Gscene Magazine - October 2020 | WWW.GSCENE.COM

Page 21

GSCENE 21

WILLIAM DORSEY SWANN The first self-styled ‘queen of drag’ by Rachel Badham

“It’s why events like UK Black Pride are still necessary. I just wish more was visibly done and maybe there wouldn’t be such an issue with the BLM protests, although the Brighton chapter has gone above and beyond educating and presence even with Covid-19 restrictions.” What are your hopes for the future as a drag queen? Will we be seeing you take to the stage again soon? “Definitely. In fact, I have a new residency at Brighton’s newest LGBTQIA+ venue, Ollie’s Jerk Shack & Cocktails. I aim to bring the wealth of talent we have in Brighton together and create a fresh new experience for Brighton drag that excites people again. It's lovely to see your fave acts but I want to cater to every drag form and it will almost be surprising who you could see working together. “I also want to do more, not just for the local community but as a whole within the UK, raising awareness of mental health, sexual health, race-related issues and LGBTQIA history. I also have some musical projects on the way, including working with the wonderfully talented Luke Fincher on a few tracks.”

MELANIN MONROE

Follow Melanin Monroe: F @melaninmonroequeenuk I @melanin_monroe_queen_uk D www.melaninmonroequeen.co.uk

Swann’s name has become well known since Channing Gerard Joseph published an article in The Nation (picked up by other mainstream media) earlier this year about his book, The House of Swann, to be published in 2021; the first literary work to detail the life of Swann and his role in the 19th century queer community. Joseph hails Swann’s activism as the “beginning of the fight for gay liberation,” as he battled for queer freedom nearly a century before the Stonewall riots, which are generally considered the beginning of the LGBTQ+ community’s struggle for equality. Many also celebrated Swann’s life and work on Juneteenth, which was the day US slaves were emancipated. Joseph’s book chronicles how Swann was freed from slavery after Lincoln’s emancipation proclamation in 1862, which took effect in 1863, following which he later organised a series of secretive balls in the 1880s and 1890s, where guests would often dress in what would be described today as drag. As Swann became a central figure in the underground queer scene, this led to multiple arrests, the most notable being in 1896 when his home was raided and he was sentenced to 10 months for ‘keeping a disorderly house’ (a euphemism

for a brothel). However, this was not actually the case as his home was in fact a gathering place for other queer people and drag queens. Swann requested a pardon from president Grover Cleveland, making him the first person in American history to pursue legal action to defend the LGBTQ+ community’s right to gather. Although his request was denied, Swann paved the way for the black drag community. Even after he stopped organising drag balls, his brother continued to make costumes for drag artists. Swann was also known to be friends with Pierce Lafayette and Felix Hall who formed the first known male same-sex relationship between enslaved Americans. Although it is thought that drag entered the mainstream LGBTQ+ scene in the 1930s where it was used in underground clubs as a mode of self-expression, Swann was a pioneer of the culture that has become so sacred to the queer community. Nowadays, drag is commonly seen in popular culture and millions partake in it to challenge normative gender roles. The writer of The House of Swann has described Swann as a “former slave who reigned over a secret world of drag balls in Washington”, and hopes to bring his inspirational story into the public eye and preserve his legacy, which lives on in contemporary drag culture and in the black LGBTQ+ community. Sadly, there’s no actual images of Swann. His story often gets paired up with this picture (below) of another incredible drag performer who is actually Mr Brown from the Vaudeville duo Gregory and Brown, who introduced the Cake Walk dance to the world.

MR BROWN, 1903 FRENCH POSTCARD

and Mary Seacole, but once they left school it’s not really that big a deal. So I add elements of black history to my act where I can or try to educate as much as possible.

Drag culture has a long, rich history, often dated back to the Shakespearean era when men would dress as women to perform and the term ‘drag’ originated – from the fact that the male players wore dresses to play female roles and the garments dragged along the floor. However, the first self-proclaimed ‘queen’ was, according to a book to be released next year, born into slavery in Maryland, around 1860. William Dorsey Swann was better known as ‘the queen’ by his friends and was frequently seen in dresses and other ‘women’s’ garments. Although he is lesser known than other black LGBTQ+ figures, such as trans activist Marsha P Johnson, he was the earliest recorded American to take legal action to defend the drag queen community and form a queer resistance group.


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