In January,
GLAAD reported that 23 per cent of queer characters on
broadcast TV were Black, with a higher percentage on cable and a lower
percentage on streaming.
However in
film, just two of the 20 LGBT+ characters who appeared in major studio released
were Black. While progress is happening, it’s clear that there remains a long
way to go.
As
screenwriter and director Joseph A Adesunloye puts it: “Yes, Black queer
representation on-screen is enjoying a long-overdue moment as we as queer Black
people get a chance to tell our own stories, in our own image.
“But getting
the funding and support as a queer Black filmmaker is hard. Getting funding for
queer Black stories… even harder.”
Hollywood’s
relationship with Black narratives has its own distinct and damaging history,
not least the ongoing appetite for films such as 12 Years a Slave and The
Help.
Such reductive
representation of Black people relied upon consistent tropes – heterosexual
Black men as either strong and hypermasculine, Black women as unbreakable
caregivers, and gay Black men as femme and sass – all of which obscure the
multitude of ways we actually show up in the real world.
The history of
all queer representation on-screen (or lack thereof) starts somewhere within
the film industry’s self-imposed Hays Code.
Introduced in
1934, it laid out a set of guidelines for all motion pictures. The code
prohibited many things, including ‘sexual persuasions’ and ‘sex perversion’
which was understood to include homosexuality, and TV studios followed.
Outside of the
Hollywood machine these rules weren’t always considered, like 1967’s Portrait
of Jason, a documentary following openly gay Black entertainer and sex
worker Jason Holliday.
And as Cabaret screenwriter and critic Jay Presson Allen said in the 1995 documentary The Celluloid Closet: “The guys that ran the Code weren’t rocket scientists.
“They missed a
lot of stuff and if a director was subtle enough and clever enough, they got
around it.”
One of these
enduring workarounds was queer coding: the subtextual coding of a character in
media as queer, without explicitly confirming their sexuality.
Queer coding
led to an array of queer-coded stock characters such as The Villain: bitchy and
mean – think The Lion King‘s Scar.
Most enduring
is The Camp Sissy – flamboyant, weak men who viewed women through a non-sexual
lens, like In Living Color’s Blaine and Antoine.
While queer
coding enabled an expression of queerness to subvert the Hays Code, it
eventually became limiting. Over a span of 90 years, queer coding reduced gay
men to the same fatigued cliches and reinforced harmful narratives about queer
people.
Representation
in the media, as we now know in 2021, is integral to how we all navigate the
world. The plethora of TV, streaming, and Academy Award-worthy narratives we
see today celebrating queer Black stories, and what has come before, only
really broke through, perhaps, 20 years ago.
A precursor,
and one of the most notable pieces of representation in the 1990s, was Paris
Is Burning: both a celebrated and controversial film. Without it, we
may not have more innovative and needle-moving productions like 2016’s Kiki or Pose;
on the other hand, many of the documentary’s participants felt Jen
Livingstone’s seminal work was voyeuristic, with none of the profits from the
film going to the communities within it.
The turn of
the millennium marked a significant shift in queer Black representation on
film, as the Hays-era tropes start to be replaced by more nuanced storytelling,
with queer Black people writing, directing, and producing.
Standouts
include Jewel’s Catch One and Brother Outsider: The
Life of Bayard Rustin, both of which profiled queer Black elders; and
2005’s The Aggressives, which explored identity through the
lens of Black trans men and Black butch lesbians.
On television,
in 2002, HBO’s The Wire put forward trope-defying character
Omar Little: a fearless, unapologetically gay, hyper-masculine gangster who
robbed drug dealers.
That same
year The Shield gave the world DL (‘down low’) Detective
Julien Lowe, played by Michael Jace, and thus offered another complicated
representation of a queer Black man.
Both
characters, Omar Little and Julien Lowe, challenged the audiences and ignited
discourse in Black spaces and beyond about what gay men look, sound, and act
like.
They ushered
in never before seen portrayals of gay Black men as nuanced, and which existed
outside of the stereotypes and cliches that had so persistently been imposed.
Williams went
on to portray other trope-breaking gay characters, such as the Vietnam veteran
Leonard Pine in Hap and Leonard, the HIV-positive activist Ken
Jones in When We Rise, and most recently, Montrose Freeman in
2020’s Lovecraft Country.
In 2005, the
Logo network launched the first scripted series to centre a group of Black gay
men, Noah’s Arc.
On the show,
The Sissy, the DL, the Hyper-Masculine, and all the other types of
personalities existed as they were, in the context of a community brought
together by their sexuality and their race.
Importantly,
Noah’s Arc leaned into narratives about relationships, intimacy, STIs, and more
– and all through a queer Black lens, in front of and behind the camera.
In 2016,
something remarkable happened: Moonlight,
directed by Barry Jenkins (who is straight) became the first LGBT+ film and the
first film with an all-Black cast to win the Oscar for Best Picture.
A film centred on a young, gay Black man in Miami’s housing projects, Moonlight follows Chiron, played by Ashton Sanders, Alex Hibbert, and Trevante Rhodes, as he learns to navigate the world and how he chooses to reclaim power, control, and security.
While its
budget was $1.6 million, tiny by Hollywood standards, its $65 million worldwide
gross showed an appetite for queer Black narratives.
Today,
Netflix’s Sex Education stands as one of the streaming
platform’s big successes, and Eric Effiong, played by actor Ncuti Gatwa, is
perhaps the most prominent gay Black character on screens today.
An emotionally
mature, complex, and relatable character, he never feels like a mere token
within the narrative.
His life,
alongside those of his friends, is given meaningful, modern consideration which
offers more substantive representation for queer Black audiences globally.
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