Tag Archives: Calgary

Blue Jeans Day – 20 years later…

Going through my own files this past weekend, I discovered my own queer history with an article in The Gauntlet that came out 20 years ago this month.  I was a student at the U. of C. and I remember the furor that erupted over this very clever and subversive activist move.

The idea was to wear denim if you supported gay rights.  Blue Jeans Day started at U of C the year before, but the profile in its first year was low.  For some reason 1992 was the year that its profile blew-up.  Since the majority of students were wearing jeans on any given day, it created this interesting mind-bomb.  Are they really supporting gay rights or just oblivious to the event?

Many queers and their allies were cloaked head to toe in denim (I myself remember having to borrow some jeans from a roommate).  Many others were visibly pissed off.  I remember a number of guys who had pulled out dress pants or khakis from the back of their closets, determined not to show support, despite wearing blue jeans most regular days of their life.

There was tension in the air – but it galvanized us.  20 years later it is a different world, thanks in part, to a little fashion-activism…

The venerable Loose Moose Theatre

Like the Plaza Theatre, another cultural institution, the Loose Moose Theatre Company was an early adopter of gay content in Calgary.  Founded in 1977, Loose Moose is celebrating its 35th anniversary this year.  Back in 1980, it co-produced along with Gay Information and Resources Calgary (GIRC), Fortune and Men’s Eyes.

Fortune and Men’s Eyes is a play set in a Canadian prison for youth and deals with society’s injustice towards gay people.  Written in Canada’s Centennial Year, 1967, by John Herbert, the play shocked audiences and helped force Canadian society to acknowledge the existence and rights of homosexuals.

“Norman Nadel, reviewing the play for the New York Tribune, claimed the homosexual drama was so disgusting that the mention of someone vomiting in the prison’s off-stage toilet came like a breath of spring. Herbert Whittaker, in the Globe and Mail, called the play ‘the art of washing our dirty linen in the neighbor’s yard.'”*

Playwright John Herbert was born in Toronto, Ontario, October 13, 1926; and died in Toronto on June 22, 2001.  The twelve editions of Fortune and Men’s Eyes published by Grove Press in New York have made it the most published Canadian play in history. It won the 1975 Chalmers Award for best Canadian play, and has been published in several Canadian play anthologies.  MGM adapted the play for film in 1970, using a former Quebec City prison as its set.

* from the Canadian Theatre Encyclopedia entry for Fortune and Men’s Eyes

Open minds at U of C. In 1969 before Stonewall?

On Tuesday, February 11th, 1969 more than 300 staff and students at the U of C attended a lecture in MacEwan Hall by Harold Call, gay publisher and activist.  He was speaking at a University of Calgary Civil Liberties Association session billed as Homosexuality: A police industry.

Harold Call, born in Trenton, Missouri on September 20, 1917, was one of the founding members of the San Francisco chapter of the Mattachine Society.  Call created and edited the Mattachine Review, one of the earliest periodicals dedicated to discussing issues of the homosexual community.

In his address he spoke of sexual equality and the legalization of homosexual acts between consenting adults.  He also spoke of the economic value of the homosexual and the victimization of homosexuals at the hands of North American police officers.  He noted, “it is a happy field for the law to work in because it could state it was working to keep the community morally clean.”

Of note were three city detectives who sat quietly three rows from the front.  During the discussion session when any members of the vice-squad present were invited to comment, they did not move, and left soon after.

“Calgary lawyer, Max Wolfe, also sat on the stage during the session and took the stand after Call.  He said there were not too many instances of homosexuality in Calgary. ‘You can draw your own conclusions, it could be the police are shutting their eyes to it or the homosexuals are being reasonable circumspect, about their activities, or both.'”