Tag Archives: gay

The first gay-sympathetic mainstream article published in Canada

In just a few months it will be the 50th anniversary of what is widely considered the first article in a mainstream Canadian publication that is sympathetic to homosexuality.

Sidney Katz did a two-part story in the Feb. 22, 1964 and Mar. 7, 1964 issues of MACLEAN’S MAGAZINE.  The report documents a very marginalized but collectivizing community.

Katz’ investigation was triggered by widespread condemnation of the discovery by the press, of The Club: a member’s only privately run gay bar in Toronto.  Katz profiles the community’s outrage as well as discovers that the gay men and women he meets are surprisingly, “normal.”  Although persecuted by society, his interviewees have largely the same hopes and aspirations as other Canadians.

He also uncovers a vibrant community that exists apart from the straight world, filled with doctors, auto mechanics, bookstores, etc., that deal with an exclusively gay clientele.

He writes: “Can homosexuals look forward to making progress in their campaign for just treatment in employment and other matters?  Much will depend on their attempt to re-make their public image into a less threatening one.  This might be accomplished dramatically and expeditiously by large numbers of homosexuals publicly identifying themselves – an act that would require almost unimaginable courage.  I have only met a few homosexuals prepared to take such a bold step at this time.”

I have always loved the Plaza Theatre, now I have another reason…

In my research I discovered that the Plaza Theatre was an early embracer of diversity.  Long before Fairy Tales, or even The Fire I Have Become film festivals, the Plaza was doing their own thing in 1980….

At the Glenbow today

At the Glenbow Museum Archives going through their paper archives and the Doug Young fonds (files).

Doug Young, 1950-1994, was born near Taber, Alberta and raised there and in Medicine Hat. He attended Medicine Hat College and the University of Calgary. Young worked with the Alberta Service Corps for five years and Canada Customs for three. He was active in the Gay rights movement in Calgary and served as the president of Gay Information and Resources Calgary (GIRC) from 1977 to 1979, and as a board member from 1977 to 1981. He was active in many other organizations including the Alberta Lesbian and Gay Rights Association, AIDS Calgary, Gay and Lesbian Legal Advocates Calgary (GALLAC), Right to Privacy Committee, and the Gay and Lesbian Community Police Liaison Committee.

There was widespread discrimination of the queer community in Calgary in the 1970s, that included the police, politicians and the public at large: documented quite clearly in the fonds.  Also noteworthy, was the contributions of the courage queers who stood up to society in face of that discrimination and demanded change.

I am attaching an article by Len Girivitz, that recounts a sort of local Stonewall moment, that catalyzed forming a queer activist group.