Code, Read: Hollywood’s Hays Code and the Queer Stereotypes of the Silver Screen
February 5, 2015 - March 13, 2015
Exhibit dates:
Thursday, February 5, 2015 to Friday, March 13, 2015
Reception date & time:
N/A [Screening schedule below]
Description:
From the first appearance of subversive same-sex interaction on film, in William K.L. Dickson’s motion picture The Dickson Experimental Sound Film/The Gay Brothers (1895), the representation of LGBTQ characters and themes in popular cinema has been largely stereotypical.
The flamboyant, effeminate, and often comedic caricature of the “sissy” became prominent in early silent cinema, wherein theatricality was necessary to convey a film’s plot. The sissy transitioned easily from silent cinema into talkies, where his unconventional voice and mannerisms secured his role as a comedic staple.
As films of the 1920s and 30s grew more sophisticated, and as Depression-era audiences dwindled, there was increasing demand for more controversial characters. The hitherto harmless sissy was offset both by more complex queer figures and by more scandalous stereotypes. Debates subsequently arose about the negative effect that Hollywood cinema, and its questionable morals, might have upon society as a whole.
In response, the Motion Picture Production Code, or “Hays Code”, put in place a series of censorship guidelines by which the production of indecent or immoral filmic content would be restricted. The institution of the Hayes Code heralded the end of the sissy –and his more complex counterparts– in popular cinema, and the beginning of more reserved queer characters whose true nature was necessarily buried by subtext and innuendo. Between 1930 and 1968, a span that encompassed Hollywood’s Golden Age of film production, queer characters were either obscured through ambiguity or else written out entirely from Hollywood films. Alternatively, since the Hays Code was willing to allow “sexual perversion” if depicted in a negative light, queer characters who remained in the picture were presented as a series of unflattering stereotypes: murderous villains, suicidal misfits, farcical fairies, or sexual rebels in need of reform.
120 years after The Gay Brothers, it is debatable whether the depiction of queer characters in popular cinema is any more nuanced than it once was. What is clear is the effect that artistic censorship had, and continues to have, on depictions of LGBTQ culture in North American film. Code, Read invites the viewer to revisit a selection of lesser-seen pre-Code pictures and Golden Age cinematic classics, decoding their dialogue, plot development, characters and themes from a queer perspective. In the process, it asks viewers to consider how films both reflect and shape social attitudes towards non-normative gender roles and sexualities.
Recommended Viewing
A chronological listing of select pre-Code and Code-era Hollywood films that incorporate queer characters, themes, plotlines, actors and directors, and queer subtexts.
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The Dickson Experimental Sound Film (1895)
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Algie the Miner (1912)
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A Florida Enchantment (1914) Screened at The ArQuives February 22, 2015
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Behind the Screen (1916)
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Salomé (1923) Screened at The ArQuives February 8, 2015
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A Wanderer of the West (1927)
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Wings (1927)
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Sex in Chains (1928) Screened at The ArQuives March 8, 2015
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Morocco (1930)
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Their First Mistake (1932)
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Ladies They Talk About (1933)
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Queen Christina (1933)
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The Gay Divorcee (1934)
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Wonder Bar (1934)
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Bride of Frankenstein (1935)
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Sylvia Scarlett (1935)
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Dracula’s Daughter (1936) Screened at The ArQuives March 1, 2015
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Rebecca (1940)
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The Maltese Falcon (1941)
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Crossfire (1947)
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Red River (1948)
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Rope (1948) Screened at The ArQuives March 1, 2015
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Caged (1950)
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Calamity Jane (1953)
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Glen or Glenda (1953) Screened at The ArQuives March 8, 2015
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Johnny Guitar (1954)
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Rebel Without a Cause (1955)
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Tea and Sympathy (1956) Screened at The ArQuives February 8, 2015
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Cat on a Hot Tin Roof (1958)
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Ben-Hur (1959)
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Pillow Talk (1959)
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Some Like It Hot (1959) Screened at The ArQuives February 22, 2015
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Suddenly, Last Summer (1959)
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Spartacus (1960)
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The Children’s Hour (1961)
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Victim (1961)
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Advise and Consent (1962)
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A View From the Bridge (1962)
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Walk on the Wild Side (1962)
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The Fox (1967)
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The Detective (1968)
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The Killing of Sister George (1968)
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The Sergeant (1968)