Read The Gay Metropolis Online
Authors: Charles Kaiser
“gave the appearance”: Author's interview with Paul Cadmus, October 29, 1992.
“stunning” ⦠“I went back to school”: Author's interview with Otis Bigelow, April 28, 1994.
12 Hoyningen-Huene had been born:
New York Times,
September 23, 1968; and William A. Ewing,
The Photographic Art of Hoyningen-Huene,
p. 13.
“You're doing all this moping”: Author's interview with Otis Bigelow, April 28, 1994.
“gay society at that point”: Ibid.
“fairies” ⦠“gay hangouts”: George Chauncey, Jr., “The Policed: Gay Men's Strategies of Everyday Resistance” in
Inventing Times Square,
323.
13 “very abrupt and candid”: Tennessee Williams,
Memoirs,
66, quoted in foonote in ibid., 419.
For speakeasies versus gay bars: George Chauncey, Jr.,
Inventing Times Square,
325.
“You'd see a cop”: Author's interview with Roy Strickland and William Wynkoop, June 3,1993.
For statistics on sex offenders: Donald Webster Cory,
The Homosexual in America,
56.
14 A red tie was sometimes ⦠tone down their behavior: George Chauncey, Jr.,
Inventing Times Square,
326-27, and
Before Stonewall
(documentary).
“The sexual scene I'm sure” ⦠“anything you want to”: Author's interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.
15 “We were at that early”: Author's interview with Jack Dowling, May 5, 1993.
“the naïveté of the public”: Author's interview with Paul Cadmus, October 22, 1992.
16 “I grew up and came out”: Author's interview with “James Atcheson,” October 1, 1992.
“What seems to me”: Richard Watts, Jr.,
New York Herald Tribune,
June 14, 1942.
“Webb was playing the part”: Author's interview with “James Atcheson,” October 1, 1992.
17 “It'll ruin the party” ⦠“consistency in music”: Humphrey Burton,
Leonard Bernstein,
41â43, 49.
The degree of protection ⦠“the opportunity to commit suicide”: for a comprehensive account of the Welles affair, from which these facts are taken, see Ted Morgan,
FDR, 677â86.
19 As a result, when the: George Chauncey; Jr.,
Inventing Times Square,
324â25, and Donald Webster Cory,
The Homosexual in America,
45.
“Biblical condemnations of homosexual behavior”: John D'Emilio,
Sexual Politics, Sexual Communities,
13.
“so sordid”:
Newsweek
November 8, 1943.
“a tall, powerfully built”: Ibid.
20 “He was a gay one” ⦠Ritz Tower apartment:
New York Journal-American,
October 25, 1943;
New York Post,
October 26, 1943; and
New York Times,
October 22, 1943.
Faced with imminent separation ⦠Las Vegas:
New York Post,
October 29, 1943. “neat soufflé” ⦠“door for him”: Meyer Berger,
New York Times,
October 26, 1943.
21 But the unprintable details: Author's interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.
“he admitted he had killed”:
New York Times,
January 3, 1946.
“I was in the army”: Author's interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.
Although his uniform was covered:
New York Times,
October 29, 1943, March 29, 1944, and
New York Journal-American,
October 28, 1943.
“I raised my hand to knock”:
New York Times,
March 29, 1944.
Lonergan ordered breakfast ⦠“shouted in the District Attorney's office”:
New York Times,
October 29, 1943, and
New York Journal-American,
October 28, 1943.
22 “You can't keep your eye”:
New York Post,
October 25, 1943.
“openly labeled in newspapers”:
New York Times,
October 29, 1943.
“For the first time in”:
Time,
November 8, 1943.
23 “Psychiatrists Give Views”:
New York Journal-American,
October 30, 1943.
25 “dubious joking about sexual”: Richard Watts, Jr.,
New York Herald Tribune,
June 14, 1942.
“Was he born or made?”:
Time,
April 3, 1944.
“The majority of people”: Author's interview with William Wynkoop, June 3, 1993.
On April 17, 1944:
New York Times,
April 18, 1944.
“civilly dead”: Ibid., February 6, 1954.
Ten years after Lonergan:
New York Times,
February 6, 1954.
In 1965 Lonergan challenged: Ibid., August 14, 1965.
26 He died of cancer: Ibid., January 3, 1986.
“Just after I'd graduated” ⦠“taken me to the doctor's”: Author's interview with Roy Strickland, June 3, 1993.
27 Six months after the Japanese: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
35.
28 To win their rightful place:
Coming Out Under Fire,
8.
Allan Bérubé reports: Ibid., 10.
On the eve of the: Ibid., 9.
29 “accepted and left alone”: Ibid., 11.
“had carved out the”: Ibid.
“an aspect of three”: Ibid., 15.
In 1942, army mobilization: Ibid., 19.
30 “subject to ridicule” ⦠“the male pattern”: Ibid., 20.
“be on the lookout” ⦠“machine-gunned”: Ibid., 19â21.
was “very afraid that”: Author's interview with Murray Gitlin, February 26, 1993.
“an awful lot of gay”: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
23.
“I wanted to go in” ⦠“to hang in”: Author's interview with Stanley Posthorn, May 12, 1993.
32 “One of the worst”:
Before Stonewall
(documentary).
“instantly called”: Ibid.
“I never saw so many” ⦠“paid again. Ever”: Author's interview with Stanley Posthorn, May 12, 1993.
33 “They brought him back”: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
197.
34 “This plane came overhead”: Ibid., 197â98.
“all went to the plane”: Ibid., 198.
“I got in my car” ⦠“wonderful boys were killed”: Author's interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.
36 “It was a
greaf:
Author's interviews with Stanley Posthorn, May 24, 1993, and March 28, 1994.
37 “My God!”: Author's interview with “James Atcheson,” October 1, 1992.
“The army set up a”: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
88â89, 97.
“Despite their hairy chests”:
Life,
December 12, 1942.
38 “I was wandering” ⦠“army was a strange place”: Author's interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.
“You are not fighting”: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
97.
“My sisters were all” ⦠“was very hidden”: Author's interview with Franklin Macfie, May 12, 1993.
39
“anything
feminine” ⦠“going too far!”: Author's interviews with Jerre Kalbas, June 1, 1993, and March 27, 1994.
“People sort of did”: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
98.
“Manhattan parties got to be”: Ibid., 113.
“During the war”:
Gay Sunshine Interviews,
vol. 2, ed. by Winston Leyland, 213.
“New York in wartime” ⦠“incessant”: Author's interview with Arthur Laurents, June 14, 1995.
40 “Everybody was released”: Author's interview with Gore Vidal, January 14, 1994.
“Just as I put on”: Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
109â10.
“We never thought” ⦠“not in my group”: Author's interview with “Stephen Reynolds,” September 24, 1992.
“The men who don”:
Ebony,
March 1952 and March 1953, and Allan Bérubé,
Coming Out Under Fire,
116.
41 “the first Mrs. Johnson” ⦠“way to treat anybody”: Author's interview with Philip Johnson, May 5, 1995.
“impeccable enunciation”: Franz Schulze,
Philip Johnson: Life and Work,
93â95.
42 “model of dignity”:
The New Yorker,
May 4, 1940, quoted in James Gavin,
Intimate Nights,
88.
“blacks and whites”: Ibid., 87â88.
“general aura”: Author's interview with Philip Johnson, May 5, 1995.
“Phillip
[sic]
Johnson”: William L. Shirer,
Berlin Diary,
213.
Kirstein biographical details:
New York Times Magazine,
June 20, 1982.
“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 âgay 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., 138â39.
“confirmed pervert” ⦠court-martialed and imprisoned: Ibid., 143â44, 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., 170â72.
50 “This study was the first”: Ibid.,
277â78.
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,
3â4.
“no aspect of human biology”: Dr. Alan Gregg, ibid., v.
“To each individual”: Ibid.
54 The questionnaire about homosexual: Ibid., 623â25.
“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,
650â51.
“In view of the data”: Ibid., 659â60.
56 “The judge who is considering”: Ibid., 664â65.
“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,
150â152, 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.