Well, I’m not sure how this is going to go, because I’m not
good at writing blog series and what with the hairdos series from hell I’m
currently embroiled in I think I might be biting off more than I can chew. Still, following I was thinking it might be fun to indulge myself (and you of
course) with a few posts on queer history.
I was going to write this piece up into one long article
but, given the sheer volume of material and the average “concentration span” I have decided to split it into deliciously
camp bitesize chunks, and oh boy, is the subject of today’s post a chunk I’d
like to have bitten.
Glady Bentley – the original bulldagger of blues – was born
in 1907 in Philadelphia but, having discovered a taste for masculine dress and
the power of performing early on, she moved to New York before she hit the age
of twenty and began working the Harlem lesbian bars, most notably The Clam
House – a popular gay speakeasy.
Bentley invariably performed in drag, taking full advantage
of the freedom of this underground scene to express her masculinity rather than
having to hide. In as a wild time, clubs
were populated with lovers of what was known as the “sporting life”– rife with
sex, drugs and liquor. Usually favouring
a white tuxedo and top hat the 300lb Gladys cut quite the dash as she played on
her noted masculinity with deep growling vocals. Her performances were renowned for their
bawdy humour with Bentley adept at making class commentary, mocking racial
boundaries and flirting with the ladies of the audience all at the same time. Her act was so shocking that the clubs she
performed in were raided, on more than one occasion, on the grounds of
obscenity. Sounds like a fun scene to me
and it certainly drew in a large and dissolute crowd.
Gladys even claimed to have married her white lover, much to
the delight of gossip columnists!
Sadly the Great Depression devastated the theatre scene and pushed
her back to her family, now in California, in 1937. However, her irrepressible personality led
her back to the stage and it was not long before she made a name for herself there
, making a few theatre appearances before the authorities caught on and banned
her from appearing on stage in trousers.
Refusing to give in Bentley carried on performing but only on the gay
scene.
Sadly, (at least for me) Gladys renounced her lesbianism in
an interview with Ebony in 1952 entitled “I am a woman again” where she states
that her former tendencies were “a deviation.”
She claimed to have found God, married a man and have finally found her femininity
through a course of hormone treatment. These
claims appear somewhat spurious however, when we consider the times – this was
the height of McCarthyism, the world was a much less tolerant place for a
black, lesbian in the early 50s than it had been in the 20s and 30s. Furthermore her “husband” later vehemently
denied any marriage had taken place.
Whatever the real story, you can't deny Bentley had a great voice - there isn't a lot out there for me to link to, sadly as none of her bawdier songs were recorded. Record companies were understandably reticent. Still, have a listen to the attached and see what you think.
I hope to continue the blues vein over the next few weeks with some info on Lucille Bogan, Mabel Hampton and Bessie Smith. I've said it, now I have to do it...
inexpertly rehashed from: