LGBTQ - represenation in film

Per A History of LGBTQ+ Representation in Film | Stacker Depictions of queer and trans people have been present in the film medium since its inception more than 100 years ago, but due to censorship and varying degrees of prejudice against the LGBTQ+ community at different points in time, onscreen representation has a long, complicated, and often coded history. While gay characters were frequently used for laughs or not explicitly stated to be queer in the earliest mainstream Hollywood films, a brief relaxation in Germany's film production code in the early 20th century allowed for LGBTQ+ classics like "Different from the Others" and "Mädchen in Uniform."

In Hollywood, the strict Hays Code forbade explicit depictions of homosexuality in film for three decades, during which there was a slew of queer-coded villains. Afterward, gay characters appeared more but often in tragic stories like 1961's "The Children's Hour."

Although LGBTQ+ representation remained sparse over the next few decades, queer camp in the 1970s saw a rise in popularity with the increased prominence of "The Rocky Horror Picture Show" and the films of John Waters. Later, the New Queer Cinema in the 1990s flourished as many independent filmmakers (many of whom were gay) told fluid, empathetic stories about queer individuals.

"Moonlight" made history in 2017 as the first LGBTQ+ movie to win the Oscar for Best Picture. The film, which features an all-Black cast, was one big step toward making gay cinema that isn't whitewashed, features a range of identities, and doesn't make its queer characters one-note or vehicles of suffering.

Stacker compiled a list of 50+ significant moments in the history of LGBTQ+ representation in film, using information from cultural critiques, film reviews and retrospectives, film scholars, and historical records to understand how the community has been represented on the big screen over the decades. The history starts in 1894, with the very first gay film, and ends in 2021 with a mainstream children's movie featuring a main character who is queer.

Though, the first captured image or notable suggestion of homosexuality on film was in 1895, when two men were shown dancing together in the William Kennedy Dickson motion picture The Dickson Experimental Sound Film, commonly labeled online and in three published books as The Gay Brothers. At the time, the men were not seen as “queer“ or even flamboyant, but merely as acting fancifully.[1] However, film critic Parker Tyler stated that the scene "shocked audiences with its subversion of conventional male behavior". [Per Wikipedia]

1950s

Poster for Glen or Glenda

1953

1960’s

https://youtu.be/hUIUBJfDJvQ?si=K2D8hWiNO-bFQeff Boys Beware - Anti Gay Film from 1961 Boys Beware - Wikipedia

Shot in 1961 BOYS BEWARE was shot in the Los Angeles suburb of Inglewood, California and produced with the cooperation of the city's police department and the Inglewood Unified School District, is narrated by a police detective who is on his way to a school meeting to discuss the issue of sexual predators that attempt to lure young adolescent males. It not only shows basic misunderstandings about homosexuality but also attempts to prejudice the community against homosexuals who are portrayed as predatory at best, and basically as anti-social and evil.

Gay History: Watch the Scary 1961 Anti-Gay PSA – “Boys Beware” – Video | timalderman

Andy Warhol's Flesh (Full Movie) (youtube.com) 1968

Shown at Caffe’ Espresso by Walter W Cole before he became Darcelle XV.

1970s

"Rape Culture the 1974/5 film by Cambridge Documentary Films, produced by Margaret Lazarus and Renner Wunderlich - examines the relationship between US cultural sexual fantasies and rape through film and other media. The film defined "rape culture" for the first time." 1) Cambridge Documentary Films http://www.webcitation.org/6DCyyefjt

2) Wikipedia Rape_Culture_(film) http://www.webcitation.org/6DCyuC7lH

3) Rape culture is a concept of unknown origin and of uncertain definition; yet it has made its way into everyday vocabulary and is assumed to be commonly understood. The award-winning documentary film Rape Culture made by Margaret Lazarus in 1975 takes credit for first defining the concept. http://www.webcitation.org/6DCyNlb0f

 

https://youtu.be/3Ew3Pqjw5D8

Ad in a forum for Changing Men, July 1977 – a monthly newspaper of the men’s resource center, Portland, Oregon

LEFT: Ad in a forum for Changing Men, July 1977 – a monthly newspaper of the men’s resource center, Portland, Oregon

Director Michael Chait

RIGHT: ad in a forum for Changing Men, July 1977 – a monthly newspaper of the men’s resource center, Portland, Oregon

OREGON - “Gay Liberation Now”

as reported in the August 1972 issue of The Fountain