k February 1994 T PAGE 25 Q-Notes Blacks in history Continued from page 19 and lesbians. However, so many were in volved in heterosexual relationships while frequenting the gay “buffet flats” (after- hours spots, usually in someone’s apart- ment),'speakeasies, costume balls and pri vate parties, that to list them as gay-identify ing would be to do so without proper docu mentation. Such luminaries as author/poet Langston Hughes (identified by a few histo rians as gay, straight by some and bisexual by others), novelist Wallace Thurman, dancer Josephine Baker, actress/singer Ethel Wa ters and sculptor Richmond Barthe were sexually ambiguous and cannot therefore, fairly be labeled as homosexual. Some, and surely not all, of the black homosexuals in our history (in alphabetical order) include: James Baldwin (1924-1987)—James Baldwin was an accomplished author, but when his portrait appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 1963, the story ran under the “National Affairs.” This was due to Baldwin’s politics. As early as the 1940s, he became a spokesman for the growing racial problems in the Lf .S. and as an active partic ipant in the civil rights struggle, Baldwin’s writings challenged all Americans on a dou ble front—race and sex. In addition to novels, he also wrote essays, collected in Notes of a Native Son and Nobody Knows My Name, as well as two plays. Jan Creoli (?-1646)—An entry in “The Calendar of [Dutch] Historical Manuscripts” records the punishment enacted upon Jan Creoli for “...sodomy; second offense; this crime being condemned of God (Gen., C. 19; Levit., C. 18:22, 29) as an abomination, the prisoner is sentenced to be conveyed to the place of public execution, and there choked to death, and then burnt to ashes...” Creoli’s execution is included here because it is one of the earliest documentations of homosex uality within the Black population of the United States. Countee Cullen (1903-1946)—^Most not ed for his collection of poems, Co/or(1925), Countee Cullen is perhaps one of the finest poets to emerge from the Harlem Renais sance. He was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, regularly contributed poetry to major liter ary magazines and taught in the New York City public schools. Although he wished to be known as a poet rather than a “Negro poet,” much of his work contains striking racial themes. Alberta Hunter (1897-1984)—Alberta Hunter was a jazz singer who desperately fought to conceal her lesbianism. A contem porary of jazz greats “Ma” Rainey and Bessie Smith, Hunter, while definitely not gay- identifying, is included here because the music^ “My Castle’s Rockin’,” which chron icles her life, dramatically portrays the dis crimination and prejudice faced by Black gays and lesbians. Alain Locke (1886-1954)—Head of the department of philosophy at Howard Uni versity, Washington, D.C., for over 40 years, Locke was the first Black Rhodes scholar and received his Ph.D. from Harvard. He edited the 1925 anthology The New Negro which brought attention to the Harlem Re naissance, and he is credited with bringing white patronage to Harlem’s fledgling writ ers and artists. As an essayist, anthologist and critic, he wrote extensively on philoso phy, cultural and interracial relationships, literature, music, drama and the fine arts. Audre Lor de (1934-1992)—Audre Lorde authored 13 books of poetry and essays, was named poet laureate of New York State in 1991, CO founded Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press (the only U.S. publisher of liter ature for women of color), and became a role model for lesbians fighting against breast cancer. She was also a champion of gay rights, speaking on our behalf at the 1983 March on Washington for Jobs, Peace, and Freedom which marked the 20th anniversary of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I have a dream” speech. Gertrude Malissa “Ma” Rainey (1886- 1939)—”Ma” Rainey has been unquestion ably dubbed “Mother of the Blues,” and no biographer doubts her lesbianism. Her song “Prove It on Me Blues” admits her prefer ence for male attire and female companion ship, but dares the listener to “prove it” on her. That song, in defense ofher lesbian life, was quite astonishing for the time period and potentially damaging to her career. Bessie Smith (1894-1937)—Bessie Smith was a powerful blues singer who wrote much ofher won material. Sometimes labeled “too black” for an entertainer of the ’20sand ’30s, Smith was her own woman in every respect. Although married to a man, her love affairs with women were hardly hidden and some of her songs included references to lesbian re lationships. Viewed as too coarse, bad- mannered, obscene and rough. Smith proved that talent can be its own success. A’Lelia Walker (1885-1931)— A’Lelia Walker, heiress to the Walker hair straight ening process, was the richest Black woman in America during the early years of this century. She threw lavish parties during the 1920s and is credited by several historians with providing the appropriate atmosphere for creativity and growth within Harlem’s Black community, bringing together Blacks and Whites, straights and gays, artists and patrons. 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