Showing posts with label gay history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gay history. Show all posts

Saturday, October 7, 2023

324. Yesteryear's Queers' Word of the Day #38 - Nancy Boy

 Nancy Boy
A queer man; taken from "Nance", 
a generic role for an actor
who played an effeminate man 
in burlesque theatre houses
-1930s-
From Columbian College History News Network

"The ‘nance,’ or Nancy Boy, was a gay burlesque character from the 1930s who brought guffaws and belly laughs as he pranced about the stage, creating campy scenes and sketches of gay life. He put on an outrageous show and audiences loved him. In the late 1930s, New York Mayor Fiorello LaGuardia, fearful of how the lurid burlesque shows would make his city look in the upcoming World’s Fair of 1939, cracked down on the houses.

Part of LaGuardia’s anger was aimed at the Nance, whom critics said created audiences of lusty gay men having sex in the dark balconies of the burlesque emporiums. It was an outrage, the Mayor said, and police began swooping down on burlesque shows, closing many and forcing others to drop the nance act or greatly curb it."

Thursday, September 21, 2023

303. Yesteryear's Queers' Word of the Day #34 - Blue Discharge

Blue Discharge
From 1945 to 1947, gays discovered
in the US armed forces received less than honorable discharges
and were often sentenced to hard labor,
without an appeal process
-1940s-
"My buddy Fred survived D Day on Omaha Beach but didn't survive the army - they gave him a blue discharge!"