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GAY WISDOM for Daily Living...
from White Crane
GAY WISDOM for Daily Living...
from White Crane
Exploring Gay Wisdom & Culture
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THIS DAY IN GAY HISTORY
OCTOBER 9
1776 - Father Francisco Palou founds
Mission San Francisco de Asis in what is now San Francisco, California.
1835 – CAMILLE SAINT-SAËNS, French composer, born. French composer,
organist, conductor, and pianist, known especially for his orchestral works The Carnival of the Animals, Danse Macabre,
Samson et Dalila, and Symphony No. 3
(Organ Symphony). Saint-Saëns began his musical career as a child prodigy and
pursued a life in music until he died at age 86. He was a pianist and organist
who composed works, as he put it, “as an apple-tree produces apples.” He
brought forth prodigious quantities of musical apples, and if some, to modern
ears, are a little green or even rotten, they are more than made up for by the
large number of perfect polished fruit. It cost a great deal of money to be a
full-time composer, and Saint-Saëns was no struggling artist in a rooftop
garret. He was supported by a large behest from an older friend, Henri Libon,
and the nature of their friendship has always been open to interpretation.
There’s no interpretation necessary, however,
to understand Saint- Saëns own sexuality. Though he is reported to have had a
marked preference for Algerian boys, he was a devotee of Parisian pissoirs even
in old age. In an amusing memoir, the composer Henri Busser records coaxing his
ancient colleague, now reduced to merely peeking, from the local pissoirs. In 1875, Saint-Saëns married
Marie-Laure Truffot and they had two children, André and Jean-François, who
died within six weeks of each other in 1878. Saint-Saëns left his
wife three years later. The two never divorced, but lived the rest of their
lives apart from one another. On being accused of homosexuality at a social
occasion, he is reported to have countered 'Non.
Je ne suis pas homosexuel, je suis pédéraste!' (“No, no, my dear, I am not a
homosexual. I am a pederast.”) Not everyone, after all, acknowledges that the
two are not synonymous.
1840 – SIMEON SOLOMON, British artist (d. 1905) Solomon lived as an openly Gay man in a
time when it was not socially acceptable to do so. He and Algernon Swinburne
were frequently seen chasing each other naked through Dante Gabriel Rosetti’s
house. In 1873 his career was cut short when he was arrested in a public toilet
in London and
charged with indecent exposure and
attempting to commit sodomy. He was
sentenced to serve eighteen months' hard labor in prison, but this was later reduced to "police supervision". He fled to the French Third
Republic. He was however arrested again in 1874, after which he was sentenced
to spend three months in prison. Upon his arrest, though, Swinburne turned into
a fair weather friend and would no longer deign to be seen with Solomon, much
less romp naked through Dante’s house. For a time, Solomon was lovers with Eton
master and Cambridge tutor, Oscar Browning who himself was forced to leave both
schools because of his own little homosexual scandals. Solomon’s own art has
never been collected and published, probably because most of it is erotic and
explicitly Gay, much as the artist’s name seems to have been expunged from all
but the most complete art reference books. Their loss as his work has been said
in many ways to virtually define Victorian art.
1944 – NONA HENDRYX, American singer (LaBelle) vocalist, record
producer, songwriter, musician, author, and actress, born. Hendryx is known for
her work as a solo artist as well as for being one-third of the trio LaBelle, who had
a hit with "Lady Marmalade." Her music has ranged from soul, funk,
dance and rhythm and blues to hard rock, art rock and new age. Labelle had
emerged from the traditional "girl group" Patti LaBelle and the Bluebells, a quartet
that became a trio with Cindy Birdsong’s departure for The Supremes. It was
manager Vicki Wickham who re-imagined the group as Labelle; as glam rock/space
age divas, Labelle created a sound and look previously unheard of for a black,
all-female crew, what with the "girl group" pigeon-holing of the
time. Hendryx embraced the new concept whole-heartedly (much more so than Patti
LaBelle in particular, who stated her own adoration for "big
ballads"; bandmate Sarah Dash remained
fairly neutral throughout their time together). Hendryx and Wickham paired off
on a creative level. Other artists with whom Hendryx has recorded with over the
years include: David Johansen, Yoko Ono, Cameo Talking Heads (3 albums, 80’s
band, Our Daughter’s Wedding, Garland Jeffreys, Dan Hartman, Afrika Bambaata
(performing a duet of "Giving Him Something He Can Feel" with Boy
George), Canadian band Rough Trade, Curtis Hairston, and Graham Parker on the
hit single, "Soul Christmas." In 2001 she discussed her bisexuality
in an interview with the Advocate magazine and has appeared as herself on three
episodes of the Lesbian hit show, The L Word.”
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