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The Gay Metropolis Page 54

by Charles Kaiser


  Campaign for Military Service, 334

  Canby, Vincent, 196

  Capote, Truman, 70, 110, 120, 172–75

  Carlisle, Kitty, 58

  Carmichael, Stokely, 147

  Carter, Jimmy, 273

  Case, Archie, 276

  Catholic Archdiocese of New York, 143

  Catholic Church: opposing gay rights, 66, 143 270, 317

  and AIDS, 323–24

  Catholic Legion of Decency, 66 CBS, 67–68, 270, 271–72

  “CBS Reports”: “The Homosexuals” documentary, 160–71

  “Gay Power, Gay Politics” documentary, 271–72

  Celluloid Closet, The (Russo), 284, 302

  censorship: in the fifties, 66–68

  Centers for Disease Control: and AIDS, 297

  Central Intelligence Agency, 80–81

  Central Park: cruising in, 84, 106, 122, 147

  in the seventies, 214

  “Gay In” (1970) at, 216

  Chaplin, Charlie, 67 Chaplin, Saul, 194

  Charade (club), 215–16

  Chauncey, George, 13, 67

  Cherry Grove, Fire Island: in the forties, 46

  in the fifties, 109

  in the seventies, 291–92

  Chesley Robert, 293

  Chiang Kai-shek, 68

  “chickenhawks,” 11

  child molestation, 159, 207

  children’s books: gay themes in, 144n

  Children’s Hour, The (film), 155

  Chow, Michael, 254

  Christian right: antigay prejudice of, 272, 273, 275–77, 329

  antigay propaganda of, 272

  political advances of, in the eighties, 273

  oppose gays in the military, 334

  Christians for Reagan, 273

  Christopher Street, 197, 200, 243–44

  City and the Pillar, The (Vidal), 58–62, 170n

  Civil Rights Act, 1964, 136

  Civil Service Commission, 79

  Clark, Blair, 173

  Clarke, Lige, 190, 201, 202, 215

  Clemons, Walter, 115–21, 175–80, 193

  Gift, Montgomery, 59, 89, 113–15

  Clinton, Bill, 164, 248–49, 330–31, 333–34, 336, 337

  Stoddard on, 248–49, 334–35

  1992 election campaign of, 330–31

  pledge to lift ban on gays in the military, 333, 334–39

  gays in administration of, 337

  opposes gay marriage, 337

  judicial appointments of, 347, 358

  Cloisters (restaurant), 45

  closeted gays, 29. See also coming out;

  in the fifties, 107–15

  critique of, 129

  in the seventies, 213–14, 264

  in the eighties, 270–71

  in Reagan’s circle, 276–77

  Clurman, Harold, 193

  CNN, 331

  Cockettes, 246–47

  Cock Ring (bar), 244

  Cohn, Roy, 75–78, 96, 270, 278

  and McCarthy hearings, 75–76

  baited by Vidal, 76–77

  denial of homosexuality, 77–78

  and Studio 54, 254–55, 257, 258

  and Reagan, 277

  and AIDS, 318

  Cole, William, 73

  Colorado: antigay propositions in, 334

  Supreme Court overrules antigay laws of, 344–45

  Colt Studios, 8

  Columbia Journalism Review, 271, 286

  Columbia University: student movement at, 137

  recognizes gay student organization, 146

  coming out, xii–xiii

  to parents and family, xii, 262–63

  by James Baldwin, 73

  by Merle Miller, 226–28

  in the seventies, 226–28, 250–51, 260–63

  in black community, 234–35

  by Howard Brown, 250–51

  Coming Out Under Fire (Bérubé), 28

  Comitto, Tony, 191

  commercialization of gays, 339–40

  Common Threads (film), 302

  Communists: crusade against, in the fifties, 68–78, 80–82

  concentration camps: homosexuals in, xv, 289

  conservatives: See also Republicans

  antigay prejudice of, in the eighties, 272, 273, 275–77, 329

  antigay platform for 1992 election, 331–33

  and gays in the military, 334, 336–37

  consumers, gay: corporate exploitation of, 339–40

  Continental Baths, 248, 258

  Copland, Aaron, 17, 89, 92, 183

  Cork Club, 104, 122

  Cornell Selectee Index, 30

  Coronet, 82

  corporations: antidiscrimination policies at, 270, 339

  exploiting gay market, 339–40

  Cory, Donald Webster. See Sagarin, Edward Cory Book Service, 126

  Cox, Christopher, 284

  Craven, James Braxton, 164

  Crawford, Cheryl, 92

  Crile, George, 271, 272

  crime: association of homosexuality with, in the fifties, 82–83

  Crist, Judith, 196

  Crittenden Board, U.S. Navy, 50

  Crossen, Cynthia, 322

  Crowley, Mart, 7, 185–92

  Crowther, Bosley, 155–56

  cruising: in the forties, 8, 12–14, 38, 39–40

  in the fifties, 94–95, 104–6, 121–22

  in the sixties, 147

  in the seventies, 243

  Crumpley, Ronald, 274–75

  Cub Room, 15

  Cuckor, George, 37

  Cuite, Thomas, 317

  cultural subversives, gays as, 169

  in the nineties, 332

  Curran, Dr. James, 280

  Curtis, Charlotte, 173

  Daily Mirror, 79

  Daily News, 19n

  on Stonewall riot, 135, 201

  Dall, John, 59

  dance and dancers, 103–4

  Daniels, Jimmy, 41–42

  Darwin, Charles, xiv

  Daughters of Bilitis, 206

  Day, Doris, 97

  DDI (dideoxyinosine), 324

  Deans, Mickey, 180, 196

  Decter, Midge, 225

  Defense Department’s Personnel Security Research and Education Center, 50

  Defense of Marriage Act, 337

  DeLarverie, Stormé, 135, 198, 200

  DeMarco, Felix, 314–15

  D’Emilio, John, 19, 58, 79, 126, 149

  Democratic party: Chicago convention (1968), 48

  gays at 1980 convention, 273

  gays at 1992 convention, 331

  Dennis, Patrick, 35

  Dennis, Rev. Walter D., 143

  Denton, Herb, 213

  Der Kreis/Le Cercle, 16

  “Die-Ins”: by ACT UP, 322

  Dietrich, Marlene, 96

  Dignity, 323–24

  discotheques: in the sixties, 180–81

  in the seventies, 253–259, 291–92

  in the eighties, 283

  discrimination, antigay: See also prejudice against gays;

  in WWII army, 27–38

  ACLU takes on federal (1960s), 140

  corporate policy against, 270, 339

  NYC bans, 317–18

  Clinton asserts ban on

  federal, 337

  Divided Path, The, 125

  domestic partners, 340

  Donahue, Phil, 207–8

  Donovan, John, 144n

  Don’t Look Back (documentary), 152

  Doty, Robert, 156–57

  Dougherty, Phil, 286n

  Dowd, Maureen, 299–300

  Dowling, Jack, 8, 15, 83, 106, 107, 121–22

  drag queens: and Stonewall riot, 198–201, 205

  and gay political activism, 263

  drag shows: in WWII military, 37–38

  in Harlem, 40–41

  drug culture: of the sixties, 144–45, 89, 188–89n

  of the seventies, 244, 246, 256, 257, 258

  Drury, Allen, 155
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br />   Duberman, Martin, 65, 100, 198, 322

  Du Bois, W.E.B., 139

  Dugas, Gaetan, 296–97

  Dulles, Allen W., 80n

  Dunlap, David, 164

  Dunne, Dominick, 186, 187

  Dunphy, Jack, 174

  Dylan, Bob, 135, 136, 150, 152, 264

  Ebb, Fred, 210–11

  Ebert, Roger, 151

  Edwards, Anne, 193

  effeminacy, 32, 131, 143, 155

  Eighth Street Bar, 107

  eighties, the, 269–325

  rising conflict between gays and antigay activists, 269–72

  election of Reagan, 272–74, 275–77

  violent attacks on gays, 274–75

  early coverage of AIDS, 278–81

  effect of AIDS in, 278–318

  NYC bans antigay discrimination, 317–18

  Bowers v. Hardwick, 319–20

  ACT UP in, 320–25

  8709 (bathhouse), 300–301

  Einstein, Albert, xv

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 38, 47, 80, 81, 276, 285

  Electric Circus (club), 201–2

  electric shock treatment, 230

  Ellison, Ralph, 101

  Elphant, Jules, 46, 51–52

  Emanuel, Rham, 331

  Empire State Building, 311

  entrapment: See also police harassment;

  in the fifties, 71, 83–84, 111

  in the sixties, 145–46

  Episcopal Diocese of New York, 143

  Epstein, Brian, 150–51

  Epstein, Joseph, xi, 223–25, 226, 228–29

  Epstein, Rob, 302

  Equal Rights, Special Rights (film), 272

  Ertegün, Ahmet, 246, 255

  Esquire, 148, 208, 209, 253, 260

  Etheridge, Melissa, 334

  Evans, Arthur, 95, 225

  Evans, Oliver, 95

  Everhard (bath), 119–20

  Faggots (Kramer), 290–92, 293, 298

  Fairchild, John, 269

  “fairies,” 12–13

  Falwell, Jerry, 273

  Fauci, Anthony, 324

  Feldman, Mark, 311

  Ferro, Robert, 284

  Fielding, Fred, 278

  Fierstein, Harvey, 241

  fifties, the, 65–131

  conformity during, 66–68

  crusade against Communists and homosexuals during, 68–82

  gay artistic community of, 88–104

  Beats in, 98–100

  changes to NYC during, 101–2

  gay bars in, 106–7

  gay socializing in, 107–10

  closeted life in, 111–15

  film critics: homophobia of, 155–56

  films: gay themes in, in the seventies, 209–11

  Finch, Peter, 209

  Fire Island: in the forties, 45–46

  in the fifties, 109

  in the sixties, 149–50

  in the seventies, 291–292

  in the eighties, 290

  Fisher, Pete, 223

  Fitzsimmons, Jack, 277–78, 293–94, 302, 303–5

  Flanders, Ralph, 75

  Fleischman, Mark, 259

  Fletcher, James, 282n

  Fonda, Henry, 196

  Fonteyn, Margot, 109

  Ford, Gerald, 214

  Forster, E. M., 43, 211–12

  forties, the, 3–62. See also military; World War II

  Fosburgh, Lacey, 216

  Fosse, Bob, 209, 210, 211

  Foucault, Michel, 291

  Fouratt, Jim, 206

  Four Saints in Three Acts (Thomson and Stein), 41

  Frank, Barney, 325

  Frankel, Max, 226, 287

  Frankfurter, Felix, 92

  Franklin, Aretha, 136, 196

  Franklin, Johnny, 324

  French, Jerry, 54–55

  French, Margaret, 44

  Freud, Sigmund, xiv, 116

  Frey, Leonard, 186

  Friedman, Jeff, 302

  Friedman, Stanley M., 78, 97n, 255

  Friedman-Kien, Dr. Alvin, 280–81

  Friendly, Fred, 160, 221

  Fry, Clements, 49

  Fugate, James, 125

  Fulbright, William, 248–49

  Gabelline, Mario Enzo, 20–21

  Gabrielson, Guy, 74

  Gagliostro, Vincent, 322

  Gallagher, John, 334n, 336

  Gallowhur, George, 10–11, 12

  Gallup, Grant, 136

  Gamrecki, Jack, 275

  Gancyclovir, 324

  Gardner, Gerald, 66

  Garland, Judy, 192–97

  Garrow, David J., 320

  Gathering of the Tribes, 145

  Gavin, James, 42

  Gay (magazine), 215

  gay: term used by New York Times, 287

  Gay, Lesbian and Bisexual Psychiatric Survivors, 330

  Gay Academic Union, 243

  Gay Activists Alliance, 206, 216, 220–21, 261–65

  National Gay Movement Committee of, 206

  politicians endorse platform of, 217

  demonstrates against Harper’s, 225

  and campaign against APA classification of homosexuality, 235–40

  firehouse headquarters of, 260, 263–64

  organization of, 262

  weekly dances of, 263–65

  Gay Agenda, The (film), 272

  gay festivals: in the seventies, 216–17

  Gay Games, 339

  “Gay-In” (1970), 216

  “Gay is good” slogan, 147, 148

  gay journalists: See also individual journalists, newspapers, and magazines

  bias against, 175–80, 286

  closeted, 213, 286

  New York Times improves treatment of, 286–87

  impact of Randy Shilts, 287–90

  coming out by, 318

  national association’s party at 1992 Democratic convention, 331

  gay liberation: See also gay militancy; gay rights; political activism

  Mattachine Society and, 122–24

  black civil rights and women’s liberation as models for, xii, 136

  Stonewall riot and, 197–202, 205–6

  Gay Liberation Front, 135, 206, 220

  gay magazines, 16, 171–72, 339, 340,

  in the sixties, 158

  corporate advertising in, 339–40

  Gay Men’s Health Crisis (GMHC), 293, 298–300, 320, 325

  gay militancy, 216. See also political activism

  backlash against, 222–28, 271–72

  religious right campaign against, 272, 273

  violent attacks against, 274–75

  ACT UP, 320–25

  and capitalist mainstreaming of gays, 340

  gay organizations: proliferation of, 206, 329–30

  GAYPA, 237–38

  “Gay Power, Gay Politics” (CBS), 271–72

  Gay Pride March, 262–63

  Gay Pride Week, 216

  gay rights: See also gay militancy; political activism; concept of, 148

  Koch and, 215, 221, 317

  politicians begin endorsing call for, 217

  Abrams and, 221

  backlash against, 222–28

  and APA repeal of “illness” classification, 235–40

  gains in the eighties, 269–70

  corporate antidiscrimination policies, 270, 339

  in the eighties, 270

  bill passed in NYC, 317–18

  gay self–identity: See also coming out

  in the seventies, 212–13, 243

  AIDS and, 310–17, 325

  Gefter, Philip, 242–45, 256, 263, 277, 291–92, 293–95, 302–7

  genetic theory of homosexuality, 231

  Georgia: sodomy statute of, 318–20

  Germany: Weimar, xiv–xv, 25, 210, 271

  Nazi, xv, 25, 42–43

  Geto, Ethan, 77, 95n, 217–21, 223, 255–56, 259, 260–62, 263–65, 269–70, 315

  and Abrams, 220, 221, 256, 264–65

  coming out of, 260–62
>
  and NYC gay rights bill, 317

  and “moral values,” 325

  Gibson, Charles, 310–13, 343

  Gielgud, John, 107

  Gilliatt, Penelope, 209

  Gillman, Bill (pseudonym), 77–78

  Gingrich, Newt, 333

  Ginsberg, Allen, 89, 99–100, 144, 149, 152, 201, 236n

  Giovanni’s Room (Baldwin), 73

  Gitlin, Murray, 8, 30, 44–45, 93, 102–4, 120, 155, 186, 186n, 187, 190n, 191

  Gittings, Barbara, 236

  Goff, Michael, 339

  Gold, Ron, 237, 238

  Goldberg, Arthur, 217, 221

  Goldberg, Suzanne B., 345

  Golden Pheasant (bar), 106

  Goldman, Albert, 169, 171

  Goldman, William, 190n

  Goldstein, Al, 201

  Goldwater, Barry, 141

  Gomes, Rev. Peter J., xiii, 344

  gonorrhea, 119

  Good Book; The (Gomes), xiii

  Goodell, Charles, 217

  Goodhue, Robert, 9

  Goodman, Paul, 98

  Goren, Shlomo, 182, 182n

  Gorman, Cliff, 187

  Go Tell It on the Mountain (Baldwin), 73

  government, gays in the: in the forties, 17–19

  persecution of, in the fifties, 69–82

  exclusion of, in the sixties, 140

  Jenkins scandal, 140–41

  in the seventies, 222

  coming out by, 325

  Clinton and, 337

  Graber, Ted, 276

  Graham, Katharine, 172–75

  Graham, Martha, 103

  Granger, Farley, 59

  Grant, Cary, 59

  Gray, Robert, 276

  Great Britain: decriminalization of homosexuality in, 152–54, 164

  Green, Adolph, 184

  Green, Richard, 237

  Greenberg (publisher), 125

  Greenfield, Jeff, 222

  Greenwich Village: in the fifties, 85–86, 101–2, 106–7

  Stonewall riot in, 197–202

  in the seventies, 215

  Ninth Circle, 240–42, 244

  sex in trailers in, 261

  shooting spree against gays in, 274–75

  Gregg, Dr. Alan, 53

  Gregg, Gail, 286–87

  Griffith, Robert E., 92

  Griffo, Michela, 215

  group sex: in baths, 120

  in bars, 245

  in trailers, 261

  in the “Meat Rack,” 292

  Grumley, Michael, 284

  gyms, 12

  Hagerty, James, 81

  Haight-Ashbury, San Francisco, 144, 152

  Hair (Broadway musical), 187

  Halberstam, David, 65, 223

  Hamilton, Margaret, 193

  Hammerstein, Oscar, 67

  harassment of gays: See also police harassment

  in the forties, 13–14

  in the fifties, 82–84

  in the sixties, 145–46

  Hard Day’s Night, A (film), 151, 180n

  Hardwick, Michael, 319

  Harlan, Justice John Marshall, 344–45

  Harlem: drag shows in, 40–41

  gay life in, 40–41, 122

  Harper’s: diatribe against gays in, xi, 222–25, 226, 228–29

  Harris, L. D., 117–18

 

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