The Gay Metropolis

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The Gay Metropolis Page 49

by Charles Kaiser


  “I, Pvt Lincoln Kirstein”: Franz Schulze, Philip Johnson: Life and Work, 164.

  43 His salon included W. H. Auden … “tolerance, sympathy, and kindness”: Author’s interview with Paul Cadmus, October 29, 1992.

  44 “On nights off I” … “several times after”: Author’s interview with Murray Gitlin, February 26, 1993.

  45 “If you went in”: Author’s interview with William Wynkoop, June 3, 1993.

  “We were in a building” … “living in New York”: Author’s interview with Roy Strickland, June 3, 1993.

  46 “In those days you”: Recorded interview with Jules Elphant, SAGE Archive.

  “I was aghast”: Author’s interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.

  “A lot of my ‘gay life’”: Author’s interview with Paul Cadmus, October 29, 1992.

  “There was a tolerance” … “good battalion to be in”: Before Stonewall (documentary).

  47 “an extraordinary aspect” … “civilian life”: Allan Bérubé, Coming Out Under Fire, 46, 50.

  48 “the stigmatization of homosexuals”: Ibid., 138–39.

  “confirmed pervert” … court-martialed and imprisoned: Ibid., 143–44, 147.

  “gone down” … “have done to you”: Author’s interviews with Stanley Posthorn, May 24, 1993; and March 28, 1994.

  49 When the army moved toward … homosexuals were sick: Allan Bérubé, Coming Out Under Fire, 152, 148.

  “in various military jobs”: Ibid., 170–72.

  50 “This study was the first”: Ibid., 277–78. For the full text of these reports, see Gays in Uniform: The Pentagon s Secret Reports, ed. Kate Dyer.

  “topped the average”: Newsweek, June 9, 1947.

  “is unrelated to job performance”: ed. Kate Dyer, Gays in Uniform: The Pentagon’s Secret Reports, ix.

  “It was the most depressing”: Author’s interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.

  51 In 1945, they founded … “never lived together”: Recorded interview with Jules Elphant, SAGE Archive.

  52 In 1947, America was shocked: New York Times, January 17, 1947; February 11, 1949; September 1, 1947; and February 18, 1949.

  53 But just weeks after: John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 34.

  “religious background”: Alfred C. Kinsey, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, 3–4.

  “no aspect of human biology”: Dr. Alan Gregg, ibid., v.

  “To each individual”: Ibid.

  54 The questionnaire about homosexual: Ibid., 623–25.

  “You started out shy”: Author’s interview with Otis Bigelow, April 28, 1994.

  “gentle and quiet”: Author’s interview with Paul Cadmus, May 20, 1995.

  55 famous zero-to-six: Alfred C. Kinsey, Sexual Behavior in the Human Male, 650–51.

  “In view of the data”: Ibid., 659–60.

  56 “The judge who is considering”: Ibid., 664–65.

  “Homosexuality was thought”: Before Stonewall (documentary). Rusk biographical details: New York Times, November 5, 1989.

  “end results”: Ibid., January 4, 1948.

  57 “we have the right” … “behavior of each human being”: Ibid.

  “degradation in American”: John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 36.

  “Lawrence Kubie was the prominent”: Allan Bérubé, Coming Out Under Fire, 19.

  “stuck a scalpel into”: Time, June 14, 1948.

  “The statistics based on the”: New York Times, June 5, 1948.

  “He was a celebrity”: Author’s interview with “James Atcheson,” October 1, 1992.

  “The implication that because”: New York Times, June 5, 1948.

  58 “Kubie ruined Tennessee”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “All the so-called”: Author’s interview with “Nicholas Simmons,” October 11, 1996.

  “most of the sexual”: Time, June 14, 1948, and New York Times, June 5, 1948.

  “By revealing that millions”: John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 37.

  59 “even a member of Congress”: Vidal, The City and the Pillar, 150–152, and ibid. “You’d sit in the commissary”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  Laurents had a four-year: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “The studios didn’t care”: Ibid.

  “You know, you’re Farley’s”: Arthur Laurents interviewed by Larry Kramer in The Advocate, May 16, 1995.

  “Hitch wanted Cary Grant”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “I don’t think the censors”: The Celluloid Closet (documentary).

  60 “It didn’t matter whether”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “I will not only not” … “But I did it anyway”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  “A frightening glimpse”: New York Times Book Review, January 11, 1948.

  “The fact that it was a” … “this particular act”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  61 “You spoiled it with”: Gore Vidal, “Some Memories,” United States, 1139.

  “certainly one of the best” … “collective morale”: Gore Vidal papers at the University of Wisconsin at Madison.

  II: THE FIFTIES

  65 “In that era of general”: David Halberstam, The Fifties, x.

  “Undergraduates seemed uniformly”: Martin Duberman, Cures, 2.

  “We are not living”: Humphrey Burton, Leonard Bernstein, 229.

  “The fifties was”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  66 “No picture shall be” … “he immediately complied”: Gerald Gardner, The Censorship Papers, xv, xx, 122, 207–10, 215.

  67 “I Love Lucy” … suffer from morning sickness: Halberstam, The Fifties, 196–201.

  “utter anomaly”: George Chauncey, Jr., lecture at the Museum of the City of New York, June 22, 1995.

  68 “Half of the nicest girls”: David Halberstam, The Fifties, 201.

  69 “homosexual panic”: New York Post; July 10, 1950.

  The Washington Post reported: Ibid., July 13, 1950.

  According to Washington insiders: Ibid., July 15, 1950.

  “At no point, whether”: Ibid., July 14, 1950.

  70 “spousal”: Richard Gid Powers, Secrecy and Power, 171, 173.

  “killer fruit”: Truman Capote, Answered Prayers, 8.

  “No one argues the question”: New York Post, July 22, 1950.

  “More drastically than anything”: Ibid., July 12, 1950.

  Hoover may have been too … “got to be born”: Ibid., July 18, 1950.

  71 “low, low, low general” … “this sort of thing”: Author’s interview with Benjamin C. Bradlee, April 6, 1995.

  “the compulsive” … “their sex habits”: New York Post, July 22, 1950.

  72 Some of his friends believe: Victor Navasky, Naming Names, 75, 304.

  “While other witnesses denounced”: New York Times, May 6, 1953.

  “so compliant”: Navasky, Naming Names, 75, 304.

  “He wasn’t threatened” … “blacklist destroyed Hollywood”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  73 “something which tormented” … “saved my life”: James Baldwin: The Price of the Ticket (documentary).

  “I’d been a boy preacher” … Cole was “horrified”: Ibid, and New York Times, December 2, 1987.

  74 “primary issue”: New York Post, July 21, 1950.

  “a preliminary sampling”: Ibid., July 20, 1950.

  “homosexual angle”: John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 41–42.

  “pervert problem”: New York Post; July 17, 1950.

  “[Maryland Democratic Senator]” … “homo who was jealous”: Drew Pearson, Drew Pearson: Diaries, 1949–1959, 188–89, 190, 192.

  75 “The portrait
of the Wisconsin”: New York Post, July 21, 1950.

  “one of the boys”: David Halberstam, The Fifties, 54.

  “there was a lot of time”: Author’s interview with Benjamin C. Bradlee, April 6, 1995.

  “wreck the Army”: New York Times, August 3, 1986.

  “real heart”: Neil Miller, Out of the Past, 269–71.

  76 “shamefully cut down” … “himself had practiced”: Ibid.

  “Bonnie, Bonnie and Clyde”: New York Times, August 3, 1986.

  “Anybody who knows me”: Nicholas von Hoffman, Citizen Cohn, 132.

  77 “The only thing I really”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  “In Schine’s case”: Author’s interview with “Bill Gillman,” November 10, 1994.

  “thrilling moments” … “a gay restaurant?”: Author’s interview with Ethan Geto, July 1, 1995.

  “did not acquire” … “very busy man”: Author’s interview with “Bill Gillman,” November 10, 1994.

  78 “Roy was a lot of” … “growing up with him”: Author’s interview with Stanley Friedman, November 30, 1994.

  79 “Homosexuals and other sex”: “Employment of Homosexuals and Other Sex Perverts in Government: U.S. Senate document No. 241, December 15, 1950,” quoted in Donald Webster Cory, The Homosexual in America, 272–77.

  “sex perversion”: Ibid., 276–77.

  “Homosexuality became an epidemic”: Lee Mortimer, Washington Confidential Today, 110–19; and Jack Lait and Lee Mortimer, U.S.A. Confidential, quoted in John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 43–44.

  80 “sexual perversion”: John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 43–44

  “U.S. Agency Box Score”: New York Times, July 3, 1953; and February 24, 1954. Joseph Alsop, the scion … his death in 1989: The facts for the Alsop account are taken from the Washington Post, April 13, 1995. It is also discussed in Joe Alsop’s Cold War, by Edwin Yoder, Jr.; Molehunt, by David Wise; and a doctoral thesis, “Joseph Alsop and American Foreign Policy,” by Leann Grabavoy Almquist.

  82 “Perverts Called Government”: New York Times, April 19, 1950; May 22., 1950; and September 17, 1950.

  “psychiatric case histories”: Coronet, September 1950.

  “wide leather motorcycle” … “normal Saturday crowds”: New York Times, August 1, 1954

  83 At the end of the decade: George Chauncey, Jr., lecture at the Museum of the City of New York, June 22, 1995.

  “In those days it”: Author’s interview with “Sam Baron,” December 12, 1991.

  “The hustlers were mostly”: Author’s interview with Jack Dowling, May 5, 1993

  women were legally required: Author’s interview with Sandy Kern, June 29, 1993.

  84 “When a dead man”: Author’s interview with Joe Schoener, 1978.

  “I always felt ugly” … “I loved it”: Author’s interview with Sandy Kern, June 29, 1993.

  86 “We knew we were outside” … “place that was illegal”: Before Stonewall (documentary).

  “sex is beautiful” … “woman again, or a man”: Author’s interview with Sandy Kern, June 29, 1993.

  89 “scientists, businessmen”: Donald Webster Cory, The Homosexual in America, 161–62.

  “homosexual creativity”: Ibid., 161.

  “a gay man who got married”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “The idea of family”: Author’s interview with Stephen Sondheim, August 1, 1995.

  90 “Jerry R. called today”: Humphrey Burton, Leonard Bernstein, 187.

  “I didn’t want to write”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “so-called Americans”: Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 14–15.

  Laurents recruited Sondheim: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “We thought the same way”: Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 15–16; and New York Times, October 21, 1990.

  “Something’s coming, it may”: Humphrey Burton, Leonard Bernstein, 274–75.

  91 “I remember all my collaborations”: Ibid., 275.

  “Originally, Robbins wanted only”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, January 1, 1997.

  “I twisted syllables”: Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 20–21.

  “Jerry continues to be”: Humphrey Burton, Leonard Bernstein, 270.

  “The idea was”: Ibid., 275.

  “I thought it would run”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “It’s such a shame”: Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 26.

  92 “We thought at that point”: Ibid., 17.

  Harold Prince was in Boston: Ibid.

  Their gamble seemed worthwhile: Humphrey Burton, Leonard Bernstein, 273.

  “Despite the triumphant”: Ibid, and Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 25.

  “It was extremely generous,” Author’s interview with Stephen Sondheim, August 1, 1995.

  “The next day I went”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  93 “The purity of the music”: Ibid.

  The actor Alan Helms: Alan Helms, Young Man from the Provinces, 98.

  In 1996, it was one: New York Times, March 26, 1996.

  “It was never an issue”: Author’s interview with Murray Gitlin, February 26, 1993.

  “There is one sensibility”: Letter from Arthur Laurents to the author, August 21, 1995.

  “boy-girl stuff: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  “If you think that’s”: Author’s interview with Sondheim, August 1, 1995.

  94 “What we did was”: Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 26.

  “The radioactive fallout”: Quoted in Humphrey Burton, Leonard Bernstein, 276.

  “It was a big hit” … “The picture failed for me”: Craig Zadan, Sondheim & Co., 26–30.

  95 “It was a rare sort”: Quoted in Gore Vidal, United States, 447. From an essay first published in New York Review of Books, June 13, 1985.

  Michael Butler was the … “good arrangement for us”: Author’s interview with Michael Butler, March 10, 1996.

  96 “there are no homosexual”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  “What we can discuss”: Edmund White, States of Desire, 259.

  “any discussion of a group’s”: New York Times Magazine, June 16, 1991.

  “you got very good” … “impersonating a gay man”: The Celluloid Closet (documentary).

  97 “At one point”: Gore Vidal, United States, 443–44.

  “so convinced of being”: City Poet, 229, and What Did I Do: The Unauthorized Autobiography ofLarmy Rivers, with Arnold Weinstein, 228, 230, 232, 234.

  98 “I wouldn’t go to bed”: Author’s interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.

  “repairing the three of us”: Jack Kerouac, The Subterraneans, 53—54.

  “It is hard now”: Vidal, United States, 1136.

  99 “So why all the fuss?”: New York Review of Books, June 13, 1985.

  “’Cause I was in love”: Allen Young, Gay Sunshine Interview with Allen Ginsberg, 4.

  “Neal [Cassady]”: Ibid., 3, 4, 6.

  “He had mixed feelings”: Ibid., 7.

  100 “That was eliminated”: Ibid., 3–7.

  “It took an enormous amount”: Before Stonewall (documentary).

  “In the forties”: Ibid.

  “We thought that we”: The Celluloid Closet (documentary).

  “There was a series”: Before Stonewall (documentary).

  102 “I loved the Puerto Ricans”: Author’s interview with Franklin Macfie, May 12, 1993.

  “just had to become” … “loved to have fun”: Author’s interview with Murray Gitlin, February 26, 1993.

  104 “I was twenty-one” … “the next fifteen years”: Author’s interview with Roy Aarons, December 12, 1991.

  106 There was another famous cluster: Brad Gooch, City Poet, 194–96.

  “Gay life
was secretive” … “could talk to people”: Author’s interview with Jack Dowling, May 5, 1993.

  107 “14th Street is drunken,”: Frank O’Hara, “Homosexuality,”

  After his adventures in the … “everybody bowed”: Author’s interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.

  110 “Truman lifted his cape”: Author’s interview with Paul Cadmus, May 20, 1995.

  “He was so funny”: Author’s interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.

  111 “officially came out” … “moved a mountain”: Author’s interview with Franklin Macfie, May 12, 1993.

  115 “sort of a village atheist” … “very cute country boy”: Author’s interview with Walter Clemons, November 9, 1992.

  118 “I have noticed that straight men”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.

  “They would fix me up” … men had disappeared: Author’s interview with Walter Clemons, November 9, 1992.

  119 “It was vividly exciting” … “legs I’ve ever seen!”: Ibid.

  120 “a room with a lot”: Author’s interview with Murray Gitlin, February 26, 1993.

  “It was before I”: Author’s interview with Walter Clemons, November 9, 1992, and James Spada, Streisand, 68.

  121 “One day this girl”: Arthur Laurents interviewed by Larry Kramer in The Advocate, May 16, 1995.

  “It took me all day” … “wouldn’t believe it”: Author’s interview with Jack Dowling, May 5, 1993.

  123 “We didn’t know” … “achievements of the homosexual minority”: Before Stonewall (documentary), and John D’Emilio, Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities, 59–66.

  gay friends: Los Angeles Times Magazine, June 10, 1990.

  “She never treated”: New York Times, November 22., 1996.

  124 “Curiosity and empathy”: Los Angeles Times Magazine, June 10, 1990.

  “Every clinical psychologist”: Eric Marcus, Making History, 24.

  “gay men can be”: Ibid., 24–25.

  Although it would be: New York Times, November 22, 1996.

  In the seventies: Ibid.

  “how terrible’: Author’s interview with William Wynkoop, June 3, 1993.

  125 It was published under the: Author’s interview with Brandt Aymar, May 1, 1995.

  The offending books: Ibid.

  “It was well accepted”: Ibid.

  “American life as”: Donald Webster Cory, The Homosexual in America, xiii.

 

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