Download - LGBTQ Portrayal in the Media
LGBTQ Portrayalin theMedia
By Maureen & Kenny
1900s – 1920s: Silent Films• Very few openly queer
characters• 1895: The Dickinson
Experimental Sound Film
• Origin of “The Sissy” archetype
• Several openly gay directors
• 1920s saw films pushing more boundaries
1930s: Hays Code• Morocco (1930): woman
dressed in tuxedo kisses another woman
• Hays Code passed in 1930, after strong pressure from religious conservative groups– Set strict regulations for
film content– Filmmakers found ways
to creatively circumvent these regulations
1930s – 1950s: Avoiding the Hays Code
• Openly gay & lesbian characters weren’t erased, but were made into villains
• Gay themes were coded in scripts (but queer audiences could figure it out)– Red River: guns as phallic
symbols– Ben-Hur: “body servant”– Rebel Without A Cause: Plato– Gentlemen Prefer Blondes:
gym scene with Jane Russell
1960s: Where’s The Progress?
• Viewed as a decade of liberalism & liberation, but movie industry hadn’t quite caught up
• Gay & lesbian characters were depressed, guilty, unstable, suicidal (or eventually died)– Advise and Consent:
blackmail– The Sergeant: guilt,
unrequited love, suicide
1970s: Queer Positivity• The Boys in the Band
(1970)– Gay men were happy– Sense of belonging &
community– “If we could just learn not
to hate ourselves…”• Cabaret (1972)
– Sally fails to seduce Brian, thinks he’s gay
– They try being a couple later, it’s weird
– They wind up having sex with the same guy
1980s: Moving Forward & Backwards at the Same Time
• Queer characters were portrayed as villains again– Cruising: serial killer
murdering gay men, portrayal of gay men as sex-crazed
– Night Shift: gay stereotypes & prison rape paranoia
• But progress was also made– Making Love: positive, stable
gay male relationship– Victor Victoria: increased gay
& trans* visibility– The World According to Garp:
John Lithgow as transwoman– Before Stonewall
1990s: And Here We Go…• Significant increase in
queer visibility– Philadelphia: AIDS crisis– The Adventures of
Priscilla, Queen of the Desert: trans* visibility
– Boys Don’t Cry: real-life story about a trans man
• Presence of LGBTQ characters on TV– Both Ellen DeGeneres
and her sitcom character coming out
2000s• Queer As Folk: first hour-
long drama about LGBT people (gay & lesbian)– First gay sex scene on TV– Portrayed “real” gay
issues• The L Word: lives of
lesbian, bisexual, trans* people
• Logo launched in 2005– Mainly gay programming– Criticized for “watering
down the gay”, heteronormativity, gay male focus
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