Yes, There's Change, Then There Is Not

When the Tony Awards are presented next Sunday night in New York City, two productions with gay themes — one vying for best new play and the other for best revival of a musical — will highlight changes in subject and tone in “gay theater� over the last 25 years.

   AIDS attacked New York in 1981, and authorities quickly labeled it a gay male disease and did little to fight it. Gay men discovered more horrible symptoms and effects, as well as lists of the dead, each week in the Village Voice. Activists began to agitate for public funding of AIDS treatment in the city, since insurance companies denied claims. And anger in the gay community mounted.

   Larry Kramer’s “The Normal Heart,â€� produced in 1985 by Joe Papp at the Public Theater, was the first play to deal with the epidemic and its consequences for victims, partners, friends and family. Never a dramatist of subtlety, Kramer raged furiously and demanded respect for gay people in a searing polemic. This was not the 1970s world of  “The Boys in the Band,â€� wallowing in alcohol, stereotype and self-pity.  Kramer wanted gays to stand up and shout.

   Five years later, Tony Kushner’s epic “Angels in Americaâ€� won all the major Tonys; but the theme of Kushner’s lyrical play was still AIDS and discrimination.

   This year, “Next Fall,â€� competing for best new play, concerns a gay couple — one man young, southern and Christian; one older, a New Yorker, agnostic — dealing with religious faith in a gay relationship.  The revival of Jerry Herman’s “La Cage aux Follesâ€� emphasizes the love story of two men who have raised one’s son together, and Douglas Hodge sings “I Am What I Amâ€� as a quiet statement of fact. In the original, George Hearn made the song an anthem of  gay liberation.

   Other gay-themed shows of the past year have also centered on more universal themes: love, commitment, parenthood. “Yank,â€� a surprisingly charming musical that played earlier in 2010, off-Broadway, told the story of two soldiers in World War II (“Yankâ€� was the army newspaper in that conflict) who fall in love. “The Pride,â€� an English import, had its characters live in the 1950s in the first act, then live all over again in current time, dealing with being gay in the different periods.

   “The Temperamentals,â€� which recently closed off-Broadway, concerned the personal life of a founder of The Mattachine Society, the country’s first significant gay male organization, and his circle of friends.  But it concerned growing self-awareness and changing personal relationships more than politics.

    I don’t think “Next Fallâ€� will win a Tony because its writing is too weak and often inchoate. But how refreshing it is to see large audiences watching gay men wrestling with questions of faith on stage.  I do think “La Cageâ€� may well win.  And deservedly so with its humanity and universality explored.

    Of course, in this “newâ€� world of liberation, greater acceptance and freedom, even a probable end to “don’t ask, don’t tell,â€� some things remain: The young, religious character in “Next Fallâ€� can’t bring himself to tell his parents or his stepbrother he is gay. In some very personal ways, “plus ca change, plus ca meme chose.â€�

    

Latest News

Inspiring artistic inspiration at the Art Nest in Wassaic

Left to right: Emi Night (Lead Educator), Luna Reynolds (Intern), Jill Winsby-Fein (Education Coordinator).

Natalia Zukerman

The Wassaic Art Project offers a free, weekly drop-in art class for kids aged K-12 and their families every Saturday from 12 to 5 p.m. The Art Nest, as it’s called, is a light, airy, welcoming space perched on the floor of the windy old mill building where weekly offerings in a variety of different media lead by professional artists offer children the chance for exploration and expression. Here, children of all ages and their families are invited to immerse themselves in the creative process while fostering community, igniting imaginations, and forging connections.

Emi Night began as the Lead Educator at The Art Nest in January 2024. She studied painting at Indiana University and songwriting at Goddard College in Vermont and is both a visual artist and the lead songwriter and singer in a band called Strawberry Runners.

Keep ReadingShow less
Weaving and stitching at Kent Arts Association

A detail from a fabric-crafted wall mural by Carlos Biernnay at the annual Kent Arts Association fiber arts show.

Alexander Wilburn

The Kent Arts Association, which last summer celebrated 100 years since its founding, unveiled its newest group show on Friday, May 11. Titled “Working the Angles,” the exhibition gathers the work of textile artists who have presented fiber-based quilts, landscapes, abstracts, and mural-sized illustrations. The most prominently displayed installation of fiber art takes up the majority of the association’s first floor on South Main Street.

Bridgeport-based artist Carlos Biernnay was born in Chile under the rule of the late military dictator Augusto Pinochet, but his large-scale work is imbued with fantasy instead of suffering. His mix of influences seems to include Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart’s popular German libretto “The Magic Flute” — specifically The Queen of the Night — as well as Lewis Carol’s “Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland,” The Tudor Court, tantalizing mermaids and exotic flora.

Keep ReadingShow less
Let there be Night: How light pollution harms migrating birds
Alison Robey

If last month’s solar eclipse taught me anything, it’s that we all still love seeing cool stuff in the sky. I don’t think we realize how fast astronomical wonders are fading out of sight: studies show that our night skies grow about 10% brighter every year, and the number of visible stars plummets as a result. At this rate, someone born 18 years ago to a sky with 250 visible stars would now find only 100 remaining.

Vanishing stars may feel like just a poetic tragedy, but as I crouch over yet another dead Wood Thrush on my morning commute, the consequences of light pollution feel very real. Wincing, I snap a photo of the tawny feathers splayed around his broken neck on the asphalt.

Keep ReadingShow less