Bush wants Pro-Homosexual Drama Banned

December 9, 2004

http://arts.guardian.co.uk/features/story/0,11710,1369643,00.html

President Bush wants ‘pro-homosexual’ drama banned. Gary Taylor meets the politician in charge of making it happen

What should we do with US classics like Cat on a Hot Tin Roof or The Color Purple? “Dig a hole,” Gerald Allen recommends, “and dump them in it.” Don’t laugh. Gerald Allen’s book-burying opinions are not a joke.

Earlier this week, Allen got a call from Washington. He will be meeting with President Bush on Monday. I asked him if this was his first invitation to the White House. “Oh no,” he laughs. “It’s my fifth meeting with Mr Bush.”

Bush is interested in Allen’s opinions because Allen is an elected Republican representative in the Alabama state legislature. He is Bush’s base. Last week, Bush’s base introduced a bill that would ban the use of state funds to purchase any books or other materials that “promote homosexuality”. Allen does not want taxpayers’ money to support “positive depictions of homosexuality as an alternative lifestyle”. That’s why Tennessee Williams and Alice Walker have got to go.

I ask Allen what prompted this bill. Was one of his children exposed to something in school that he considered inappropriate? Did he see some flamingly gay book displayed prominently at the public library?

No, nothing like that. “It was election day,” he explains. Last month, “14 states passed referendums defining marriage as a relationship between a man and a woman”. Exit polls asked people what they considered the most important issue, and “moral values in this country” were “the top of the list”.

“Traditional family values are under attack,” Allen informs me. They’ve been under attack “for the last 40 years”. The enemy, this time, is not al-Qaida. The axis of evil is “Hollywood, the music industry”. We have an obligation to “save society from moral destruction”. We have to prevent liberal libarians and trendy teachers from “re-engineering society’s fabric in the minds of our children”. We have to “protect Alabamians”.

I ask him, again, for specific examples. Although heterosexuals are apparently an endangered species in Alabama, and although Allen is a local politician who lives a couple miles from my house, he can’t produce any local examples. “Go on the internet,” he recommends. “Some time when you’ve got a week to spare,” he jokes, “just go on the internet. You’ll see.”

Actually, I go on the internet every day. But I’m obviously searching for different things. For Allen, the web is just the largest repository in history of urban myths. The internet is even better than the Bible when it comes to spreading unverifiable, unrefutable stories. And urban myths are political realities. Remember, it was an urban myth (an invented court case about a sex education teacher gang-raped by her own students who, when she protested, laughed and said: “But we’re just doing what you taught us!”) that all but killed sex education in America.

Since Allen couldn’t give me a single example of the homosexual equivalent of 9/11, I gave him some. This autumn the University of Alabama theatre department put on an energetic revival of A Chorus Line, which includes, besides “tits and ass”, a prominent gay solo number. Would Allen’s bill prevent university students from performing A Chorus Line? It isn’t that he’s against the theatre, Allen explains. “But why can’t you do something else?” (They have done other things, of course. But I didn’t think it would be a good idea to mention their sold-out productions of Angels in America and The Rocky Horror Show.)

Cutting off funds to theatre departments that put on A Chorus Line or Cat on a Hot Tin Roof may look like censorship, and smell like censorship, but “it’s not censorship”, Allen hastens to explain. “For instance, there’s a reason for stop lights. You’re driving a vehicle, you see that stop light, and I hope you stop.” Who can argue with something as reasonable as stop lights? Of course, if you’re gay, this particular traffic light never changes to green.

It would not be the first time Cat on a Hot Tin Roof ran into censorship. As Nicholas de Jongh documents in his amusingly appalling history of government regulation of the British theatre, the British establishment was no more enthusiastic, half a century ago, than Alabama’s Allen. “Once again Mr Williams vomits up the recurring theme of his not too subconscious,” the Lord Chamberlain’s Chief Examiner wrote in 1955. In the end, it was first performed in London at the New Watergate Club, for “members only”, thereby slipping through a loophole in the censorship laws.

But more than one gay playwright is at a stake here. Allen claims he is acting to “encourage and protect our culture”. Does “our culture” include Shakespeare? I ask Allen if he would insist that copies of Shakespeare’s sonnets be removed from all public libraries. I point out to him that Romeo and Juliet was originally performed by an all-male cast, and that in Shakespeare’s lifetime actors and audiences at the public theatres were all accused of being “sodomites”. When Romeo wished he “was a glove upon that hand”, the cheek that he fantasised about kissing was a male cheek. Next March the Alabama Shakespeare festival will be performing a new production of As You Like It, and its famous scene of a man wooing another man. The Alabama Shakespeare Festival is also the State Theatre of Alabama. Would Allen’s bill cut off state funding for Shakespeare?

“Well,” he begins, after a pause, “the current draft of the bill does not address how that is going to be handled. I expect details like that to be worked out at the committee stage. Literature like Shakespeare and Hammet [sic] could be left alone.” Could be. Not “would be”. In any case, he says, “you could tone it down”. That way, if you’re not paying real close attention, even a college graduate like Allen himself “could easily miss” what was going on, the “subtle” innuendoes and all.

So he regards his gay book ban as a work in progress. His legislation is “a single spoke in the wheel, it doesn’t resolve all the issues”. This is just the beginning. “To turn a big ship around it takes a lot of time.”

But make no mistake, the ship is turning. You can see that on the face of Cornelius Carter, a professor of dance at Alabama and a prize-winning choreographer who, not long ago, was named university teacher of the year for the entire US. Carter is black. He is also gay, and tired of fighting these battles. “I don’t know,” he says, “if I belong here any more.”

Forty years ago, the American defenders of “our culture” and “traditional values” were opposing racial integration. Now, no politician would dare attack Cornelius Carter for being black. But it’s perfectly acceptable to discriminate against people for what they do in bed.

“Dig a hole,” Gerald Allen recommends, “and dump them in it.”

Of course, Allen was talking about books. He was just talking about books. He never said anything about pink triangles.

3 thoughts on “Bush wants Pro-Homosexual Drama Banned

  1. Okay, not entirely speechless. This article reminds me of reading about a mother in Alabama who wanted the Harry Potter books banned from school libraries, because these articles of fiction enlightened her children about witchcraft, and she feared they would become interested in it.
    My first reaction was, “Lady, do your parenting at home, don’t leave it up to the schools!” Then I went off on this tangent in my thoughts for a while and came away with a summary:

    Number 1, it’s a fictional story; Number 2 moral values start at home, and if you want your child to make good decisions, you have to instill that moral fiber in them from day one. I thought the woman was absolutely ridiculous, and if my mother were like that, I’d rebel and read all the Harry Potter I could…those children will be ridiculed if they’re old enough, for having a mother who hates Harry Potter…I mean, you know how children can be…so there’s potential for psychological damage even before the child decides to read the books, which will no doubt give them an insatiable appetite for practicing witchcraft. Please!!

    With children, it does not work to push your views and values on them, pushing is not the way to go. Guidance, education and understanding is where it’s at. Granted I’ve never had children, but I’ve been one, and the times when I wanted to scream and rebel, was when I was being told to believe something, or told something was wrong or bad, without being given any understanding why or what for.

    So ramble, ramble ramble. I feel currently that choices are trying to be made for us in this country, like the aforementioned mother was trying to make for her children, especially where moral values are concerned. And honestly, I’m really tired of it…and the views of Mr. Allen really sadden me, especially as an actress. I want to be able to do any number of productions, and I really hate it when a show is not done as it was written. Unless a creative mind has a better idea than originally planned upon, that can do the original idea justice, I’m against it. The idea of not being able to do certain shows, because they show parts of society that some holier-than though politician disapproves of, really sickens me. I really didn’t think we’d be going that far back into history with society in the 21st century. So, our exterior lives have come a long way, but the inner workings of the human mind hasn’t evolved much at all. I know plenty of people that are on the other end of the spectrum, but it seems that those in power are the squeaky wheels right now. I think I’ll pray.

  2. Okay, sorry, one more. I wanted to point out that the drama in question is not necessarily pro-homosexuality, it’s just telling a story about people who live that lifestyle. They may or may not be the central character, but the authors chose to include a person living the homosexual lifestyle. That’s what drama does, it tells the story of people, and when writing, an author will write what they know to be real in their life, or the lives of those they’ve experienced. So, I really wouldn’t be surprised if the “dig a ditch and bury’em” attitude carried over into relating to homosexuals. If we can’t tell their stories too, the general message is that they aren’t worthy of being emulated as a part of society. Hmmm…I think I read about this sort of view in history, discrimination, I’m so spent on dealing with that, I wish everyone else were too. Judgement day will come someday, to those who believe, and nobody really knows what will happen, or who will be saved, it’s completely out of our hands. Our responsibility is to give and receive love, to and from all God’s creatures, and since human beings are supposed to be the most advanced creation of the Father, we should make him proud by respecting him and all he’s placed before us. Not by controlling the masses with ideas we believe to be righteous and virtuous in the eyes of God.

    I’m definitely done for the night. I guess these posts struck a chord that hasn’t been given the opportunity to sing out for a while.

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