‘Hollywood Pride’ and the Very Queer History of Showbiz (Book Review)

We reviewed Hollywood Pride: A Celebration of LGBTQ+ Representation and Perseverance in Film by Alonso Duralde


This story was featured in our print and digital September/October issueo.

Image of author, Alonso Duralde in yellow and green plaid shirt. 'Hollywood Pride' - Non Fiction, $40.00, 322 pages, Running Press
Image of author, Alonso Duralde. ‘Hollywood Pride’ – Non Fiction, $40.00, 322 pages, Running Press

You plan to buy lots of Jujubes.

They’ll stick to your teeth, but whatever, you’ll be too busy watching to care. You like the director, and you know most of the actors are first-rate. The word is that the newcomer couldn’t be more fitting for the role. Yep, you’ve done your homework. You read Rotten Tomatoes, looked up IMBd, and bought your ticket online. Now, all you need is Hollywood Pride by Alonso Duralde, and your movie night is complete.

William Kennedy Laurie Dickson likely had no idea what he’d done was monumental. 

Sometime in the late 1800s, he set up a film camera and a wax cylinder to record a short dance between two men, hands around one another’s waists, as Dickson played the violin. It “was one of the very first movies ever shot,” and probably the first film to record men dancing rather intimately alone together.

Back then, and until well into the twentieth century, there were laws against most homosexual behavior and cross-dressing and very rigid standards of activity between men and women. This led to many “intense relationships… between people of the same gender.” Still, in World War I-era theaters and though LGBTQ+ representation “was somewhat slower to get rolling” then, audiences saw films that might include drag (often for comedy’s sake), camp, covert affection, and “bad girls of the era.”

Thankfully, things changed because of people like Marlene Dietrich, Ramon Novarro, Claudette Colbert, George Cukor, Alfred Hitchcock, and others through the years, people who ignored social mores and the Hays Code to give audiences what they wanted. Moviegoers could find LGBTQ+ actors and themes in most genres by the 1940s; despite politics and a “pink scare” in the 1950s, gay actors and drag (still for comedy’s sake) still appeared on-screen, and by the 1960s, the Hays Code had been dismantled. And the Me Decade of the 1970s, says Duralde, “ended with the promise that something new and exciting was about to happen.”

So, have you run out of movies on your TBW list? If so, get ready…

You never want to start a movie at the end, but it’s okay if you do that with Hollywood Pride. Flip to the end of the book, and look up your favorite stars or directors. Page to the end of each chapter, and you’ll find “artists of note.” Just before that: “films of note.” Page anywhere, in fact, and you’ll like what you see.

In his introduction, author Alonso Duralde apologizes if he didn’t include your favorites, saying that “Hollywood has been a magnet for LGBTQ+ people” for over a century, making it hard to capture it completely. That said, movie-loving readers will still be content with what’s inside this well-illustrated, well-curated, highly-readable historical overview of LGBTQ+ films and the people who made them. Come to this book with a movie-lover’s sensibility and stay for the wealth of photos and sidebars. If you’re up for binge-reading, binge-watching, or Date Night, dig into Hollywood Pride. Popcorn is not necessary, but welcome.



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