The Avengers Emma Peel and her man pal, Mr. Steed. Queer, Isn't It?Tonight’s Episode: Psycho Cross-Dressing Killers[29 May 2007] The history of TV is lacking GLBT characters. But on which shows should they have appeared? If ever someone needed a friend that was a tool-toting lesbian, for example, it was Lucy Ricardo.
By Michael AbernethyAccording to the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation, there were nine gay or lesbian characters on the broadcast networks last year, comprising 1.3 percent of the total number of regular characters. There were no bisexual or transgender characters. The number of GLBT representations shoots up if you count cable, daytime, and reality programming, but still some GLBT advocates argue that it’s not enough. Of course, these same advocates don’t suggest where those characters should be added—a transsexual on Grey’s Anatomy, a lesbian on Smallville, a gay man on CSI: Miami? It is Miami, after all. These advocates also seem to forget how far we’ve come in the representation of gays and lesbians on TV. There was a time when a GLBT individual was lucky to see anyone like him or herself on TV. They popped up occasionally, such as the wonderful Beverly LaSalle on All in the Family, but most often they were stereotyped characters whose sexuality was implied but not stated. Usually, this took the form of the limp-wristed, lisping queen with a melodramatic personality. Unrealistic stereotypes ruled: if the character was a cross-dresser on a drama, you could rest assured that by the end of the show, he would be revealed as the psychotic killer. If she was a butch female, by the end of the show, someone would have gussied her up in a pretty dress and bee-hive hairdo so she could land the man of her dreams. Musing on this had me wondering how much farther we would be in representations of GLBT individuals on TV had series through the years been brave enough to feature regular gay, lesbian, bisexual, or transgendered characters. But which shows? After all, featuring a gay man on Hawaii Five-O would have seriously altered the dynamics of this testosterone-driven crime drama. What’s more, some shows had characters that were “gay” without being gay; Uncle Arthur on Bewitched was the gayest straight man in the history of TV, while the female Ralph Monroe of Green Acres was the most lesbianic straight woman. Who could have possibly have been more flamboyant than Suzanne Sugarbaker on Designing Women? And why feature a gay character on Batman when the entire show was practically an ode to man / boy love, with the one outside love interest of Batman being a drag queen (Catwoman)? When TV did start featuring gay characters, the character usually had some conversion experience that turned them straight. Remember Steven Colby on Dynasty or Jodie Dallas on Soap? Groundbreaking characters in their queerdom, but all it took was some slutty bimbo with a trick pelvis to make them forget their penchant for doing the dirty deed with the same sex. It was as believable a transition as when soap opera characters send their five-year-old kids off to some magical Swiss boarding school to have them come back six months later as 20-year-olds with MBAs. For lesbians, the dominant theme was “the big tease”: take a regular female character, drop a lesbian guest star into her life, and let her experiment with a same sex smooch. L. A. Law, Roseanne, and Picket Fences all featured a lesbian dalliance episode. However, in the case of Picket Fences, network sponsors raised a ruckus, so CBS blacked out the scene but kept the dialogue. Because what we imagine is going on in the dark certainly wouldn’t be more salacious than what they filmed for a family drama, would it? So I’ve come up with a list of shows which could have easily featured a GLBT character. In fact, they most likely would have benefited from one. I Love Lucy (1951 - 1957) ![]() The Avengers buddies The Avengers (1961 - 1969) The Streets of San Francisco (1972 - 1977) and Charmed (1998 - 2006) Rhoda (1974 - 1978) Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman (1976 - 1977) The Love Boat (1977 - 1986) ![]() Moonlighting’s Maddie Hayes’ thoughts seem to be elsewhere . . . Moonlighting (1985 - 1989) Murphy Brown (1988 - 1998) There are probably other series that could fit onto this list, so feel free to imagine your own. Doris Roberts as a transgendered person on Remington Steele? The Bionic Woman with a hydraulic tongue? Agent 69 on Get Smart? Why not? Of course, having a gay character doesn’t mean you have to feature gay sex. It’s not as if you ever saw Lucy and Ricky doing the humpty dance; hell, their two beds were barely even in the same room. Whatever the series and whatever the time, social standards dictate how much shows can get away with. Which helps explain why there have been so few gay characters in television history. Social mores just wouldn’t have any of the homosexuality nonsense. In 1968, Harry Belafonte and Petula Clark caused a scandal by singing a song together and—gasp—touching during the middle of it. If Americans couldn’t handle a white woman touching the arm of a black man, then they certainly weren’t ready for Little Joe Cartwright looking longingly after some cowboy in chaps and an unbuttoned shirt. Thus, we are left to imagine what could have been. Television through the years hasn’t had any problems with hiring gay men and women, just portraying them. Personally, I think television would have been a little more fun if it had. Queer, Isn't It?
Neil Patrick Harris: The Other SortBy Michael Abernethy05.Nov.09 Neil Patrick Harris is riding high these days. But in years past, if the average person sitting in his or her Barcalounger knew a TV star was gay, it would have been disastrous for both series and star.
Sitting on the MountaintopBy Michael Abernethy15.Oct.09 Did Obama calm the rash of criticism regarding his inaction on gay rights with his recent speech to the Human Rights Campaign?
Like ‘The New York Times’—with a Pink Boa and a TiaraBy Michael Abernethy18.Aug.09 Local LGBT papers are a vital part of our community. They bind us together, and they have played a major role in the development of that community. If only they were more inclusive. |
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Comments
I like to think that Miss Jane Hathaway and Jethrine Bodine from the Beverly Hillbillies ended up together.Jethrine could have been a stunt woman and Miss Jane her agent.That would have been a great spin-off.Can a city-woman and a big-boned country-girl find happiness in Hollywood ? BDM
Comment by BDM from New Nlbany IN — June 7, 2007 @ 8:23 am
I enjoyed your article very much, although I think that the Mary Tyler Moore show could have benefited from a regular gay character (not the one time appearance of Phyllis’ gay brother.). I have to correct you on one point. Even though it has been 30 years since I saw the show, I distinctly remember not one, but two gay characters on Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. A mysterious family moves in nearby, headed by a mature mother with fiery red hair played by Vivien Blaine. She has two hunky “sons” who have a secret. I turns out only one is her son, the other his boyfriend. Granted, they weren’t so much gay as homosexual, but MHMH still broke ground before Soap.
Comment by Seth Hager from Port Townsend, WA — June 15, 2007 @ 10:15 am