JULIAN MITCHELL born. The English screenwriter and novelist is best known for his plays including AnotherCountry, which won the Olivier award for best play of the year (1981) and his screenplays for five movies, including the 1984 film adaptation of AnotherCountry, Wilde and Vincent&Theo. In 2007 Mitchell wrote the BBC4 drama ConsentingAdults about pioneering Gay Rights activist Sir John Wolfenden and his celebrated 1957 report which called for the decriminalization of homosexuality.
Noteworthy
1886 -
The start of the general strike which eventually wins the eight-hour workday in the United States. These events are today commemorated as May Day or Workers Day in most industrialized countries. So don't work more than eight hours today!
ONE Magazine
1953 -
The first wide-circulation Gay periodical in North America, ONEMAGAZINE: The Homosexual Viewpoint was first published by the Mattachine Society.
1974 -
Gay activists march in PORTUGAL, for the first time, demanding an end to the country's sodomy laws and a repeal of all statutes that discriminate against Gays and Lesbians.
1975 -
MAINE Legislators decriminalize homosexuality between consenting adults in private by repealing its sodomy laws, and lower the age of consent to fourteen.
The Front Runner by Patricia Nell Warren
1975 -
Published reports confirm that Paul Newman is having financing trouble with his attempt to bring an adaptation of the gay classic "The Front Runner" to screen. Newman eventually allows his option to lapse.
1976 -
The great CHRISTOPHER STREET magazine debuts. The unapologetically, LGBT-oriented magazine published in New York City was known both for its serious discussion of issues within the LGBT community and its satire of anti-homosexual criticism. It was one of the two most-widely read Gay-issues publications in the United States. ChristopherStreet printed 231 issues before closing its doors in December of 1995.
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN publishes an ad from the Lesbian and Gay Associated Engineers and Scientists. Science News refused to run the ad. An interesting note: I went looking for an image of the cover o the May 1982 edition of Scientific American to accompany this entry. I spent the better part of an hour on line, searching, and finally finding a site where every cover of Scientific American could be seen from as far back as September 1846 (this is a venerable publication that has been around for a long, long time.) I found all the covers for 1982...all except the one for May, 1982. I could get April (which is the illustration here) and I could find June. But May was not there. If anyone can find this cover, I would be interested in seeing the cover, just out of sheer curiosity. Also, it seems the "Lesbian and Gay Associated Engineers and Scientists" no longer exists. Did they break up into Lesbian Associated Engineers and Scientists? Or Gay Associated Engineers and Scientists? Or Just Gay Engineers? Or just Lesbian Scientists?
Inquiring minds want to know.
Ann Bancroft
1986 -
On this date Lesbian ANN BANCROFT becomes the first woman to reach the North Pole by dogsled. The trip, which started from Ellesmere Island, took two months.
Bancroft, 62, was the first woman to reach both the North Pole and the South Pole. In 1986, she and Will Steger and six other explorers drove dogsleds to the North Pole; seven years later, she successfully led the American Women’s Expedition to the South Pole.
Bancroft made history again in 2001 when she and her polar-trekking partner Liv Arnesen, 63, of Norway, became the first women to cross Antarctica.
Now the women, who co-own an exploration company called Bancroft Arnesen Explore, will follow the Ganges from the Himalayas to the Bay of Bengal with six other women from six continents. She lives in St. Paul Minnesota.
2018 -
Today is BELTANE. This festival officially begins at moonrise on May Day Eve, and marks the beginning of the third quarter or second half of the ancient Celtic year. It is celebrated as an early pastoral festival accompanying the first turning of the herds out to wild pasture.
The rituals were held to promote fertility. The cattle were driven between the Belfires to protect them from ills. Contact with the fire was interpreted as symbolic contact with the sun. In early Celtic times, the druids kindled the Beltane fires with specific incantations. Later the Christian church took over the Beltane observances, a service was held in the church, followed by a procession to the fields or hills, where the priest kindled the fire. A rowan branch is hung over the house fire on May Day to preserve the fire itself from bewitchment (the house fire being symbolic of the luck of the house).
This is a holiday of Union — both between the Goddess and the God and between man and woman. Handfastings (Pagan marriages) are traditional at this time. It is a time of fertility and harvest, the time for reaping the wealth from the seeds that we have sown. Celebrations include braiding of one's hair (to honour the union of man and woman and Goddess and God), circling the Maypole for fertility and jumping the Beltane fire for luck. Beltane is one of the Major Sabbats of the Wiccan religion.
Those who observe this holiday celebrate sexuality, something seen as holy and intrinsic to humans and they celebrate life and the unity which fosters it. The myths of Beltane state that the young God has blossomed into manhood, and the Goddess takes him on as her lover. Together, they learn the secrets of the sexual and the sensual, and through their union, all life begins.
May Day has long been marked with feasts and rituals. May poles, supremely phallic symbols, were the focal point of old English village rituals. Many people arose at dawn to gather flowers and green branches from the fields and gardens, using them to decorate the village Maypoles. The insertion of the May-pole into the hole in the earth is symbolic of this erotic theme.
The May Queen (and often King) is chosen from among the young people, and they go singing from door to door throughout the town carrying flowers or the May tree, soliciting donations for merrymaking in return for the "blessing of May". This is symbolic of bestowing and sharing of the new creative power that is stirring in the world. As the kids go from door to door, the May Bride often sings to the effect that those who give will get of nature's bounty through the year.
In parts of France, some jilted youth will lie in a field on May Day and pretend to sleep. If any village girl is willing to marry him, she goes and wakes him with a kiss; the pair then goes to the village inn together and lead the dance which announces their engagement. The boy is called "the betrothed of May."
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Gay Wisdom for Daily Living from White Crane Institute
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