The Gay Super Bowl

It is that time of year again.

The time when television sales spike, party lists are composed, pizzas are ordered at astonishing
rates, and millions flock to their living rooms to watch who will take home the ultimate trophy.

Yes, Super Bowl season is upon us. As a sports and movie enthusiast, I am one of those rare breeds who is equally giddy about the Super Bowl as I am about what has been coined the
“Gay Super Bowl” — the Oscars.

I remember when Hilary Swank won Best Actress for her role in Boys Don’t Cry in 2000.

I saw the movie in Northampton, Mass. — the “Lesbian capital of the USA” — at a small, independent movie theater. I was in college and attended the movie with my two gay friends (my first gay friends). Although I had grown more at-ease with my gay identity, I was going through a pathetic phase where, I suppose, in an attempt to lessen my shame about being gay and to deal with my own, internalized homophobia, I played a game I liked to call the “At Least Game.” I would attempt to make myself feel better by thinking, “At least nobody can tell I am gay,” (which, by the way, was patently false, but denial is powerful). Or, “At least I’m not one
of those butch dykes, with short spiky hair.” Or, “At least I don’t have rainbow tattoos and march topless in gay parades.” Or, “At least I haven’t had a sex change.” Or, “At least I don’t look like a boy.”

Clearly, a psychologist would have had a field day with my “at least” game.

While sitting in that movie theater, I was surrounded by people prime for my game. Yes, I was in a sea of boys who looked like girls, girls who looked like boys, individuals whose gender was too elusive to identify, spiky hair, flannel shirts, and mullets.

Then, Boys Don’t Cry happened. It was one of the most powerfully moving performances I have ever seen. Hilary Swank portrayed the real-life transgender Brandon Teena. Teena was born a woman, but spent his entire life feeling as though he were in the wrong body and that, in actuality, he was a man. Teena ultimately lived his life as a man.

In the end, Teena’s anatomical identity was exposed, and he was brutally raped and killed solely because of who he was, or perhaps, more accurately, because of who he was not. When the movie ended, the audience was stunned. Nobody moved. Nobody left. Nobody spoke. I looked straight ahead as I did not want my friends to see how forcefully I was crying. It occurred to me that in that moment we were crying not only for the Brandon Teena on the screen, but also for the Brandon Teena among us and within us.

I never played the “at least” game again.

During Swank’s acceptance speech at the Oscars when she said, “And last, but certainly not least, I want to thank Brandon Teena for being such an inspiration to us all. His legacy lives on through our movie to remind us to always be ourselves, to follow our hearts, to not conform. I pray for the day when we not only accept our differences, but we actually celebrate our diversity.”

HERE, ARE SOME OTHER HIGH-PROFILE LGBT HIGHLIGHTS:

  • In 1929, at the very first Oscars, there were two Best Picture winners, one of which was Wings, a movie with heavy, gay subtext. Wings chronicled the story of a woman who comes between two men who appear to be in love and even share an onscreen “pucker.”
  • In 1957, (at-thetime) closeted Rock Hudson was considered by many to have exhibited “drag-queen-like” qualities when he sang “Baby, It’s Cold Outside” with Mae West at the Oscars.
  • In 1963, Sir John Gielgud became the first “out” performer to be nominated for an Oscar for his (Supporting Actor) role in Beckett. He later won Best Supporting Actor in 1981 for Arthur.
  • In 1969, gay director John Schlesinger won Best Director for Midnight Cowboy.
  • In 1983, Cher was nominated for Best Supporting Actress for her portrayal of a lesbian in Silkwood. Silkwood has been praised for integrating lesbian characters, as opposed to most movies, which marginalize gay characters by portraying them as caricatures.
  • In 1986, William Hurt won Best Actor for his nuanced portrayal of a gay man who was imprisoned for engaging in sexual relations with a young man and fell in love with his cellmate in Kiss of the Spider Woman.
  • In 1989 and in 1992, although not officially “out,” Jodie Foster, won Best Actress for her respective roles in The Accused and Silence of the Lambs.
  • In 1994, gay musician Sir Elton John won Best Original Song for “Can You Feel the Love Tonight” from The Lion King.
  • In 1994, Tom Hanks won Best Actor for his role as a gay lawyer who sues his former law firm for discriminating against him because he has AIDS in Philadelphia. During his acceptance speech, Hanks thanked his high school drama teacher, Rawley Farnsworth, and former classmate John Gilkerson. Hanks said, “I mention their names because they are the finest gay Americans, two wonderful men that I had the good fortune to be associated with … I wish my babies could have the same sort of teacher, the same sort of friends.” Hanks’s acceptance speech is credited for inspiring the film In & Out.
  • In 1998, gay writer Bill Condon won Best Adapted Screenplay for Gods and Monsters.
  • In 1999, Sir Ian McKellen was the first and only openly gay actor to be nominated for Best Actor for his portrayal of a gay character in Gods and Monsters.
  • In 2000, Hilary Swank won Best Actress for her powerful, heartbreaking portrayal of transgender Brandon Teena in Boys Don’t Cry.
  • In 2004, Charlize Theron won Best Actress for her haunting portrayal of lesbian serial killer Eileen Wournos in Monster.
  • In 2005, Felicity Huffman was nominated for Best Actress for her unbelievable, incomparable portrayal of a transsexual who embarks upon a road trip with her long lost son in Transamerica. Many film critics considered it “highway robbery’’ when she lost the Oscar to Reese Witherspoon.
  • In 2006, Philip Seymour Hoffman won Best Actor for his poignant portrayal of the openly gay Truman Capote in Capote. In so doing, he edged out Health Ledger, who also was nominated in the Best Actor Category for his portrayal of a gay rancher in Brokeback Mountain.
  • In 2007, Ellen DeGeneres was the first and only openly gay host of the Oscars. Her performance garnered rave reviews.
  • In 2007, gay musician Melissa Etheridge won Best Original Song for “I Need to Wake Up” from the documentary An Inconvenient Truth.
  • In 2007, gay producer Scott Rudin won Best Picture for No Country for Old Men.
  • In 2008, Penelope Cruz won Best Supporting Actress for her fiery, hilarious portrayal of a bisexual artist in Vicky Cristina Barcelona.
  • In 2009, Sean Penn won Best Actor for his brilliant portrayal as the former gay mayor of San Francisco, Harvey Milk, in Milk. During his acceptance speech, Penn publicly supported gay marriage.
  • In 2009, gay writer Dustin Lance Black won Best Original Screenplay for Milk. During his inspiring acceptance speech, he said, “If Harvey [Milk] had not been taken from us 30 years ago, I think he’d want me to say to all of the gay and lesbian kids out there tonight who have been told that they are less than by their churches or by the government or by their families that you are beautiful, wonderful creatures of value, and that no matter what anyone tells you, God does love you, and that very soon, I promise you, you will have equal rights, federally, across this great nation of ours.”
  • In 2011, Brett Ratner stepped down from producing the 2012 Academy Awards after he made the remark that “rehearsal is for fags.”
  • In 2011, Ian Canning, who shared the Best Picture Oscar for The King’s Speech with his co-producers, thanked “[his] boyfriend, Ben,” during his acceptance speech.
  • In 2011, The Kids are All Right, a movie about a married lesbian couple raising two teenagers, garnered nominations for Best Picture, Best Actress, Best Original Screenplay, and Best Supporting Actor. The movie was shut out in all categories
  • In 2012, Christopher Plummer won Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal as an elderly man who comes out late in life and embraces his gay-identity in Beginners.
Tiff Waskowicz is a Civil Rights Attorney. A large percentage of her practice is representing individuals in employment discrimination, retaliation, sexual discrimination, whistleblower, Family and Medical Leave Act, and sexual harassment cases. Tiff received her J.D. from the University of Pittsburgh School of Law in 2006 and a B.A. from Amherst College in 2000, where she emphasized her study in creative/persuasive writing. Tiff is a huge Pittsburgh Penguins fan, and, in her spare time, she enjoys cross word puzzles, reading, and jogging.

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