"}},"i":0}}]}" id="mwBCQ">
These days, there's barely a female pop star alive who doesn't loudly broadcast her unwavering, if sometimes exploitative, support for LGBT rights. But in 1991, when Madonna gave her no-holds-barred interview to The Advocate, then the largest voice of gay communities, she showed more understanding of queer issues and identity that any pop star before her, and most who came after. In the two-part sit-down, Madonna revealed the roots of her gay identification via her early mentors. [41]
Madonna is the first major mainstream artist to give gay images and themes explicit mass treatment and exposure
Madonna's figure made possible in her generation provided various with their first impression or representation of the collective, in an era not dominated by Internet, as documented some authors. In Good As You: From Prejudice to Pride – 30 Years of Gay Britain (2017), editor Paul Flynn documented that Madonna's Blond Ambition tour was the first time British gay and girls "got to claim ownership of the thrilling communion and euphoria of a stadium show". [113] The tour was followed by her 1991 documentary Truth or Dare in which "several generations of gay men reported was the first time they had ever seen their own desires represent ... onscreen". [41] Seeing the dance troupe in her 1990 tour, wrote Jeremy Atherton Lin in Gay Bar (2021), "amounted to my first impression of gays". [114] Writing for The Georgia Straight in 2016, Craig Takeuchi explains that many recognized this Madonna's era, as a number were "living in an era prior to the internet and had never seen gay men or gay kissing on screen before". [115] According to LGBT-targeted publication Washington Blade , it became "a gay cultural touchstone". [116]
Virtel said that Madonna accomplished something astounding with "Vogue": She ushered an "audacious", "unapologetically queer art" form into mainstream America, and that means gays everywhere got to witness (and recognize) a rare kind of performative ebullience. [8] For Hopper, she revived an "entire movement" when she performed this song at the 1990 MTV Video Music Awards. [117] Music critic Kelefa Sanneh, said that she "helped define gay nightlife in New York". [118]
Aside from Madonna, there were others advocating queer awareness, yet her mainstream influence and achievements for the community drew significant international perspectives recognizing cultural consequences in favor of the community, frequently described as a better entry into the "mainstream". For instance, Mark Watts commented "she has done a lot to bring gay culture into the mass media". [119] On the point, Darren Scott from The Independent felt and commented in 2018: "Her relentless insistence on treating us like the equals that we actually are meant that gay culture became part of the mainstream". [120] Musto believes she helped brought gay audiences to "center stage", along with others like Cyndi Lauper. [121] British writer Matthew Todd, in 2020, recalled her celebrity status, saying she "brought gay culture directly into the living rooms of the public", having "men dance together in her tours ... all the time speaking about homophobia in interviews". [122]
Editors of Sontag and the Camp Aesthetic (2017), also agree that "in many ways, Madonna contributed to making gay mainstream" and "part of this contribution was her colonization of queer male, non-white subculture to the benefit of modern queer". [123] Craig Takeuchi from The Georgia Straight also attributes her 1990's tour and Truth or Dare for "brought gay culture to the mainstream". [115] Another observer, British writer Matt Cain attributed her for bringing gay culture into the mainstream as well. [83] [124] Writing for 20 minutos in 2019, José Casesmeiro gave also her a "fundamental" role to "normalize" the collective. [125] Greek scholar Constantine Chatzipapatheodoridis, also argued she has been contributed in the socio-artistic evolution of queer culture worldwide, [126] while Alex Hopper of American Songwriter as do others, explained that Madonna contributed to bringing ballroom culture and voguing into mainstream pop culture. [117]
C. E. Crimmins in How The Homosexuals Saved Civilization (2004), called Madonna a "pioneer" explaining and considering her in the 1980s and 1990s as "the first homosexual icon to interact with her audience sexually (well, unless you count Judy Garland's marriages to gay men)". [127] In similar connotations, John Leland explored for Newsweek in 1992, how Madonna incorporated mainstream homosexual sex, [128] and Gina Vivinetto from The Advocate held in 2015, that since the 1980s "Madonna has been giving visibility to LGBT eroticism". [129] Scott felt she helped change the way many people perceived gay sex. [120]
Mark Bego commented that her exploration of traditional gender roles helped make lesbianism more acceptable to mainstream society, [130] in various cultural contours. In a 1989 article for Gay Community News , Sydney Pokorny refers the duo Madonna and Sandra Bernhard that inspired such devotion from lesbians. [47] Lucy O'Brien cited an editor from lesbian-targeted magazine Diva whom described "Madonna became meaningful in the early nineties with that lesbian chic thing ... There was a hunger to see ourselves reflected in popular culture, and she made us visible". [131] Writer Thomas Dyja in New York, New York, New York (2022), also lumped the public dilliance between Madonna and Bernhard along with Martina Navratilova and k.d. lang for ushering the lesbian chic. [132] Torie Osborn, executive director of National LGBTQ Task Force asserted: "[She's] the first major woman pop star who's out and proud and fine about it. It signals a whole new era of possibility for celebrities". [131] Osborn also credited k.d. lang in bringing a new peak for Lipstick lesbian. [131] An author described Madonna, as the archetypal femme lesbian, regarded both the champion of sexual feminism and the pirate of traditional lesbian feminist lifestyles. [52]
Madonna sparked again conversations after kissing Christina Aguilera and Britney Spears at the 2003 MTV Video Music Awards. Their kiss have been replicated numerous times, including by Israeli activists in 2019, to celebrate Madonna's arrival at the Eurovision Song Contest and to show that "love break down barriers", [133] and in popular culture by celebrities like Kylie Jenner. [134]
Madonna's influence on individuals from the community has been noted in a decades-long period. In 2019, GLAAD's Sarah Kate Ellis said: "Her music and art have been life-saving outlets for LGBTQ people over the years and her affirming words and actions have changed countless hearts and minds". [108] The Hollywood Reporter also remarked "her music and advocacy has positively affected the lives of LGBTQ people". [16] In this regard, Madonna told: "It's a total reciprocation because, like I said in my speech (2019 GLAAD Media Awards), they made me feel not afraid to be different. And then I made them feel not afraid to be different". [16] Commenting about her attitude that influenced others, in 2008, Babineau said she "was a chick with balls" and her attitude "resonated and continues to resonate" within gays and lesbians up that point. [69]
Various public figures from the community such as Cain and musician Arca, have mentioned Madonna's impact in their lives addressing their LGBT background. [83] [135] Anderson Cooper noted the importance of Madonna to him as a teenegar. [136] In 2015, Christopher Bergland commented that a performance she made in 1983 at a small gay club on Lansdowne St. in Boston, "changed his life". [137] When Kim Petras became the first openly transgender woman to win a Grammy Award in February 2023, she thanked the singer in her acceptance speech for fighting for LGBTQ rights, saying "I don't think I could be here without Madonna". [138] Commemorating her 60-years old birthday in 2018, The Advocate dedicated an article of love letters to Madonna that included commentaries from their staff, with many talking about her influence. [139]
Madonna topped KBGO's 2011 rank of the "stars that helped their LGBTQ+ Fans Come Out". [140] Agence France-Presse referred to her Truth or Dare film inspired many to coming out. [141] Wesley Morris of The New York Times, said that maybe he knew was gay because of Truth or Dare. [41] Ellen DeGeneres said that she was instrumental in her 1997 decision to come out. [8] [3] Rosie O'Donnell similarly credited Madonna to help her become more comfortable. [142]
Madonna has been depicted in diverse LGBT-media content, and events over the years, including various Pride Month. In 2017, Virtel considered Pride Month "is not the same without Madonna and her music". [8] In 2022, a special show named "Madonna Made Me Gay" in Feast Festival was dedicated to her. [143] In A Drag Queen's Guide to Life (2022), Bimini Bon Boulash wrote "would any queer inspiration be complete without the Queen of Pop herself?". [144] LGBT-targeted publications such as The Advocate, [129] Attitude , [124] to DNA have created listicles about "Madonna's gayest moments". [145] Other publications like HuffPost addressed similar lists. [146]
In 2016, to pay tribute to her contributions to the LGBT community, contestants of the eighth season of reality competition show RuPaul's Drag Race were asked to render some of prominent Madonna looks on the runway. [147] In effort to address the criticism the runway received for its repetitiveness, it was brought back for season nine. [148] In season 12, the reality show paid tribute to Madonna again as the contestants performed in Madonna: The Unauthorized Rusical , a musical that chronicled her major accomplishments and contributions to the LGBT community. [149] [150] According to Billboard, Pose 's season two was influenced by her. [151]
Glee dedicated to Madonna an episode named "The Power of Madonna" accompanied with their first-ever EP released, Glee: The Music, The Power of Madonna . In Brian Tarquin's book The Insider's Guide to Music Licensing (2014), it was mentioned the importance of Madonna for their producers. Her episode was also the first time the music on Glee was turned over in its entirety to one performer. [152] The documentary Strike a Pose (2016) is based in the dance troupe that accompanied Madonna in the documentary Truth or Dare and the Blond Ambition Tour; six of them were homosexual at a time when "homosexuality was much more taboo and associated by many straight people with illness", some recalled. [153]
Madonna has received many titles and sobriquets from gay press. Out called her a "true gay icon". [155] In Queer (2002), editor Simon Gage explained that a UK gay magazine constantly referred to her as "Our Glorious Leader". [156] She has been also referred to as a "queer icon" or "icon of queerness". Theologian Robert Goss expressed: "For me, Madonna has been not only a queer icon but also a Christ icon who has dissolved the boundaries between queer culture and queer faith communities". [157] Musicologist Sheila Whiteley wrote in her book Sexing the Groove: Popular Music and Gender (2013) that "Madonna came closer to any other contemporary celebrity in being an above-ground queer icon". [158]
Madonna has appeared in books addressing significant Gay icons, including The Gay 100, [159] [160] [161] and polls or journalistic listicles, including OnePoll's 2009 "Greatest Gay Icons of All Time". [162] [163] [15] Others, have noted she garnered a substantial audience considering her to be "the greatest LGBTQ icon", as Samuel R. Murrian of Parade noted in 2019. [3] On the point, in 2018, Diaz said she is "the biggest musical LGBTQ icon of all time" at least to an entire generation. [19] Scholars Carmine Sarracino and Kevin Scott in The Porning of America (2008), attributed that calling her "the biggest gay icon of all time", was a result of her career-long popularity with gay audiences. [164] Gage also referred to her as "the biggest gay icon of the 20th century". [156] In 2006 and 2012, editors from The Advocate named her "the greatest gay icon". [2] [165]
I've been sexually attracted to other women and I suppose you would say that's feeling gay, but ultimately I'm very attracted to men [...] I never think about labels
{{cite news}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)