17-05-2024, 06:46 AM
Today is International Day Against Homophobia, Transphobia, and Biphobia.
While I used to be heavily involved socially with the LGBQT social scene for several decades, I've been disconnected from it for a little over 10 years. It is however something I feel strongly about, and I think it was said here once by one of our more well known members, that her hat was off to those who've endured ridicule, resentment, isolation, depression that one goes through in a major shift in their life, and I have to agree.
One of my heroes so to speak is Christine Jorgensen. She was front page news and the leading torchbearer for transgender causes in the 50's & 60's. That woman is an absolute legend because she inspired so many others to pursue their dream of transitioning.
As brash as she was confronting the shock of her reality, it is a stark contrast to other early pioneers who transitioned in the shadows. I was reminded of this tonight when I was reading up again about Wendy Carlos, who helped invent the Moog Synthesizer. She is most famously known for her 1968 record album Switched on Bach, and she wrote the soundtrack for A Clockwork Orange, The Shining and Tron.
But I was reading about the mortal fear she faced when appearing in public early in her transition when the world still knew her as Walter Carlos. She had started HRT in the late 60s, and had recently had gender reassignment surgery in the early 70s when all of a sudden she had gotten worldwide fame. She dressed in disguise by wearing men's wigs, glued-on sideburns and large sunglasses when she appeared on the Dick Cavett Show and the BBC and she swore off public appearances after that. She turned away a long list of famous pianists who wanted to meet her from Stevie Wonder to Keith Emerson, choosing to "hide in the closet" instead.
She later came out publicly on the Art Bell Radio Show in 1979, but for over a decade she lived her life afraid of the transphobia she knew she was sure to face. Whereas Christine Jorgensen was "in your face" about her transition, the immensely talented Wendy Carlos was afraid to show hers.
I guess in thinking about today's awareness event, I wanted to highlight someone who lived in fear of the hatred she faced from others.
While I used to be heavily involved socially with the LGBQT social scene for several decades, I've been disconnected from it for a little over 10 years. It is however something I feel strongly about, and I think it was said here once by one of our more well known members, that her hat was off to those who've endured ridicule, resentment, isolation, depression that one goes through in a major shift in their life, and I have to agree.
One of my heroes so to speak is Christine Jorgensen. She was front page news and the leading torchbearer for transgender causes in the 50's & 60's. That woman is an absolute legend because she inspired so many others to pursue their dream of transitioning.
As brash as she was confronting the shock of her reality, it is a stark contrast to other early pioneers who transitioned in the shadows. I was reminded of this tonight when I was reading up again about Wendy Carlos, who helped invent the Moog Synthesizer. She is most famously known for her 1968 record album Switched on Bach, and she wrote the soundtrack for A Clockwork Orange, The Shining and Tron.
But I was reading about the mortal fear she faced when appearing in public early in her transition when the world still knew her as Walter Carlos. She had started HRT in the late 60s, and had recently had gender reassignment surgery in the early 70s when all of a sudden she had gotten worldwide fame. She dressed in disguise by wearing men's wigs, glued-on sideburns and large sunglasses when she appeared on the Dick Cavett Show and the BBC and she swore off public appearances after that. She turned away a long list of famous pianists who wanted to meet her from Stevie Wonder to Keith Emerson, choosing to "hide in the closet" instead.
She later came out publicly on the Art Bell Radio Show in 1979, but for over a decade she lived her life afraid of the transphobia she knew she was sure to face. Whereas Christine Jorgensen was "in your face" about her transition, the immensely talented Wendy Carlos was afraid to show hers.
I guess in thinking about today's awareness event, I wanted to highlight someone who lived in fear of the hatred she faced from others.