It's delightful, it's delicious, it's dlevy!

I post about musicals a lot. Find me on Twitter: @itsdlevy. You might also enjoy my other Tumblrs, Fuck Yeah Stephen Sondheim and Fuck Yeah Dorothy Fields.

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Frances Faye,
Caught in the Act

johnseven:

Frances Faye was Danny Kaye’s second cousin - I love how their names have the same delivery to them. She was a Jewish nightclub performer and actress who while not open about her bisexuality, at least hinted at it. And her material onstage did the same - bawdy if you knew what she was alluding to, as this song certainly demonstrates. She seems like a pretty interesting person with a great story - her partner for life after two marriages was also her manager, and she recorded several albums, and appeared in a few movies. This is a cool album capturing her night club act I have no idea when. I imagine the 1960s, but who knows?

“This is not dirty, it’s the way I say it.”

trampsky:

I just excused myself from a group lunch because of a bunch of things one person said. And I was enough of a dumbass to say, “I’ve got to go do something.”

Way to make it vague and formless, Erica. You’re trained in what, again?

Now, any major dude will tell you that there are many different…

So, um, I know you’re in the middle of your own process and I don’t want to derail or anything, because his misogyny is inexcusable, but “these guys are why straight people are homophobic” is some fucked up victim-blaming bullshit.

Real liberation makes room for all kinds of gays (and straights), including the kinds that make us uncomfortable. And that’s a hard place to get to, but it’s one worth fighting for. I occasionally reblog this quote from Michael Warner as a reminder of that.

(via trampsky-deactivated20121008)

For those of us of a certain age, Sally Ride was *the* feminist icon, the first and brightest star introduced to elementary school children in the curriculum of girls can do anything… *even science*!

So I was sad to learn she died today.

And then when people on Twitter started to talk about Sally being gay, I got angry.

How did I made it to 34 years old and not know this? I was furious at the presumed erasure of her identity that happened during my education.

It turns out that when I was in elementary school, Sally Ride was still married to a man. She later divorced him and spent the following 27 years with a female partner.

In life, Sally was intensely private, both before and after coming out. She really only used her celebrity to advance the cause of girls in science. 

That makes me sad and furious too. NOT SAD WITH HER. NOT FURIOUS AT HER. But sad and furious at the conditions of the world we live in where she felt a need for the kind of intense privacy that prevented us from learning basic biographical data about her that could have made a huge difference in the lives of many, many queer kids.

A year and a half ago I caused a minor shitstorm for expressing the same sense of anger and regret at the passing of another lesbian icon who, like Ride, was intensely private, and while not exactly closeted in her day to day life, carefully kept mention of her lesbian identity out of the popular narrative about her life. People thought I was criticizing her or calling her a closet case. And the fact that we can’t separate a critique of the societal forces that create an atmosphere where this discussion is even happening from a critique of the victims (yes, victims) of that society also infuriate and sadden me.

But now that she has posthumously come out, I hope (as I did with the previous icon) that this can become part of her story, and we can adopt her not only as a pioneering woman but also as a pioneering queer person, and as my people say, may her memory be for a blessing.

muppetmayhem:

From The Jim Henson Company:

The Jim Henson Company has celebrated and embraced diversity and inclusiveness for over fifty years and we have notified Chick-Fil-A that we do not wish to partner with them on any future endeavors. Lisa Henson, our CEO is personally a strong supporter of gay…

As I mentioned earlier this week, I was invited to give the sermon this Shabbat at Temple Beth Zion in Brookline, MA for their Pride Shabbat. If you’d like to read what I had to say, it’s behind the cut.

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…and it’s not too late to contribute!

If you’re outraged over the North Carolina vote, you can take action. Instead of writing off the people of this state who need support more than ever, help keep the institutions of the LGBTQ community strong when they’re needed more than ever. Your gift to the lgbt Center of Raleigh at any level will send a message that the LGBTQ residents of NC have the rest of us behind them.

Join Keshet’s Equality Guide

Keshet is assembling a directory to provide a way for LGBTQ Jews and their loved ones to find welcoming institutions and spiritual leaders. The survey is very short and consists of a series of yes/no questions. If you are a member of the clergy or the leader of a Jewish organization, please complete the survey to add yourself to the directory.

boywholikesboys:

> What that girl on the right side’s sign says is on the bottom.

Raleigh Pride Festival, 2012.

In their zeal, lawmakers got careless with the wording of the measure, known as Amendment One. It would constitutionally prohibit recognition not just of same-sex marriages, but of other legal arrangements like civil unions and domestic partnerships. That could harm all unmarried couples, imperiling some children’s health insurance benefits, along with child custody arrangements and safeguards against domestic violence.
New York Times editorial on North Carolina’s Amendment One