Friday, May 10, 2024
Divine Acclamation!
My feeling towards the issue, and my feelings about drag queens began to change when I got a bit older. It started when my father and some of his friends appeared in drag at our church talent show. It was done for laughs, but it was still impactful to see my father and his friends in make-up, wigs and dresses. It really changed however, after seeing Hairspray. The film came out in 1988 and I think I saw it a couple of years later when it was release on video. I was about thirteen or fourteen and it was my mother who chose the film that weekend. It was my first introduction to both John Waters and to Divine.
'Divine never dressed as a woman except when he was working. He had no desire to be a woman... He didn't want to pass as a woman; he wanted to pass as a monster. He was thought up to scare hippies. And that's what he wanted to do. He wanted to be Godzilla. Well, he wanted to be Elizabeth Taylor and Godzilla put together.'
Divine was not who Harris Glenn Milstead was or who he became, Divine was who he played, at least according to John Waters in the quote above. I'm guessing if Divine were alive today things might be different. At the time, Divine was said to be a persona, one invented for Milstead's music career. I'm guessing this line of thought made it easier to be accepted by the mainstream in the 70's and 80's. Given there were not really many drag performers doing work in mainstream television or movie productions, I can understand the logic looking back.
A suburban housewife's world falls apart when she finds that her pornographer husband is serially unfaithful to her, her daughter is pregnant, and her son is suspected of being the foot-fetishist who's been breaking local women's feet.
Pizza Delivery!12 Days: Daniel Craig in The Mother
A woman has a passionate affair with a man half her age, who is also sleeping with her daughter.
Mother Hens
'Twelve chicks, one cock...'
Holidays are about looking back and they often bring back memories of past holidays and time with family and friends. Mother's Day in particular can be painful, especially for those who have lost their mothers. It can also be difficult for those with strained relationships with their mothers, or who had mother's who weren't there to love, protect or care for them.
For a few years after my own mother died, I found the day painful, but now that a few years have passed, I find it a good way to honor her, and look back on how fortunate I was to have her in my life. This year however, when I was thinking about mother's day, I was thinking about the limits on how mother's could celebrate their day up until the last few decades.
In America, Mother's day originated in 1907 after a woman named Anna Jarvis from Philadelphia, organized groups of women together to promote friendship and health. Within five years virtually every state was observing the day, and in 1914 U.S. Pres. Woodrow Wilson made it a national holiday. Canada, Australia and many other countries, followed suit, although many had their own traditions to honor mothers before the official holiday was set.
Not sure who the two models are in the above and below shots, but I wish could I find more! If anyone knows who they are, ore what 'paint and sip' company they work for, let me know! 😊