On the topics of, and around Stonewall, I have already published the following accounts
Stonewall Inn and the Riots
Three Centuries of Police Raids
Other Trans Person in New York 1969-72
Recurring Untruths: Masha P Johnson's Birthday
Where was Sylvia the night of 27/28 June 1969?
New York in the 1960s
East New Jersey in the 1960s
1969 – a Year of Much Activity
Trans New York, 1960-1962.
Trans New York, 1963-1965.
It is now 50 years since the Stonewall riots. They became a pivotal event for both trans and gays. There are a number of commemorative books out this year, but all from the gay perspective. My June 2011 account is one of only a very few from a trans perspective.
What I am doing here is putting Stonewall in context. What else what was going on in New York by and/or for trans people in the surrounding years? I start with 1966 because that is the year of Benjamin's influential book, and continue to 1973 and the contentious pride march when Sylvia Rivera was badly treated, the death of Candy Darling, and with 1974, new beginnings.
The four years leading to Stonewall
The five years following Stonewall
The trans geography of New York 1966-74
It is now 50 years since the Stonewall riots. They became a pivotal event for both trans and gays. There are a number of commemorative books out this year, but all from the gay perspective. My June 2011 account is one of only a very few from a trans perspective.
What I am doing here is putting Stonewall in context. What else what was going on in New York by and/or for trans people in the surrounding years? I start with 1966 because that is the year of Benjamin's influential book, and continue to 1973 and the contentious pride march when Sylvia Rivera was badly treated, the death of Candy Darling, and with 1974, new beginnings.
The four years leading to Stonewall
The five years following Stonewall
The trans geography of New York 1966-74
1966
The decision by the New York Bureau of Records to omit a sex designation
from amended birth certificates for transsexuals was tested legally but
unsuccessfully in Matter of Anonymous v. Weiner,
Harry Benjamin referred Phyllis Wilson to the new clinic at Johns
Hopkins.
Sylvia Rivera was hustling as a woman. She used a gun on a trick who was beating her. He later had her arrested and charged. Ray appeared in court as a clean-cut young man and was acquitted.
Marsha Johnson, 22, from Hoboken and Elizabeth, New Jersey, moved to Manhattan. Sometimes she worked as a waitress, but usually she worked the streets.
Spring 1966: the new New York City mayor, John Lindsay, had announced a crackdown on pornography and prostitution. Sylvia, at her usual spot on 9th Avenue and 44th Street was one of many caught in the sweep. Sylvia was put in the gay section in Rikers Island prison. It was here that she started doing heroin. She also met Bambi L’Amour.
After release Sylvia tried female hormones for a while: then stopped.
“I don’t want to be a woman. I just want to be me. … I like pretending. I like to have the role. I like to dress up and pretend, and let the world think about what I am. Is he, or isn’t he?”
The noted photographer Walter Rutter came and took a series of photographs at Susanna Valenti's transvestite resort Casa Susanna in upstate New York.
Later that year Phyllis Wilson had become a dancer
in New York. Oct 4 a gossip column in the New York Daily News carried the item
about her:
“Making the rounds of the Manhattan clubs these nights is a stunning girl who admits she was male less than a year ago and that she underwent a sex change operation at, of all places, Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore”.
Johns Hopkins made a tactical
decision and gave an exclusive to The New
York Times, which ran the story on the front page on Nov 21. A press
conference was called on the same day, where Edgerton and several colleagues
announced at a press conference the establishment of the Johns
Hopkins Gender Identity Clinic under the chairmanship of plastic
surgeon John Hoopes. They announced that they had already operated on 10 patients, all of whom were happy with the
outcome. Three were already married, and three more were engaged.
A black
trans girl (born 1948) previously in the New Jersey foster care
system, expressed the kinds of statement that a trans girl normally would, and
for that was committed to a psychiatric institution.
Holly
Woodlawn went to John Hopkins for the operation, but she was denied it in that
she had not been in the program for at least a year. She went on a shopping
spree instead with the money that her boyfriend had provided for the operation.
Kim
Christy and her friend
Billy, who was becoming known as International
Chrysis and entering pageants and performing, shared a tiny
apartment in the area that later became New York's SoHo. They met sex magazine
pioneer and editor of Exotique
magazine, Lenny Burtman who arranged photo-shoots and other favors. She got to know New
York female impersonators such as Tammy Novak, and performed at Club 82 as a
stripper and as a showgirl.
·
Harry
Benjamin. The Transsexual Phenomenon.
Julian Press, 1966. With a bibliography and appendix by Richard Green. A
close reading. The seminal
work that defines the field for decades to come.
1967
The Harry Benjamin Foundation presented eight separate papers at a meeting at the prestigious New York Academy of Sciences on January 16, 1967, mainly considering etiology based on pre and post examinations of Benjamin's patients. Robert Stoller, Richard Green, Herbert Kupperman, Wardell Pomeroy, John Money, Ruth Doorbar, Leo Wollman and Henry Guze presented papers, based on their work with the HBF.
Harry Benjamin and Reed Erickson had been having disputes, sometimes quite petty, about how the money was spent. In the spring of 1967 the EEF grant to the HBF was reduced to $1,200, and in the fall – after the promised three years expired-- stopped entirely. Shortly afterwards, the Erickson Educational Foundation asked Benjamin to vacate the office that it was subsidizing.
Over 700
desperate transsexuals wrote and implored the doctors at the Johns
Hopkins Clinic to help them. However the Clinic would approve for surgery
only those whom they unanimously deemed to be ‘good candidates’. They often chose to err on the side of wait-and-see,
recommending therapy rather than progressing a patient on to surgery.
Dr Edgerton
adopted and adapted Burou's
penile inversion method of vaginoplasty.
April: Mauricio
Archibald, en femme, having been to a masquerade party, was on a New York
subway platform waiting for a train. A police officer charged him as being a vagrant in
violation of subdivision 7 of section 887 which forbids a disguise "in a
manner calculated to conceal his being identified". He was tried and
convicted. See also Felicity Chandelle, who had been convicted under the same law three years earlier. Neither Virginia Prince nor Siobhan Fredericks arranged help as they had done for Felicity.
September: Section 105 of chapter 681 of the Laws of 1967, which chapter
repealed section 887 came into effect as of September 1, 1967, "provided
that the newly enacted sections were not to apply or govern the prosecution for
any offense committed prior to the effective date of the act".
One-year-old
Bruce Reimer from Manitoba was brought to see Dr Money after losing his penis
in a botched circumcision, and was surgically reassigned to female as Brenda,
and continued annual visits for almost 10 years, until Brenda began to refuse,
and started to change back to male as David.
Phyllis
Wilson’s marriage in Baltimore was reported in Jet Magazine.
Ray
Rivera (Sylvia) was called to the draft board. She proclaimed “I know I like men. I know I
like to wear dresses. But I don’t know what any problem is”, was rejected and
was still able to get a lift home.
Eddie
Dame, a cross-dresser since early childhood, was best man when his lover of
four years married a women (Eddie and the lover had sex the night before and
continued to do so occasionally until 1982 when the lover was seriously
ill). Eddie then went to New Orleans
for Mardi Gras and bought a full set of female clothing. Back in New York Eddie
started going out dressed female.
Flawless
Sabrina/Jack Doroshow had organized 46 Nationals Pageants a year from
1959-1967, including the annual Miss Philadelphia contest held at the Hotel Philadelphia (now
demolished) at Broad and Vine Stree, which was won in 1967 by the 19-year-old Rachel Harlow.
Flawless
Sabrina held the Miss All-American Camp Beauty Pageant. Miss Philadelphia (Rachel Harlow) was the
winner; Mis Manhatten (Crystal Labeija)
staged a tantrum. Kim Christy and International Chrysis were in the chorus line. Minette and Mario Montez performed songs. Dorian Corey, Jackie Curtis, Andy Warhol and
Terry Southern were also present.
Wayne
County (the future Jayne) arrived in New York for the first time, and
survived by meeting people in the Stonewall Inn. However
he returned to Atlanta come September as could not afford a winter coat.
Siobhan
Fredericks’ Turnabout magazine
for transvestites ceased publication.
Valerie
Solanas, masculine woman and room-mate of Candy Darling, wrote the SCUM Manifesto Scum
stood for Society for Cutting up Men.
She commented on male transvestites:
“Women, in other words, don't have penis envy; men have pussy envy. When the male accepts his passivity, defines himself as a woman (males as well as females think men are women and women are men), and becomes a transvestite he loses his desire to screw (or to do anything else, for that matter; he fulfills himself as a drag queen) and gets his dick chopped off. He then achieves a continuous diffuse sexual feeling from `being a woman'. Screwing is, for a man, a defense against his desire to be female.”
Pudgy
Roberts was a New York female
impersonator most famous in the late 1960s. He also wrote two novels, an how-to
book, and edited a monthly magazine, The
Great Female Mimics.
·
Andy
Milligan (dir) Compass Rose, with Minette.
US 73 mins 1967.
·
Jackie
Curtis play: Glamour, Glory and Gold.
Performed by Candy Darling and Robert De Niro.
·
Pudgy
Roberts. Female Impersonator’s Handbook.
Capri Publishers, 1967
·
Bob Clarke (dir). She-Man. With Hans Crystal and Dorian
Wayne. US 68 mins 1967. Bad
transvestites blackmail men into feminization.
·
The
Rolling Stones in the song “Citadel” on Their
Satanic Majesties Request: “Candy and Taffy, hope we both are well/Please
come see me in the citadel”
Renée Richards met with John Money at Johns Hopkins, but at the end was told that Johns Hopkins was not accepting any more transsexual patients at that time.
1968
Leo
Wollman was on the WBI Boston television channel with Virginia Prince.
Dr Stanley
Biber, in Colorado, contacted the Johns Hopkins Clinic for advice on how to
do gender corrective surgery. He was
supplied with diagrams based on Dr Burou’s penile inversion method.
The most
prominent patient in the Gender Identity Clinic was writer Dawn
Langley Hall who had surgery in 1968, married an African-American the next
year, and publicly announced the birth of a daughter in 1971 (a claim that
the Gender Identity Clinic said was “definitely impossible”).
Erica Kay
had surgery with Dr Benito
Rish.
Lee
Brewster, from West Virginia, who had been fired from the FBI
finger-printing section because of suspicions that he might be gay, had arrived
in New York, and started organizing drag balls as fund raisers for the
Mattachine Society.
Eddie
Dames joined Charles Ludlam's Ridiculous Theatrical Company, and had a part
in When Queens Collide. The troupe gave him the name Bunny
Eisenhower.
Wayne
County met photographer Leee Childers and they shared a coldwater
walkup. Later Jackie Curtis and Holly
Woodlawn moved in.
June 3. Valerie
Solanas, shot Andy Warhol three times. He was
pronounced clinically dead. The doctors managed to
revive him and operated for 5 1/2 hours, removing his spleen. Warhol was in
critical condition but survived.
At approximately 8:00
pm, Valerie walked up to a traffic cop near Times Square and surrendered. She was arrested and later taken to Bellevue Hospital for psychiatric
examination.
Flawless
Sabrina/Jack Doroshaw was special advisor for gay and trans aspects on John
Schlesinger’s film Midnight Cowboy.
Schlesinger’s new lover, photographer Michael Childers -- an old friend of Morrisey -- negotiated for a bunch of Factory regulars to be in the film’s party scene. They each got $25 a day, but were left sitting around and became very bored, and only a few of them appeared very briefly in the film. Schlesinger’s film was the first notable Hollywood film to tell of hustlers and the underground countercultural life. Warhol, still in hospital, spoke on the phone to Morrissey, and admitted jealousy that his material was being stolen. They had made a film, My Hustler, in 1965. Warhol suggested the Morrissey make a similar film, and have it out before Schlesinger’s, and use whoever had not been sent to Midnight Cowboy. This Morrissey did. He shot the film, Flesh, over six weekends, and for less than four thousand dollars (compared to $3 million for Midnight Cowboy). He again used Joe Delasandro, as a hustler called Joe, and he included two trans actresses who had not been in the bunch sent to Midnight Cowboy: Jackie Curtis and Candy Darling. During their short scene, they sit reading Hollywood magazine, commenting on the articles while Joe gets a blow job. The film opened at the New Andy Warhol Garrick Theatre in the last week of September 1968 and played there for seven months before moving to the 55th Street Playhouse in May, 1969. At the Garrick, its average gross was $2,000 per week, making $10,000-12,000 during the first six weeks.
Schlesinger’s new lover, photographer Michael Childers -- an old friend of Morrisey -- negotiated for a bunch of Factory regulars to be in the film’s party scene. They each got $25 a day, but were left sitting around and became very bored, and only a few of them appeared very briefly in the film. Schlesinger’s film was the first notable Hollywood film to tell of hustlers and the underground countercultural life. Warhol, still in hospital, spoke on the phone to Morrissey, and admitted jealousy that his material was being stolen. They had made a film, My Hustler, in 1965. Warhol suggested the Morrissey make a similar film, and have it out before Schlesinger’s, and use whoever had not been sent to Midnight Cowboy. This Morrissey did. He shot the film, Flesh, over six weekends, and for less than four thousand dollars (compared to $3 million for Midnight Cowboy). He again used Joe Delasandro, as a hustler called Joe, and he included two trans actresses who had not been in the bunch sent to Midnight Cowboy: Jackie Curtis and Candy Darling. During their short scene, they sit reading Hollywood magazine, commenting on the articles while Joe gets a blow job. The film opened at the New Andy Warhol Garrick Theatre in the last week of September 1968 and played there for seven months before moving to the 55th Street Playhouse in May, 1969. At the Garrick, its average gross was $2,000 per week, making $10,000-12,000 during the first six weeks.
A
troupe of street queens, with varying membership sometimes camped out in
the parkette opposite the Stonewall tavern.
It was a tough life. One
drugged-out queen fell asleep on a rooftop and came close to death with
third-degree sun burn; ‘cross-eyed
Cynthia’ (?=Wanda) died when she was pushed out of a window of the St George
Hotel in Brooklyn; another, Sylvia (not Rivera) jumped off its roof; Dusty
‘ugly as sin, never out of drag, very funny, big mouth’ who was careless about
the term she used to refer to an African-American and was stabbed to death.
Sandy, a Yale-educated
lawyer, was 6'5" (1.96m). He liked to say that he was five foot 17 inches.
He was a regular in both Virginia Prince's FPE organization in New York, where
he rarely wore female clothing, but did show photographs of himself so
dressed. He was also part of the local
bondage community. His lover was the drag performer Tobi
Marsh.
David
Wilde, who had been a focal point for FPE members in Manhattan, met Joan
Bennett (1910-90), the film star and member of the New York acting dynasty, at
a party. When she met David she was
appearing in the occult soap opera, Dark
Shadows, 1966-71. They would date for ten years. When David told her about
his female persona, Gail, she was initially dismayed, but afterwards she was
unperturbed. David knew Harry Benjamin and asked him to talk to her about
cross-dressing.
Susanna
Valenti responded in her column to Prince’s recent appearance on the Alan
Burke television show. Burke pushed the line that a transvestite taking
hormones and considering surgery was close to being a transsexual. Prince
replied that she would not have the operation for anything. Susanna commented: “Such a statement marks the boundary between
the TV and the TS. The TV rejects the thought of surgery. He enjoys living the
two sides of the human coin.” However
she estimated that she personally knew a dozen transvestites who had had
surgery. “I met them all before the sex change, and some of them, at first, did
not know they were TS’s, they only knew that they enjoyed dressing and would
feel much happier as girls than in their male role.” However she believed that many who did think
themselves as transsexuals were mistaken. She also criticized transsexuals as a
group as not being able to pass: “Very few of the TS’s I know have learned to
move and gesture with that suppleness that is exclusively female”. Later she
continued: “Society insists upon females behaving like ladies—and this is where
our TS and pseudo TS friends fail in a most regrettable way. I am thinking
right now of several instances whereby people continue to ‘read’ a TS as being
a man even AFTER the operation”.
Catherine Bruce was photographed by Diane Arbus in both female and male personas.
Joe Tish had been a female impersonator since the early 1950s. In particular she performed at the Moriccan Village on West 8th St. In the late 1960 she had a long running show at the Crazy Horse. Tish was one of the few performers who left the club dressed as female. Although refused admission at the Stonewall when so dressed, she had no such problem at uptown straight clubs.
Alexis Del Lago, from Puerto Rico had studied at the Parsons School of Design, and had started going as female. She met Jackie Curtis which led to her being introduced to Andy Warhol’s Factory where she was invited to be in one of his films.
Desiree, who had previously hung around the Stonewall Tavern, took up with Petey, a gangster, and they moved to the suburbs as a heterosexual couple. Petey, in a fit of jealousy, shot and killed her.
++Big Bobby, the bouncer at Tony Pastor's, a mafia gay club at 6th Ave and McDougal St, was the lover of Tony Lee who performed ballet at the club.
++Big Bobby, the bouncer at Tony Pastor's, a mafia gay club at 6th Ave and McDougal St, was the lover of Tony Lee who performed ballet at the club.
October: Mauricio
Archibald appealed to the New York Supreme Court. He contended that a) he
could not be a vagrant in that he has visible means of support b) while
cross-dressed, he had no intention of committing any illegal act. Judge
Markowitz observed that the 1845 law had been updated and readopted, with a
more modern aim to discourage “overt homosexuality in public places which is
offensive to public morality” as well as disguises used to cover criminal
activities.” But Archibald was not engaged in criminal activities, nor was he
gay. Mere “masquerading” without harming third parties is not a crime in New
York, suggested Judge Markowitz. “If appellant’s conviction was correct then
circus clowns, strangely attired ‘hippies,’ flowing-haired ‘yippies’ and every
person who would indulge in the Halloween tradition of ‘Trick or Treat’ ipso
facto may be targets for criminal sanctions as vagrants. However Judges Streit
and Hofstadter rules that the wording of subdivision 7 does not require that
the State must establish either a lack of means of support or an intention to
commit an illegal act. Thus the conviction was affirmed.
Edward
Sagarin, who had published The
Homosexual in America, 1951 as Donald Cory, wrote a paper "Ideology as
a Factor in the Consideration of Deviance" for The Journal of Sex
Research, in which he made the commonplace observation that scientists are
not always as objective as they should be. In the section he named "Normal
Necrophiles and Transsexuals", he quotes Harry Benjamin finding "no
evidence of serious mental illness", and replies: "Benjamin describes
a condition in which 'the male speaks of his female counterpart as of another
person,' but to label this schizophrenia would constitute social condemnation,
rather than diagnostic realism" and "One need only read the case
histories, written by Benjamin or his collaborators, to note how disturbed are
the patients". The Journal allowed Benjamin to reply: "My criticism
of Sagarin's contribution is that his own ideology leads him to draw
unwarranted conclusions in some (not all) instances, and his tendency to generalize
too much".
Patrician but ever
controversial novelist, Gore Vidal (1925-2012) produced a novel, Myra Breckinridge, (named for San
Francisco transvestite Bunny Breckinridge, and an outgrowth of a proposed
sketch for the risqué revue Oh! Calcutta!
- itself produced by semi-closeted transvestite, drama Critic Kenneth
Tynan). An exploration of what
real-life transsexuality never could be.
Myra, the supposed widow of film critic Myron, is taken on at a Los
Angeles acting academy owned by Myron’s uncle, also rapes one of the young
men. After a car accident, Myra reverts
back to being Myron.
·
Frank
Simon (dir). The
Queen, with Flawless Sabrina, Rachel Harlow, Crystal Labeija, Mario
Montez, Minette
and uncredited in the chorus line: Kim
Christy and International Chrysis. US 68
mins 1968. Rachel went to the Cannes International Film Festival with the film and was a center of attention. David Bowie, in his androgynous phase, would cite her influence.
·
Mart
Crowley. The Boys in the Band. Dir:
Robert Moore. Premiered Off-Broadway
April 14, 1968 and played 1001 performances through September 1970. Despite its rather old-fashioned view, it
was one of the first plays centered on gay men.
· Jack
Smight (dir). No Way to Treat a Lady.
Scr: John Gay from a novel by William Goldman, with Rod Steiger and Kim
August. A misogynist serial killer does
drag for one killing of a cis woman played by Kim August. US 108 mins 1968. One scene shot in the 82 Club.
· Andy
Milligan (dir). The Filthy Five. A heterosexual sex film, with Selena
Robbins as the stripper who has a threesome with two men. Robbins was featured prominently on the
film’s poster – and incidently was post-op by then.
· Paul
Morrissey (dir). Lonesome Cowboys
with Francis
Francine as the transvestite sheriff.
US 109 mins 1968.
· Avery
Willard (dir) Flaming Twenties. With Mario
Montez, Minette, Jack Smith, Charles Ludlam, Bill Vehr. US ? mins 1968
· Minette. Come to
Me at Tea-Time. LP, 1968.
· Jean Marie
Stein. Season of the Witch. Essex House, 1968. Stein was still pre-transition when she
wrote this science fiction of a man, accused of rape, who has his consciousness
transferred to the woman’s body.
· Jackie
Curtis’ play Amerika Cleopatra with
Harvey Fierstein and Alexis Del Lago.
· Lou
Reed’s song “Sister Ray” – said by some to be about Sylvia/Ray Rivera who was
16 at the time. although the lyrics don't support this.
· Lou
Reed’s song “Lady Godiva’s Operation”. “Life
has made her that much bolder now/ That she [has] found out how/ Dressed in
silk, latin lace and envy/ Pride and joy of the latest penny-fare” -- however the operation ends badly.
1969
Transsexual
pioneer Christine Jorgensen came to Johns Hopkins for corrective surgery.
Future
showgirl Michelle
Brinkle ran away to Baltimore intending to register at the Johns Hopkins Clinic,
but never did, and ended up at Dr Burou’s Clinic in Casablanca instead.
Psychiatrist
Jon Meyer became chairman of the Johns
Hopkins Gender Identity Clinic, and his predecessor, John Hoopes wrote:
“The surgery, often considered outrageously excessive and meddlesome by the
uninformed, must be undertaken regardless of the censure and taboos of present
society”.
Charles
Ihlenfeld was a medical internist with an interest in endocrinology when a
friend arranged an introduction to the then 84-year-old Dr Harry Benjamin who
asked him to cover the office during the summer while Benjamin was in San
Francisco. Ihlenfeld learned on the job, and stayed on:
"I was awed by the courage of people who were willing to risk losing everything to gain the truth of their own lives".
Kim Christy
was being kept by an oil tycoon. She also starting doing photography for Eros
Publishing Company, which published Eros,
Mode Avantgarde, Hooker and Exposé.
Phoebe
Smith, from Atlanta, came to New York after initial surgery with Dr Barbosa
in Tijuana, to see Harry Benjamin for a hormone prescription. She returned in November and Benjamin
declared her ready for final surgery.
Terry
Noel had been performing at the 82 Club since her operation in 1964. Later she was a typist. Then she moved to Virginia and married a
naval officer.
Holly
Woodlawn talked her way into Paul Morrissey’s Trash,
first in a bit part, but then as the female lead (a heroin addict’s
girlfriend). She was paid $25 a day, and
ad-libbed many of the lines. Several Hollywood
people petitioned the Academy to nominate her for best actress.
Vicki
Strasberg,
sex worker, was photographed by Diane Arbus at her birthday party.
Susanna
Valenti, writing her column in Transvestia,
took up the concept that had been proposed by Sheila Niles of ‘whole girl
fetishist (WGF)’ for members who did not pass well enough, particularly if it
were for lack of trying, Susanna even
estimated that the majority of members were WGFs (Transvestia #55, 1969). Later in the year, despite what she had written the previous year,
Susanna Valenti had decided to live full-time as female. She planned to quit
her job in the city and run Casa Valenti as a year-round bed-and-breakfast.
Joe
Tish was performing in upstate New York.
June 22: Judy Garland
died, age 47 from an overdose.
June 27: Judy’s
funeral.
Edmund White: “I was
just walking past Sheridan Square with my close friend Charles Burch the night
of the raid. I had stopped going to the Stonewall because it had been taken
over by drag queens, whereas before it had been a simple gay cruise bar where
people danced to jukebox tunes.”
27/28
June - 1st night of Stonewall
Riots. The police raid against the Stonewall Tavern hours after the Judy Garland funeral, was co-ordinated by Deputy Inspector Seymour Pine, who used the excuse that the bar was unlicensed. The raid was carried out without the knowledge of the local precinct which was suspected of being on the take. Interpol had recovered negotiated bonds from Wall Street which were turning up in Europe. The bonds were being stolen by Wall St. employees who were victims of a blackmail operation run by Ed Murphy, sometimes called the Skull from his time as a wrestler. Murphy sometimes worked the door, where one task was to hand envelopes to a representative of the Sixth Precinct, rumored to be $1,200 a month. Other times he behaved as if he were the manager of the Stonewall Inn. Murphy had served time for stealing gold from dental offices, and had been arrested previously on blackmail charges, but supposedly had incriminating photographs of J. Edgar Hoover, and the charges had not been pursued. The NYPD figured out that the theft of bonds was tied to blackmail at the Stonewall Inn, and the order went out to shut down the club. One of the first reported actions that started the riot on the 27th, was that a cop hit a butch female/trans man and that he hit back. It has been debated whether this was Stormé
DeLarverie, who was previously the sole male impersonator in the Jewel Box
Revue. Deputy Inspector Pine has testified that the first significant
resistance that he encountered in the bar was from the transvestites. Allyson
Allante, then 14, was arrested, as was Maria Ritter who was there with her
friend Kiki to celebrate Maria being 18 and legally able to drink for the first
time. Street queen, Birdy
Rivera was also there. Diane Kearny was in the area and for a time joined
the crowd that was observing events. Tammy
Novak was arrested and put in the paddy wagon for drag queens, but escaped
in the confusion and ran to Joe
Tish's apartment where she holed up for the weekend. A police officer
putting Maria Ritter into the paddy wagon had commented that he couldn't
believe that she was a boy. She said that she wasn't. As some more trans women
were directed in, Maria stepped around them and walked away. The same policeman
went to intercept her, but as she broke into tears, waved her to go away. Marsha
P. Johnson and Zazu
Nova were also active in the riots, and Michelle, Dario
Modon and Christine
Hayworth were present. Marsha was observed dropping a heavy weight onto a
police car. Wayne
County met Miss Peaches and Marsha P Johnson on arrival and realized what
was going on. He joined an impromptu
march up and down Christopher Street shouting "Gay Power!". Beat poet Alan Ginsburg lived on Christopher
Street and inevitably joined the crowd. Ed Murphy was handcuffed to another
man, but they managed to escape into the crowd and took a taxi to an S&M
friend who knew how to remove handcuffs. Perhaps the Sixth Precinct cops,
already peeved in not knowing about the raid in advance, recognized the man who
paid them off.
Apparently Sylvia
Rivera was not at the Stonewall Inn at the outbreak of the riots as often
been claimed. Comparing the different accounts,
the most likely account is that she had fallen asleep in Bryant Park after
taking heroin. (Marsha later went to Bryant Park, found her asleep, and woke
her up to tell her about the riots.)
A few weeks later the
Gay Liberation Front was formed. Five
months later, the Gay Activists Alliance split from GLF.
A few
months after the riots, the Stonewall Inn closed. The space was occupied in
turn by a bagel sandwich shop, a Chinese restaurant, and a shoe store.
19 September: Leo
Wollman was on the Phil Donahue television show to discuss transsexual
operations.
1 October: ++The opening of John Osborne's play, A Patriot for Me, at the Broadway Theatre, was picketed by female mimics complaining about the disrespectful presentations during the drag ball scene.
1 October: ++The opening of John Osborne's play, A Patriot for Me, at the Broadway Theatre, was picketed by female mimics complaining about the disrespectful presentations during the drag ball scene.
In the October 1969 Transvestia Susanna
Valenti, announced what she
was doing. She had lost the “fabulous thrill” that comes with the
transformation from ‘him’ to ‘her’ but it was becoming increasingly agonizing
for her to make the switch back to ‘him’. She was criticized for failing to
maintain the balance.
John Money conducted
a follow-up study of ‘17 male and seven female patients’, and found that after
surgery nine patients had improved their occupational status and none declined.
“Seven male and three female patients married for the first time” and “All of
the 17 are unequivocally sure they have done for themselves the right thing”.
There had
been discussion that a book should emerge to embody the findings of the Harry
Benjamin Foundation, but this was felt to be too narrow. In particular that would exclude the important
work being done in Europe. The book,
financed again by the Erickson Educational Foundation, eventually came out in 1969.
·
Richard
Green and John Money (eds) Transsexualism
and Sex Reassignment, with a preface by Reed Erickson, an introduction by
Harry Benjamin. Johns Hopkins University Press, 1969. With contributions by Erickson, Money, Green,
Stoller, Guze, Pomeroy, Doorbar, Hamburger, Wollman, Sherwin.
- Avery
Willard (dir). Camp Burlesgue. With Pudgy Roberts impersonating
Bette David, Carol Channing, Tiny Tim, Marlene Dietrich, Lily Tomlin, Judy
Garland and Barbra Streisand. US 6 mins 1969.
- Jackie Curtis play: Heaven Grand in Amber Orbit, with Candy Darling.
- Lou Reed’s song “Candy Says”: “Candy says, I've come to hate my body/ And
all that it requires in this world …. Candy says, I hate the big decisions/
That cause endless revisions in my mind”
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