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Peering beneath the jockstrap of Western history
By
Michael Bronski
The Lavender Locker Room: 3000 Years of Great Athletes whose Sexual Orientation was Different
by Patricia Nell Warren Wildcat Press
How to order
The Lavender Locker Room: 3000 Years of Great Athletes whose Sexual Orientation was
Different, by Patricia Nell Warren (Wildcat Press, $24.95, 368 pages)
This is a terrific book-- informative, breezily written, filled with interesting facts, and totally fun to read. It's also a little, well, all-over-the-place, ahistorical, and at times just plain silly. But if you're interested in sports,
lesbian and gay history, or the gossip associated with each, then this is the book for you.
There's always been a thriving market-- both commercial and conversational-- for information on who's gay and who isn't. This "genre" was probably started by Havelock Ellis and John Addington Symonds, who compiled
what was probably the first list of famous historical homosexuals in their 1897 work
Sexual Inversion. Since then books such as Noel Garde's 1964
From Jonathan to Gide or A.L. Rowse's 1977
Homosexuals in History: A Study of Ambivalence in Society, Literature, and the
Arts are early examples of the driving queer desire to identify like-minded people throughout time. Even smarter people, such as Sigmund Freud, enjoyed spelunking through
history-- and case histories-- to uncover who was under the covers of notables such as Da Vinci and Michelangelo.
But queers in the arts is old news, so Patricia Nell Warren's racy run through homos in sports has new, often provocative, material. There are some surprises in this chatty, if highly speculative, three-millennium survey, but
they aren't contemporary baseball players or football champions. And that makes it even more interesting. Rumors swirled about baseball great Sandy Koufax being "that way"-- and then being so angry when someone
suggested it. But contemporary sports icons are, in some sense, post-out: not many people really care. Even the coming-out of major figures such as Billy Bean or Esera Tuaolo these days raise only the eyebrows of the most middle
of Americans.
Warren, who gained enormous fame with her 1974 novel about an openly gay track star
The Frontrunner, touches here on whatever comes into her wide-angle range of vision. She begins with Achilles and Patroclus--
you remember them from The Iliad and Shakespeare's
Troilus and Cressida, right? Well, forget the fact that the Greeks didn't have locker rooms (no need to change when athletes competed naked in the Olympics) or the fact
that these two men are probably literary inventions. What Warren focuses on here is how the film
Troy suppressed the homoeroticism of the literary traditions to fashion a more hetero duo for Brad Pitt and Garrett Hedlund.
Warren gayly skips onward through history and touches on Joan of Arc-- mid-15th century-- and speculates that she may have been transgendered or intersexed rather then lesbian (which actually makes some sense when
we consider that medieval concepts of identity were far more concerned about gender then sexual practice). But the interesting part of the Joan of Arc chapter is that Warren argues her sport was jousting-- not the Hundred
Years War. Thus Warren explores jousting in the Middle Ages and now-- information you can't find many other places. The same is true for her chapter on George Villiers, Duke of Buckingham, who was one of the first in Europe to
breed horses when he wasn't dating James I, he of the
King James Bible. L'affaire Villiers/James was fascinating: never one for modesty, James once wrote, "I wish to speak in my own behalf and not to have it thought to be a
defect, for Jesus Christ did the same, and therefore I cannot be blamed. Christ had John, and I have George." Warren finds occasion here to discuss the history of horse racing in the United Kingdom and the relationship of horse
breeding to royalty.
For Warren, 20th-century gay sports really kicks in with late 19th-century pioneer balloonist Alberto Santos-Dumont (and you thought you knew everyone connected with the history of ballooning). There follow
entertaining essays on Amelia Earhart, Ana Maria Martinez Sagi (the once famous Spanish "virgin of the stadium," expert skier, leftist, and contemporary of Lorca), and babe Didrikson Zaharias-- claimed by many to be "the most
complete women athlete who ever lived."
Warren loves a good tale, so the life of Big Bill Tilden-- who reinvented men's tennis in 1919 and whose career was ruined by a teenaged male prostitute-- suits her just fine. And she is not adverse to including non-gay
"friends of Dorothy"-- or are they friends of Patroclus's?-- such as Jim Bouton, author of the 1970s
Ball Four, along with obvious "out" people such as Martina Navratilova and Dave Kopay. Warren also has a smart chapter on gay
cowboys and rodeo stars, and some insightful comments on homophobia and figure skating.
Warren writes in an animate, conversational style that makes for easy, fun reading. Sports heroes become an excuse for a series of meditations on a variety of subjects: same-sex love, or the lack of it, in
Brokeback Mountain, Troy, and The
Messenger; gladiators as sex symbols; the importance of fencing in the Harry Potter series; women who wore pants in the 1930s; and the politics of hormone testing for women athletes. Luckily for the
reader, Warren always has an informed opinion and a backlog of wit that makes her stories-- and the ensuing digressions-- highly entertaining.
| Author Profile: Michael Bronski |
|
Michael Bronski is the author of
Culture Clash: The Making of Gay
Sensibility and The Pleasure
Principle: Sex, Backlash, and the
Struggle for Gay Freedom. He writes
frequently on sex, books, movies, and
culture, and lives in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. |
| Email: |
mabronski@aol.com |
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