Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture By John M. Clum

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Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture
 By John M. Clum

Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture By John M. Clum


Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture
 By John M. Clum


Download PDF Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture By John M. Clum

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Something for the Boys: Musical Theater and Gay Culture
 By John M. Clum

  • Sales Rank: #1371675 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-04
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: .94" h x 6.10" w x 9.20" l,
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages

Amazon.com Review
If you think this is one of those academic gay- or gender-studies-type tomes that applies a lot of incomprehensible French terms to good old-fashioned American entertainment, think again. John M. Clum may be a professor at Duke, but what this garrulous gay-inflected romp around the past 75 or so years of musical theater reveals him to be is, to use his own affectionate term, a hopeless and incurable "show queen." Indeed, Something for the Boys is so personal and idiosyncratic in its survey of the gay side/subtext of musical theater that's it's kind of like a looooong dinner with an invaluable surviving old-school elder queen. You know the type--she's seen every show and/or owns every score since 1703 and she's not afraid to hold forth tartly on everything from Julie Andrews's performance in the film of Victor/Victoria ("She was Mrs. Blake Edwards and that's why she was at the center of a Blake Edwards film") to Rodgers and Hammerstein (whose work Clum provocatively finds impossible to extract a gay reading from--or, in his words, to "queer"). Of course, she's also got the last word on every diva to walk the floorboards, from Garland ("the Wreck Who Went On--brilliantly") and Streisand (who has "the toughness that drag queens aspire to") to Bernadette Peters ("as close to a diva as the New York theater has produced in the past 30 years") and an underrated treasure like Barbara Cook (whose story reflects that of gay history, Clum informs us, since she "'came out' as a fat woman." We're sure Miss Cook's happy to know that).

Clum writes that he didn't intend this book as a traditional thesis-based academic tome, which is good, since it fails miserably in that regard. He too loosely throws around terms like "camp," "irony," and "diva" that others have applied careful meanings to. He refers more than once to The Queen's Throat, Wayne Koestenbaum's meditation on the storied bond between gay men and opera divas, but fails to do what that book did so brilliantly even amidst its over-the-top language--pinpoint the reason gay men have traditionally been so drawn to a particular genre. (Koestenbaum argues that the full-throated utterances of the opera diva gave release to the rage and pain pre-Stonewall gays weren't allowed to express, but Clum never attains as deep a conclusion, chalking up the gay Broadway link to those tired old undefined catch-alls "camp" and "irony"). Clum suggests that what sports are to many straight men, musical theater has been to many gay men, and, in the end, the facile nature of his own survey supports such an analogy: When there's a gay reading to be found in a show or song (as there always is, he insists, in Porter, Coward, or Lorenz Hart), the gays "win"; when there's not (as in Hammerstein), or when it's not as clear (as in Sondheim's Company, notoriously), the gays "lose"...or the game goes into overtime.

But I'm just quibbling. I read Clum's book straight through to the end (including his lushly opinionated personal discography) because I envy and aspire to this kind of encyclopedic, microscopic knowledge of art and entertainment as a sort of venerable gay badge of honor. So if, like me, Lady in the Dark, Anyone Can Whistle, and Mack and Mabel mean as much to you as Crazy for You, Follies, and Mame, you'll quit your bitching, Mary, and eat it up, too.--Tim Murphy

From Library Journal
In this entertaining book, Clum (drama and English, Duke Univ.) answers the age-old question, Why do so many gay men love musicals? He links musical theater to gay culture through an analysis of music, lyrics, and plot (or lack thereof) as well as the personal lives of composers (from Noel Coward and Cole Porter to Stephen Sondheim and other contemporary artists) and divas (like Judy Garland and Ethel Merman, whom he links to the history of drag performance and heroine worship). Mixing personal anecdote with scholarly analysis, Clum takes his readers into a world where, despite homophobia and plots that seemed basically heterosexual, life could be fabulous. Also included are lively endnotes and a lengthy, annotated discography of cast recordings. Highly recommended for academic and public libraries, particularly those with theater or gay studies collections.
-Lisa N. Johnston, Sweet Briar Coll. Lib., VA
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews
Why do gay men so love musical theater? Clum purports to answer this question but instead offers only petty commentary and obvious observations to support queer readings of his Broadway passions. It's lights down, curtains up, and the diva's dead. Clum (Acting Gay: Male Homosexuality in Modern Drama, 1994, not reviewed) presents himself as an academic Auntie Mame guiding the reader through the delights of queer Broadway. Peering into the sex lives of Noel Coward, Cole Porter, and Lorenz Hart, dissecting the ambivalences of Stephen Sondheim, attacking the social conservatism of Rodgers and Hammerstein, Clum trots out musical after musical to delineate its queer edge, yet no momentum develops from this strategy. Although Broadway divas from Ethel Merman to Carol Channing, from Bernadette Peters to Betty Buckley, are lauded and lionized, they are never analyzed. The question that remains, then, after finishing his tour of the fleshpots, is exactly the one we began with: Why do gay men so love musical theater? Unwrapping the semantic layering of the diva would have been a valuable beginning to such a project, but Clum praises her many incarnations rather than probing deeply into her significance. Unfortunately, Clum so revels in celebrating the obvious queer sensibility of these musicals that he often fails to take into account more profound levels of meaning and cultural significance, as when his necrophilic male gaze savors in the King of Siam's beautiful dead body, shunting aside the postcolonialist horrors of the plot in favor of the giddy pleasures of a shirtless Yul Brynner. Rather than producing the Broadway musical equivalent of Wayne Koestenbaum's The Queen's Throat, which analyzed the nexus of queer culture and opera, Clum has failed to make any contribution to analyses of the Broadway musical or queer culture, except to bask in their collective fabulousness. (12 b&w illus.) -- Copyright ©1999, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

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