QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 312 - June, 2020

Page 24

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Qsaltlake.com |  ISSUE 312 | JUNE, 2020

My first Pride Day

I think

BY BEN WILLIAMS

everyone remembers their first Pride Day whether you are 15 or 65. There’s something powerful and magical about gathering with people of your own kind in large numbers. As a minority, it is important to find a place that is welcoming and safe. That is what Pride Days in Utah has always been, a day when one can throw off the shame that a disapproving society would have us feel and replace it with feeling proud of who and what we are. Various celebratory events have been held in Utah since 1974, whether these occasions were called “Gay Freedom Day,” “A Day in the Park,” “Gay Pride Day,” or simply Pride Day as the festival has become to be known. There are still seniors in our community who remember attending the Gay Freedom Day beer busts held on the shores of the Great Salt Lake or up in Rotary Park. My memories do not go back that far. The first Gay Pride Day I attended was in 1986 when it was held in Pioneer Park. That was a different time when, outside of the bars and support groups, one did not see homosexuals in large numbers. I am talking maybe 100 on a good night at the Sun Club. I first heard that Gay Pride Day 1986 was being organized by Beau Chaine. He had taken over the Gay Pride Day event after members of the Royal Court, which had organized it for a few years, had stepped away. I attended my first Gay Pride Day planning meeting on 26 April 1986. I was bored and needed to get out of the house, so I attended the meeting which was held at the old Salt Lake Public Library. I wrote in my journal that in attendance were only Beau Chaine, Donny Eastepp, Marc Lamar, and myself. Donny Eastepp’s lover Bobby Dupray was the owner of the In-Between Bar and was well connected with members

of the Royal Court and the Gay Rodeo Association. He would later become Emperor of the Royal Court. He died from AIDS. Marc Lamar was a former U.S. Marine Gay activist who wanted to become a drag queen performer. He had a good singing voice, did not lip-sync, and did fun campy drag. He would later be nearly stabbed to death and so he fled from Utah. Gay Pride Day 1986 was held on Sunday, July 13 at Pioneer Park. The event was sponsored by Chaine’s Cabaret Corp as he was chair of Pride Day ’86. Approximately 200 people attended. Performers were Marc Lamar, Julliard-trained pianist Steve Oldroyd, Walt Larabee’s “New Orleans’ Waylon and Madame” act, singers Darrel Rojoit, and Ron Richardson, the Salt Lake Men’s Choir, and the Saliva Sisters. The Saliva Sisters are a campy novelty act parodying Utah culture. Joe Redburn, the owner of the Sun Tavern, gave them their first break booking them in his club and they, in turn, have been loyal ever since to their appreciative Gay audience. Pride 1986 was the first of many of their appearances at Pride Days in Utah. They were then the headline act having their fee donated by Redburn. Redburn was the keynote speaker. He spoke out about the unfair legal harassment of Gay people by the police. Community organizations that sponsored booths were the Libertarian Party staffed by Bob Waldrop, Restoration Church of Jesus Christ staffed by Bob McIntier, the AIDS Project Utah staffed mainly by Duane Dawson, Wasatch Affirmation staffed by myself, the Restoration Metropolitan Community Church staffed by Rev. Bruce Barton, and Triangle Magazine, staffed by John Sassaman and Michael Aaron. Additionally, Richard “Ragnar” McCall, a local artist, sold his pagan artwork. He died on October 3, 1994, at the age of 35 of AIDS.

Besides the normal concession fare sold by Chaine, I was the only one selling food. I had made cookies for a bake sale to raise funds for the Wasatch Affirmation. I called them “Whole Wheat Mormon Faggot Cookies.” I wrote in my journal, “I brought with me about 30 giant cookies I called “Whole Wheat Mormon Faggot Cookies,” which I was selling at fifty cents apiece. I made $12 for affirmation after two cookies were stolen by transients and I had given away four more. It turned out that I was the only one to have brought anything for the Affirmation Booth’s bake sale. “Russ Lane, the founder and director of Wasatch Affirmation, was already at the park by the time I arrived and he was in a tizzy because Affirmation’s booth was in the direct sun without any cover. So I said “let’s just move it to where you want it” so we did, beneath a shade tree. “There were supposed to be police at the park during the fair but I didn’t see any. I did see two transients steal cookies from me, and an Indian chasing some other Indian with a knife, which Beauchaine intervened by taking the knife away. So no one was seriously bothered or hurt. All in all the transients kept to their side of the park and the faggots kept to our side of the park. “Marc Lamar came dressed as Alice Foxx. When he saw me, this six-foot three-inch, former Marine-slash-dragqueen comes running at me and just scooped me up into his arms. That was the most excitement I had all day! “Later I asked Jon Butler if he would run me home because no one thought to provide folding chairs for the booth and I didn’t want to stand all afternoon. He complied and I brought back chairs and paperweights to hold down our pamphlets that were blowing in the wind. “As we were leaving I spotted a car driving around the park with a photog-


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Articles inside

A tale of the straight and narrow

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page 44

Utah AIDS Foundation endorses 2-1-1 PrEP non-daily dosing regimen

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page 42

Deep Inside Hollywood

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Pandemic or not — June is still Pride Month

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page 40

QSaltLake Magazine - Issue 312 - June, 2020

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Patti LuPone: A Comeback in Quarantine

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Janelle Monáe doesn’t know time either

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Filmmaker Rachel Mason on the history of gay porn landmark Circus of Books

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pages 24-26

My first Pride Day

6min
pages 22-23

I have never felt so Asian in my life

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Robert Jeffress

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Welcome Pride

3min
page 19

The new Pride

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page 17

The future of Pride is up to us

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page 16

Utah Pride Center announces Awards

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page 14

What to expect at local and global Prides in these days of COVID-19

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U of U awards Dr. Kristen Ries honorary degree

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Young nonbinary person missing for weeks

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Utah Pride Center is expanding suicide prevention resources as risk increases

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Utah Pride Center lays off much of its staff as donations slow because of Covid-19 and postponed Pride Festival

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page 8

The top national and world news since last issue you should know

4min
page 6
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