re: what's so gay about pre Hollywood? | |
Last Edit: PlayWiz 12:42 pm EDT 07/27/24 | |
Posted by: PlayWiz 12:30 pm EDT 07/27/24 | |
In reply to: what's so gay about pre Hollywood? - sc2 11:05 am EDT 07/27/24 | |
|
|
There are gay guys dancing which Al Jolson makes a remark about in, "Wonder Bar"; but that film, reasonably enjoyable for most of it, has one of the most offensive blackface sequences imaginable, using some outrageous stereotypes. There's also a "Call Her Savage" with "It Girl" Clara Bow in one of her sound films, where she and an escort go into a clearly gay bar. There's also something unofficially, but still a gay sensibility, in much of the roles and work of both Edward Everett Horton and Franklin Pangborn, who show up in numerous films in the classic era. |
|
Link | "Wonder Bar" - gays dancing |
reply | |
|
|
Previous: | re: what's so gay about pre Hollywood? - comedywest 03:24 pm EDT 07/27/24 |
Next: | THE SIGN OF THE CROSS (1932) - BroadwayTonyJ 04:06 pm EDT 07/27/24 |
Thread: |
|
Time to render: 0.039948 seconds.