Queens Liberation Front members (center:Lee Brewster) marching in New York City in 1973. Source:Transgender Archive | |
| Founded | October 31, 1969 (1969-10-31) |
|---|---|
| Location | |
Key people | Lee Brewster andBunny Eisenhower |
Formerly called | Queens |
Queens Liberation Front (QLF) was ahomophile group primarily focused oftransvestite anddrag queens rights advocacy organization inNew York City. QLF was formed in 1969 and active in the 1970s. They publishedDrag Queens: A Magazine About the Transvestite[1] beginning in 1971. The Queens Liberation Front collaborated with a number of otherLGBTQ activist groups, including theGay Activists Alliance and theStreet Transvestite Action Revolutionaries.[2]
Queens Liberation Front was founded as Queens byLee Brewster in 1969.[3]: 83 At his first ball in February 1969, Brewster announced plans to form the group, with October 31, 1969 (Halloween, a particularly popular holiday in thedrag community) to be its formal founding date.[4]
The organization was founded in part to oppose the relegation of drag queens to the back of the March at the firstChristopher Street Liberation Day in June 1970. In protest, the street queens fromSTAR moved to the front and marched at the front of the parade anyway.[5][6]
Queens Liberation Front participated in many activities to advocate for the rights of LGBT people, particularlytransvestites.[7] The organization also participated in LGBT events such as theLGBT Pride March.[3]: 113 [8] Members sometimes wore drag while lobbying New York state legislators.[6]
The organization often collaborated with other local LGBT organizations, such asGay Activists Alliance andStreet Transvestite Action Revolutionaries.[8][9]
In the early 1970s, the organizations successfully used litigation to overturn a New York City ordinance againstcross-dressing.[3]: 87
In 1973, Queens Liberation Front agreed to a compromise amendment to New York City's anti-discrimination ordinance that added sexual orientation to the ordinance, but clarified the ordinance did not cover cross-dressing. The organization's director, Bebe Scarpie, met with the bill's sponsor at City Hall and agreed to the compromise. The organization's lawyer, Richard Levidow, believed the exclusionary clause violated theUnited States Constitution and was therefore unenforceable.[10]
Lesbian Feminist Liberation opposed the performance bydrag queens at the 1973NYC Pride March in New York City. As they passed out flyers,Sylvia Rivera, of Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries, took the microphone from emceeVito Russo and spoke against this sentiment, delivering a speech about spending time in jail, and being harassed and beaten by the straight men who were preying on all the members of the gay community. Rivera ended by leading a chant for "Gay Power!"[5] Lesbian Feminist Liberation'sJean O'Leary then read a statement on behalf of 100 women that read, in part, "We support the right of every person to dress in the way that she or he wishes. But we are opposed to the exploitation of women by men for entertainment or profit."[11] Queens Liberation Front'sLee Brewster replied in support of drag and the drag queens in the community. Brewster was loudly cursed when he called the lesbians speaking a slur for women - "b***hes."[12] The increasingly angry crowd only calmed whenBette Midler, who heard on the radio in herGreenwich Village apartment, arrived, took the microphone, and began singing "Friends". This was one of several events in early 1970s where lesbian feminists, gay men, and drag queens at times found themselves in conflict; while other events, such as those led by the GLF women's caucus, often had harmonious participation between these sometimes contentious factions.[3]: 113 [13][14][15]
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