- Harry Hay
:For|the Australian Olympic swimmer|Henry Hay
Harry Hay (
April 7 ,1912 ,Worthing ,England –October 24 ,2002 ) was a leader in thegay rights movement in theUnited States , known for founding theMattachine Society in 1950 and theRadical Faeries in 1979, and partner of inventor John Burnside for 40 years, from 1962 until Hay's death. He was raised as a Roman Catholic.Founder of the Mattachine Society
Hay was born in 1912 in the coastal town of
Worthing ,Sussex ,England where he grew up until his parents emigrated toCalifornia in 1919. Starting in Los Angeles in 1950, Hay worked with a handful of supporters to found theMattachine Society . At this time, nineteen years before theStonewall riots , virtually nogay s orlesbian s were publicly out, it was illegal forhomosexual s to gather in public, and theAmerican Psychiatric Association defined homosexuality as amental illness . Very slowly, he gathered members to this group. The Mattachine Society met in secret, with members often accompanied by a female friend to prevent being publicly identified as gay. ThoughHenry Gerber 's gay rights groupThe Society for Human Rights had briefly flowered inChicago twenty years earlier, it was quickly shut down by authorities. Hay's successful launching of a lasting national gay network makes him a plausible entry for the founder of the American gay rights movement.Although Harry Hay claimed 'never to have even heard'Fact|date=February 2007 of the earlier gay liberation struggle in
Germany -- by the people aroundAdolf Brand ,Magnus Hirschfeld andLeontine Sagan -- he is known to have talked about it with European emigres in America including Mattachine co-founderRudi Gernreich . (However, Gernreich arrived in America at age 14, and Hay had already written his gay manifesto when they met).Hay, along with Roger Barlow and LeRoy Robbins, directed a
short film "Even As You and I" (1937) featuring Hay, Barlow, and filmmakerHy Hirsh .A married man (beard/wife Anita Platky) and a member of theCommunist Party USA , Hay composed the first manifesto of the American gay rights movement in 1948, writing::"We, the Androgynes of the world, have formed this responsible corporate body to demonstrate by our efforts that our physiological and psychological handicaps need be no deterrent in integrating 10 percent of the world's population towards the constructive social progress of mankind."citation |last=Hay |first=Harry |last2=Roscoe |first2=Will, (ed.) |title=Radically Gay: Gay Liberation in the Words of Its Founder |place=Boston |publisher=Beacon Press |year=1996 |isbn=0807070815 |page=64]
He soon dispensed with the apologetic language and ideas. Though it may seem very dated today, the group was very radical for its time. Hay and the Mattachine Society were among the first to argue that gay people were not just individuals but in fact represented a "cultural minority" (see
Queer culture ). They even called for public marches of homosexuals, predicting later gay pride parades. Hay's concept of the "cultural minority" came directly from his Marxist studies, and the rhetoric that he and his colleague Charles Rowland employed often reflected the militant Communist tradition. As the Mattachine Society grew with chapters around the country, the organization saw the Communist ties of its founders, including Hay, as a threat during the McCarthyite witch-hunt era, and expelled them from leadership. The organization took a more cautious tack so that by the time of theStonewall riots the Mattachine Society came to be seen by many as stodgy and assimilationist.The Communist Party did not allow gays to be members, claiming that homosexuality was a 'deviation'; perhaps more important was the fear that a member's (usually secret) homosexuality would leave them open to blackmail and made them a security risk in an era of
red-baiting . Concerned to save the party difficulties, as he put more energy into the Mattachine Society, Hay himself approached the CP's leaders and recommended his own expulsion. However, after much soul-searching, the CP, clearly reeling at the loss of a respected member and theoretician of 18 years' standing, refused to expel Hay, instead dropping him as a 'security risk' but ostentatiously announcing him to be a 'Lifelong Friend of the People'.citation |title=Harry Hay: Painful partings |first=Leslie |last=Feinberg |date=June 28 ,2005 |accessdate=2007-11-01 |url=http://www.workers.org/2005/us/lavender-red-40/ |periodical=Workers World]Founder of Radical Faeries
Hay later became an outspoken critic of gay assimilationism and went on to help found both
Jesse Jackson 's Rainbow Coalition and the gay men's group theRadical Faeries , as well as being active in the Native American movements.:"We pulled ugly green frog skin of heterosexual conformity over us, and that's how we got through school with a full set of teeth," Hay once explained. "We know how to live through their eyes. We can always play their games, but are we denying ourselves by doing this? If you're going to carry the skin of conformity over you, you are going to suppress the beautiful prince or princess within you."citation |title=Remembering Harry |first=Mark |last=Thompson |periodical=
The Advocate |url=http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m1589/is_2003_Jan_21/ai_96072134 |date=January 21 ,2003 |accessdate=2007-11-01 ]In the early 1980s Hay protested the exclusion of the
North American Man Boy Love Association (NAMBLA) from participation in the LGBT movement. Though he was never a member of NAMBLA, he gave a number of speeches at its meetings, and in 1986 he marched in the Los Angeles Pride Parade, from which the organization had been banned, with a sign reading "NAMBLA walks with me."Personal life
In 1963, at age 51, he met an inventor named John Burnside, who became his life partner. They lived first in Los Angeles and later in a
Pueblo Indian reserve inNew Mexico . After returning toLos Angeles to organize the Radical Faerie movement with Don Kilhefner, the couple moved toSan Francisco , where Hay died oflung cancer at age 90.Hay was the subject of Eric Slade's
documentary film "Hope Along the Wind: The Life of Harry Hay" (2002). He also appeared in other documentaries, such as "" (1978), in which he appeared with his partner Burnside. In 1967, Hay and Burnside appeared as a couple on theJoe Pyne television show.After the death of the actor
Will Geer , who had found fame as Grandpa Walton on "The Waltons " television show, Hay claimed that Geer had been one of his first male lovers in the early '30s. Hay wrote about their political activism and said that he and Geer were present at the San Francisco General Strike in July 1934.citation |title=Celebrity Diss and Tell: Stars Talk about Each Other |first=Boze |last=Hadleigh |authorlink=Boze Hadleigh |year=2005 |page=135 |isbn=0740754734 |publisher=Andrews McMeel Publishing]ee also
* RFD - Journal of The Radical Faerie Movement
* "" (DVD collection featuring Hay's 1937 film "Even as You and I")Notes
References
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* Hay, Harry. Edited by Will Roscoe (1996). "Radically Gay: Gay Liberation in the Words of its Founder". Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 0-8070-7080-7External links
* [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_20021029/ai_n12653684 Obituary]
* [http://williamapercy.com/pub-Stonewall.htm On Important pre-Stonewall Activists]
* [http://www.indegayforum.org/news/show/26998.html A Gay Conservative article critical of Hay]
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* [http://www.HarryHay.com/ "Hope Along the Wind: The Story of Harry Hay" film's website]
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