very, very
vicious disease, particularly in the black community. Black
women are the number one victims of AIDS in our country
right now. It’s like an epidemic proportion and surely after
I got involved in the project, my goddaughter came to the
family and told us that she was HIV positive and she’s been
married for 12 years. So, that’s the betrayal we’re talking
about.”
‘‘Blind
Faith’’ is a father-son tragedy that take pace in 1957 Jim
Crow America and questions black masculinity. Charles (Charles
S. Dutton), the father, is the NYPD’s first African-American
sergeant, and he plans a police exam for his oldest son,
Charlie (Garland Whitt), who is gay and would rather study
art. Charlie is accused of strangling a white boy to death
and will be electrocuted, but the father’s homophobia prevents
him from being there for his son.
Enoch
Page of Amherst, Massachusetts depicted the film as “a
brilliant study of black masculinity, whiteness, and homophobia.”
I
was drained after I finished seeing these films.
Just
as the films with black gay themes are problematic, so,
too, are some of the well-known black actors who portray
LGBTQ characters, making it difficult for African American
viewers to see and to actualize LGBTQ Americans of African
descent in a healthy and wholesome light.
For
example, in Spike Lee’s 1996 film “Get on the Bus,” Isaiah
Washington and Harry J. Lennix played a black gay couple
(Kyle and Randall, respectively) in the midst of a breakup
that gets played out in high homophobic drama in the cramped
quarters of a group of African-American men taking a cross-country
bus trip from Los Angeles to our nation’s capital in order
to participate in Minster Louis Farrakhan’s historic Million
Man March. Playing the role of a black gay Republican Gulf
War veteran, Washington
imparts to the group the violent acts of homophobia and
racism he incurred on an ongoing basis from his fellow comrades,
like being purposely shot at by his own platoon because
of both his sexual orientation and race.
But
in 2007 Washington made a public apology to the LGBTQ community for the derogatory
comments he deliberately and repeatedly made about his gay
costar, T. R. Knight’s sexuality.
Another
example is the black community’s dogged obsession of who
is and isn’t LGBTQ. Part of what fuels the on-going flurry
of queries concerning Queen Latifah’s sexual orientation
was her spot-on portrayal of a butch lesbian in the 1996
movie “Set it Off.” Earlier this summer, Latifah’s character
on the show “Single Ladies” - which she executive produces
- was accidentally outed, and worked out in a positive way
for the character. Viewers and the blogosphere began to
speculate that Latifah was channeling her personal life
through her small-screen character.
In
1993, the multi-talented Will Smith played a gay character
in “Six Degrees of Separation.” And for many in the African
American community it was the first time a well-respected
actor portrayed a gay character. But Smith portrayed a young
mentally unbalanced gay con artist feigning an identity
as Sidney Poiter’s son.
With
a steady stream of negative black LGBTQ films, being both
black and LGBTQ, I fear our lives will never be viewed as
anything but a horror flick.
BlackCommentator.com
Editorial Board member, the Rev. Irene Monroe, is a religion
columnist, theologian, and public speaker. She is the Coordinator of
the African-American Roundtable of the Center for Lesbian and
Gay Studies in Religion and Ministry (CLGS) at the Pacific
School of Religion.
A native of Brooklyn,
Rev. Monroe is a graduate from Wellesley College and Union
Theological Seminary at Columbia University, and served
as a pastor at an African-American church before coming
to Harvard Divinity School for her doctorate as a Ford Fellow.
She was recently named to MSNBC’s list of 10 Black Women You Should Know. Reverend Monroe is the author
of Let Your Light Shine Like a Rainbow Always: Meditations on Bible
Prayers for Not’So’Everyday Moments. As an African-American
feminist theologian, she speaks for a sector of society
that is frequently invisible. Her website is
irenemonroe.com.
Click here
to contact the Rev. Monroe.
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